Upload
jay-robb
View
719
Download
2
Embed Size (px)
DESCRIPTION
The media relations primer was presented during the 2013 media relations summer camp, offered free of charge at the Hamilton Spectator for nonprofits and community groups.
Citation preview
Media Relations Summer Camp
June 25 & 27 at The Hamilton Spectator
2013
Why we’re here
To help you:
• Pitch better stories to the media
• Get more media coverage
• Move the yardsticks on your organization’s goals
What we’ll do
• Media relations 101
• Polish, practice & then pitch a story idea
• Plus primers on:– Writing letters to the editor & op-eds– Getting in front of the camera– Getting onto social media
#mediacamp
The good news payoff
• Stand out from the crowd
• Thank your donors, funders, volunteers & staff
• Raise your profile & enhance your reputation
• Build your trust & forgiveness account
We’re pitching the wrong stories
Grip & grins with giant cheques
Ribbon cuttings with giant scissors
Groundbreakings with shiny shovels
Golf tournaments
Fundraisers
Rubber chicken galas
AGMs
Yes, these are worthwhile events for fundraising, friendraising and
recognition. Just don’t hold your breath for media coverage.
OMG Hail Mary panic pitches
No one’s buying tickets to our FILL IN THE BLANK!!! We need free publicity ASAP!!!
If we don’t get new funding and more donations, our doors will close forever!!!
Do you really want to be known for big scissors, big cheques, big holes in the ground, rubber chickens
and bad finances?
13
14
Worthy? Yes. Newsworthy? Not so much.
The good news…. you have much better
stories to pitch to the media.
You’re in the solutions business.
And you’re making Hamilton an even better place to call home.
"People are not very interested in talks about organizations.
Ideas & stories fascinate us; organizations bore us.”
"Don't boast about your company; rather, tell us about the problem you're solving."
-- Chris Anderson
The very first question you will always be asked.
WSIC
Why should I care?
Why should our readers care?
Why should our viewers care?
Why should our listeners care?
2nd question:And why now?
How is this timely?
The better your answers, the stronger your news hook.
Make it newsworthy
• Are you doing something new? Innovative?
• First in our community? First anywhere?
• Are you the best at what you’re doing?
• Informative / interesting / entertaining?
• Story has yet to be told?
3 ways to get tell better stories and get more & better media coverage
1. Find your poster child
The best stories - the one’s we read, watch & listen to, talk about, share
and remember - are all about people. Ordinary people in
extraordinary situations.
It’s not about the ribbons you cut. The ground you break. The cheques you get. Or the events you run.
It’s all about the people you serve
and whose lives you transform.
You are not the
hero.
Find your poster child• Who can be the face & heart of your
organization for this story?
• One person with a compelling story – a life transformed because of you
• Someone we can relate to and root for
• Enlist, don’t conscript
• Authentic, not rehearsed
Client
Patient
Customer
Volunteer
Staffer
Board member
Donor or funder
Funder
Grads make Notre Dame House proudBy Molly Hayes (Hamilton Spectator, June 20 2013)
Caroline Kankowsi cried as she received her diploma Wednesday. At 20 years old, she never thought she'd make it through high school. As a teen, she struggled with anxiety and depression, had family problems and ended up living on her own, moving five times in two years. Eventually, she found herself at the Good Shepherd Notre Dame House School, where they pushed her to graduate."They keep you on track completely. They make you feel like you can do anything," she said.She and five fellow grads were awarded their high school diplomas at the "accomplishment ceremony" Wednesday, in the gussied-up back lot of Notre Dame House on Cannon Street West. Another 14 students received certificates for their work in the program on the path toward graduation. Kankowski has been accepted to Mohawk College's photography program, thanks to her arts studies at Notre Dame House.The house — also a 24-hour youth shelter — has 24 students enrolled in its education program this year."The support they get here is amazing," Kankowski's father, Paul, said at the ceremony. After a tough road with family in her teen years, she had 10 relatives come out to support her.
"There are all kinds of routes you can take in life … hers was a little harder, but she worked hard and made this a very special day for our whole family," her father said. "I cried through the whole thing."
