Media Training - Media Coaching - Media Preparation
Surviving The
Media Interview
Three Great Media Training Tips
Crafting Your Media Message; Polishing Your Message; Repeating Your Message
By Andy Field, ©2004-2008“It’s the economy, stupid!”
Just four simple words helped win the an election - and if
your politics live on the other wing – another
two term President had a similar mantra.
“Are you better off now than you were
four years ago?”
The men delivering those messages never wavered - no matter what reporters asked. It’s a simple, powerful… and profitable technique.
It’s Like Grabbing The Steering Wheel; You Take Control Staying on message is simply a matter of “grabbing the wheel” of an interview and steering it across the bridge. You “bridge” the interview from the question you don’t want to answer to the answer you want to give.
While you can’t tell a report what to ask, you can control YOUR answers. Politicians do it each day. They bridge tough, unwelcome questions with phrases that begin with. “I can’t tell you that, but what I can tell you is… “Let’s put your question into perspective….” “The real issue here is…. There are many roads that help you navigate your way from hostile question to an on-target message…AND you can deliver it with a smile without being evasive or combative. “Message masters” perfect this the same way you get to Carnegie Hall… Practice, Practice… … you know the rest. ---
Step One
Crafting Your Message
You can’t stay on message if you don’t have one. To insure you do,
work with experienced media coach or public relations professional
who can help you tell your story. Watch the evening news and see which
sound bites make the broadcast. They’re short. They use colorful analogies that
explain something by comparing it to something else. The best
message carriers use superlatives, tweak clichés, use sports,
travel, medical references…. anything that paints a tight, 10
second word picture that sums up their message.
A jury selection expert explained on camera why it was best to just
avoid a trial rather than find a perfect jury. She could have
spent several paragraphs explaining why it’s risky, how jury
selection is an inexact science, how slam dunk cases often
aren’t. Instead she used a powerful, simple analogy that got her
message on national television. “We call going to
trial…rolling the dice. How many of us would risk our lives on
the roll of the dice.” I’d wager she didn’t make that up on the
spot. More likely, she and her media coach spent hours
practicing her delivery, her body language, how she paused
between “going to trial”…and then stretching out “rolling the
dice” Quite a lot went into that 7 second sound bite. Memorable
messages don’t just materialize. Executives create, polish and
rehearse them long before the interview.
It’s like preparing a debate…or a sales presentation. You wouldn’t face
your best
client without asking and answering every possible sales
objection before trying to close the deal. Yet too many
executives figure “how tough can this reporter interview be…I’ll
just wing it.” Winging it often leaves your wings clipped. The
morning talk show guest executives and politicians never wing
it. Watch closely and you’ll see they walk in with a message
and deliver it - no matter what the host asks. Like a good
quarterback, they take the field with a complete playbook. If
the host asks this, I run my message down the middle. If they
try tackling me with a tough issue, I fade back and pass. The
quarterback doesn’t just grab a hot dog and then run his plays….
he spends all week on the practice field. You should too. ---
Everything must work for you, from your body language and pacing to the clothes you wear. If one single element distracts the audience “boy those earrings are big” or “why does he look so stiff?”…your message is road kill. Steamrolled by poor practice and preparation. Staying on message means avoiding verbal detours – those ums and ahs and little side trips that drive you off a cliff.
Always prepare for an interview as if it will be on television. The exacting time limitations for sound bites and appearance work as well on TV as they do in newspaper or radio interview. You must learn to breath properly, focus and smile. Combative, defense interview subjects scramble their message. Open, forthright spokespeople make certain it gets through. And never buy in to a reporter’s negative question. If they say “Isn’t this going to ruin the environment? DON’T say, “No it won’t ruin the environment! Never buy into a negative question! Instead say. “In fact, we’ve gotten the Sierra Club’s seal of approval…we’ve set aside 100 acres to preserve park and wetlands. You can balance development and environment preservation."
Don’t give a reporter more than your message. Don’t embellish or keep
talking to fill the awkward silence. That’s the reporters job,
not yours. You are message delivery system aimed at their TV or
radio network, their newspaper or magazine. Remember a good
KISS is the best policy. Keep It Short and Simple. Presidential
Candidate John Kerry knew he had a brevity problem, so he
carried a stopwatch and timed every answer in mock debates. This is a terrific technique
that sharpens your message. And, as hard as this is to hear – style beats substance nearly every
time. That doesn’t mean you shouldn’t create a substantive
message – just that how you package and deliver it matters more
than most of us realize.
Using the proper body language, natural gestures, varying the
tone and pitch of your voice and waving a flag over your most
important points are crucial. If your interviewer and viewers
don’t like what they see, they won’t stick around to hear what
you say.
Step Three Don’t
Forget Your Message
So many interview subjects want to please
and help the reporter that they forget why they agreed to the
interview. You’re there for just one reason- to convey YOUR
message. If you forget to mention your product’s name or to
sing your company’s praises, the reporter won’t do it for you. Help him with phrases like,
“If you remember one thing today it’s this, "X Company’s widgets will solve this
problem – fast quick and at a budget price…and here’s how…”
If a reporter
wraps up the interview and says “is there anything else you’d
like to add?” Well, that’s like a pitcher lobbing a fat slow
pitch to a home run king. Just knock that one past the bleachers
with your best message line. Something like: “Well, we’re
thrilled to open this one of a kind shop here in Peoria –
There’s nothing like it on earth.” Never miss a chance to
deliver your message. The 2004 Boston Red Sox didn’t just show
up and win the World Series after 86 years – they did it with
focus, preparation and practice. Following their lead will
help insure it doesn’t take that long to hit your message out of
the park on national radio and television.



