Dealing with Brushfire Topics
Sometimes a special speaker service is set up to deal with a very limited public relations situation. When the state legislature is considering a hill that would limit duck hunting, sportsmen's organizations may set up a special task force to go around the state speaking on "Our American Heritage: The Sport of Duck Hunting." Whenever First Amendment guarantees are threatened, journalism and public relations groups usually field speakers to address civic and school groups about "Our American Heritage: Freedom of the Press."
When the speakers' bureau is set up on a "brushfire" basis, phone contacts with school administrators and civic groups listed in the telephone directory can be used to arrange several quick bookings for speakers.
Given the choice between speaking to five hundred Rotarians or just half a dozen reporters, most managers would choose the vast audience of five hundred. There may be an awful lot of them, but at least you know they won't bite.
As awesome as a major speaking engagement may seem, the speaker has a great deal of control over the situation. The press, on the other hand, insists on making its own rules. And, the impact of speaking to a half-dozen reporters is potentially much greater than addressing a huge hall full of people. It can be even riskier than a formal debate, because the rules seem to be made up as the interview or press conference goes along.
Frederick Knapp, president of a consulting firm that specializes in preparing executives to appear in public, calls the media interview the most challenging of speaking appearances because of the probing questions and the necessity of thinking clearly under pressure. Keeping the main point in mind and avoiding getting sidetracked takes concentration.
Another key problem is the fact that most managers can't visualize what a story will look like in print or sound like on the air. The PR practitioner should keep clips showing the results of interviews where the spokesperson for an organization understood the task and provided quotes that worked well for the organization, along with other articles that illustrate how the speaker's ineptitude led to embarrassing coverage in the press.
After reviewing the clips, you can stage a mock interview or press conference for your manager, using PR department personnel as reporters. Throw a little of everything at the speaker: rudeness, interruptions, hostile questions, no-win questions ("When is your company going to stop polluting the river?"), and incessantly returning to previous topics the speaker feels have already been addressed. If you try everything imaginable on the speaker in practice, the actual interview may seem more tolerable and manageable.
Before and after the mock interview, try to impress the following guidelines upon your spokesperson:
1. Be brief. Print reporters who take longhand notes will choose quotes that are succinct and to-the-point. Broadcast reporters need to tape only a few sharp sentences for use. Interviewees who ramble on will be "paraphrased" instead of quoted directly, if they are quoted at all.
2. Avoid being "cagey" about information. Don't ask that something be "off the record"—nobody can guarantee it. "No comment" makes the speaker look evasive. Better to say, "I am not at liberty to release that information at this time," giving the reason, if possible. If you don't know something, instead of pretending to be secretive, tell the reporters you aren't sure of the facts or figures, but you'll have your PR staff check it out and get in touch with the press as soon as possible. Most important of all, don't get caught telling a half-truth. An enterprising reporter may check it out and find that you were revealing only part of the story.
3. Maintain a firm but cordial stance. If the reporters are on a first-name basis with you, address them by first name, too. Otherwise use Mr. or Ms. Don't show favoritism to one reporter who is a friend or who represents a "friendly" news medium; the other reporters may unconsciously or consciously retaliate for being put on less-favored status. Above all, don't lose your temper, no matter how boorish a reporter may become. If you threaten a member of the press in any way, that fact will probably become the lead of the news story, not the information about your organization that you hoped to present.
4. When asked a negative question, don't give a knee-jerk, defensive response. Think quickly about the topic raised by the question. What relevant facts can you discuss about your organization's performance in this area? As we have stressed, in the symmetric model it is important to answer negative questions honestly, truthfully, and fully. If your organization has done something wrong, explain what happened and tell what is being done to rectify the situation. Without ignoring the substance of the question, try to turn the main substance of the reply into a "plus" for your point of view.
5. Keep calm and try to manage a smile. You're only doing your job, and the reporters are only doing theirs.
Some of the shortest and most effective speeches ever made may not appear to be speeches at all. They're the responses given by the leader of your organization to an interviewer like Robert MacNeil of the "MacNeil/Lehrer News Hour" on public broadcasting. These "answers" should not be ad-libbed. You can anticipate the question, craft a tidy statement, and rehearse your spokesperson to deliver the set speech at the proper time.
Newsman MacNeil, quoted by noted press relations expert Jack Hilton, even expects his interview subjects to take the ball and run with it: "Know what you want to say, and use whatever questions you are asked to say it. Just don't get so fixated by the questions you are asked that you forget to make your points."
Hilton explains why he prepares speakers very carefully to present the points they want to get across no matter the forum or the question: "Only a consultant with an IQ lower than room temperature would permit you to ad-lib in front of an important audience, particularly a TV audience."