Pitch your poster child• Tell your poster child’s story in
2-3 sentences
• Link to the program, project, event or announcement you want to profile
• Add a spokesperson for your organization
• 1 sentence boilerplate about your organization
• Contact info
Pitch to the right one reporter
Or editor / producer
Coverage in one media outlet can lead to coverage in others
36
Email your pitch
Save the trinkets & trash, gifts & swag
38
The subject line is your headline. Make it clear, concise and compelling.Max. of 7-8 short sentences in
the body of your email. Get to the point.
End with contact info (work & cell #s,
weekend #)
Should take 30 seconds or less to read.
SAMPLE EMAIL PITCH TO THE HAMILTON SPECTATORFrom: Robb, Jay [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: Monday, June 10, 2013 10:01 AMTo: Ammerata, CarlaSubject: Mohawk prof wins national honours
Carla – thanks for the Senator Braley coverage last week.
One of my favourite people at Mohawk has won a national teaching award – Peter Olynyk does a ton of great work in the community and here at the college. I’m trying to get him cloned.
Mohawk College is home to one of the country’s top professors for the second consecutive year. Peter Olynyk has received the 2013 bronze teaching award of excellence from the Association of Canadian Community Colleges. A professor in Civil and Structural Engineering in Mohawk’s School of Engineering Technology for the past 27 years, Peter was recognized for his excellence in the classroom and leadership on key projects, including the Bay Area Science and Engineering Fair, Meet the Grad Night and the Popsicle Stick Bridge Building Competition. Peter co-founded the competition 26 years ago and continues to run the event for high school and college students. Peter launched Meet the Grad nights with a case of beer, a couple boxes of pizza and one grad brought in to reassure students heading into their final exams. Peter, who teaches more than 400 students a year, consistently earns top marks in student evaluations.
This marks the second year in a row that Mohawk professors have received national awards. Last year, Mohawk Advertising professor Jef Petrossi also won a bronze teaching award of excellence from the Association of Canadian Community Colleges.
Contacts:Peter Olynyk, 905.575.1212 ext. 3186, [email protected] Academic Cheryl Jensen, 905.575.1212 ext. 2224, [email protected]
HAMILTON SPECTATOR June 11, 2013 (A3)
Signpost: Mohawk prof is tops
Mohawk College is home to one of the country's top professors for the second consecutive year. Peter Olynyk has received the 2013 bronze teaching award of excellence from the Association of Canadian Community Colleges. A professor in civil and structural engineering in Mohawk's School of Engineering Technology, Olynyk was recognized for his excellence in the classroom and leadership on key projects, including the Bay Area science fair.
Long emails scare, dissuade reporters
• Poster child + spokesperson lined up for interviews
• Available for interviews any time
• Complete contact info
• 2-3 supporting facts & stats
• Highlight potential places for interviews, photos and video
Make it as easy as possible for the reporter to tell your story
Reporters are always looking for experts to help:
• Localize stories
• Provide comment, analysis and background
• Simplify complexity
• Add colour with great quotes
2. Be a resident expert
Credible, reliable & trustworthy…passionate… knowledgeable…enjoy working with the media…
speak in soundbites…24/7 availability
Qualifications
Get on some of these
More ways to raise your profile
• Stand and deliver: give speeches & talk on panels
• Submit letters to the editor and op-eds
• Win awards
• Follow up with reporters when they file stories that are in your wheelhouse
3. Newsjack
Inject your idea and parachute your organization into breaking news
Add to the narrative with a new dimension / perspective
• Monitor the media
• Need to be fast – respond in real time
• Post on social media (reporters will be there doing keyword searches)
• Contact reporter directly
• Use your judgment – always in good taste and never opportunistic
Newsjacking
Pester the reporter.
Pitch & vanish.
Promise what you can’t deliver.
Ask to review & approve the story.
Ask the reporter to send you a copy of the story.
5 cardinal sins of media relations
Follow up with a quick thanks
50
Worth a read
Newsjacking by David Meerman Scott
The Media Training Bible by Brad Phillips
10 Steps to Writing a Vital Speech by Fletcher Dean
Jane AllisonManager of Community
PartnershipsThe Hamilton [email protected]
Jay RobbDirector of
CommunicationsMohawk [email protected]