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Media Advocacy: Tools of the Trade October 28, 2005
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What Is News? What makes an old story new, or a new story different Something that affects many people outside your organization
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Angles “ Ben Brown doesn’t mind being referred to as the lawyer of last resort. All too often he is the person who stands between a senior citizen and bankruptcy.”
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Angles “After five years working as an emergency room and intensive care nurse, Robyn O’Neill headed back to school. However it wasn’t to further her medical career; instead, it was to obtain a law degree.”
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Journalism 101 Beat Reporters Regularly assigned to a specific topic or place General Assignment Reporters Go wherever they’re needed Feature Reporters Longer pieces, soft news, profiles Often not time-sensitive
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Broadcast News Need a visual Importance of sound bites (a 5- minute interview will be distilled into a 15-second quote) Timing is key
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Deadlines Major Dailies: 4-6 p.m. Local Television: Noon, 4, 5, 6, 9 and 10 p.m. National news is 24/7 Reporters must produce every day
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Tools of the Trade Press Releases/Media Advisories Fact Sheets Pitch Letters Press Kits
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Tools of the Trade Press Conference (can be a risky venture) Pitching Exclusive Stories
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Writing for the Media Write your press release the way you would want the story to be written Remember to write as if the event has happened (past tense) Use an attention-grabbing headline Include a contact name and phone number
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Writing for the Media Media Advisory: who, what, when, where, and why A media advisory is never more than one page – don’t give the whole story away Use active verbs (urge, lead, call on, gather, etc.) Always include a contact name and phone number
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Following Up with Media Be polite but persistent Narrow down your story into a 2- minute pitch, 30-sec story Calling in the morning is best E-mail is often more effective than phone calls
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Make Reporters Love You Give them the information they need On time Sometimes all a reporter wants is a quote over the phone
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Message Development Your strongest points in the fewest words The basis for all communication 3 or 4 broad message points are good
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Message Development Bolster your messages with statistics and examples: Reporters love to quote figures But don’t get mired in numbers. Personal stories resonate most.
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Bringing Home the Campaign Underscoring Campaign Messages Benefits Everyone – Everyone Deserves Access to Justice – State Needs to do its Share – Legal Aid is a Solid Investment Power of One Coalition, One Voice
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How to Talk to Reporters Stick to your messages Don’t be afraid to repeat a key message Use transitions to bridge back to your messages, i.e. -What’s important to remember…… -Before we get off the subject, let me add….
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How to Talk to Reporters Narrow down your thoughts into a few hard-hitting sentences Don’t let reporters put words in your mouth-look for paraphrasing clues such as “In other words” or “So what you are saying is” Paraphrases may be attributed to you
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Media Advocacy: Tools of the Trade October 28, 2005
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