- Why Organizations Need Public Relations
- Defining Public Relations
- Confusion with Other Organizational Communication Functions
- Directions and history General pr Directions As you have probably understood pr is a very broad field of activity, it includes not only advertisement, as you might think, but many other spheres.
- History
- Attitudes and Opinions
- Building Public Opinion
- Receiver
- Men’s perception of information
- Public Relations and Public Responsibility
- Models of Public Relations
- Warner-lambert creed
- Planning and executing a public relations campaign
- Surveys
- Focus Group Interviews
- Analysis of Data
- Audience Message
- Audience Message
- Strategic management
- The Stakeholder Stage
- The Issues Stage
- The Objectives Stage
- The Planning Stage
- The Implementation Stage
- The Evaluation Stage
- Outlining
- Sentences and Paragraphs
- Word Length
- Word choice
- Errors to avoid
- Spelling
- Gobbledygook and Jargon
- Poor Sentence Structure
- Wrong Words
- "Sound-alike" Words
- Redundancies
- Too Many Words
- Too Many Numbers
- Too Many Capitals
- Politically Incorrect Language
- Persuasive Writing
- Audience Analysis
- Source Credibility
- Appeal to Self-interest
- Clarity of the Message
- Timing and Context
- Symbols, Slogans, and Acronyms
- Semantics
- Suggestions for Action
- Content and Structure
- Preparing News Releases
- Editors Depend on Releases
- Flyers Aren't Releases
- Paper and Typeface
- "News" Flag
- Release Date
- Contact Person
- Serial Number
- Headline
- Wheeling Steel Appoints Jones To Head Pittsville Foundries
- Health Fairs to Explain Benefits
- Slugline, Continuations, and End Sign
- The Summary Lead
- Handling Quotes
- Feature Style
- Sidebars
- Varied Names
- Research
- What's the "Big Idea"?
- Organizing and Outlining
- How Much to Say?
- Working with the Speaker
- Provide Coaching
- Polish During Rehearsal
- Misuse of Visual Aids
- Evaluation
- Dealing with Brushfire Topics
- Checklist • Ten Tips for Surviving a Media Interview
- Exhibits and Special Events
- Visual Impression
- Traffic Pattern and Lighting
- Furniture and Floor Covering
- Audiovisual Equipment
- Maintaining the Display
- Hospitality Suites
- Catering to the Press. Press Conferences
- Avoid Embarrassing Silences
- How to Issue the Invitation
- Dealing with Journalistic Ethics
- Check the Facilities Representatives of the pr department should make at least one on-site inspection, accompanied by a sales representative of the facility, to check for items such as:
- Offer Helpful Handouts
- Pr Staff Relations with the Press
- Using Radio
- Paid Advertisements
- Public Service Announcements
- Talk Shows
- Getting It Timed Right
- The spot lacks a local angle
- Live Announcer or Taped Spot?
- Psa: 30 seconds
- Psa: 30 seconds
- Television and Cable
- Target vnRs Carefully
- The Story Conference
- Preparing the Script and Storyboard
- Getting on the Talk Shows
- Cnn Provides Placement Opportunities
- Approaching Your Local Cable Operator
- Internet in Public Relations
- International Public Relations
- Culture
- Examples of Legal Problem
- Libel and Slander
- Invasion of Privacy
- Releases for Advertising and Promotion
- Regulations of Government agencies
- Copyright Law
- Fair Use and Infringement
- Guidelines for Using Copyrighted Materials
- Trademark Law
- Contract Considerations
- Client Contracts
- Freelancer Contracts
- Facilities Contracts
- Working with Lawyers
- Ethics and Professionalism
- What is public relations. Definitions ans aims
- Public relations (pr) – Паблик рилэйшнс, связи с общественностью
- Field of study – наука, поле деятельности
- Pr scholars – основатели науки, исследователи pr
- Strategic planning
- Planning and executing a public relations campaign
- Preparing News Releases
- Preparing Brochures
- Meeting – встреча
- Exhibits and Special Events
- Catering to the Press. Press Conferences
- Using Radio
- Television and Cable
- Internet in Public Relations
- Legal Requirements
- Puffery – навязчивая, дутая реклама
- Appendix b what is public relations. Definitions and aims
- Directions and history
- Strategic planning
- Planning and executing a public relations campaign
- Preparing News Releases
- Preparing Brochures
- Exhibits and Special Events
- Catering to the Press. Press Conferences
- Using Radio
- Television and Cable
- Internet in Public Relations
- International Public Relations
- Legal Requirements
- Appendix c public relations’ websites Public Relations Society of America – www.Prsa.Org
- International Public Relations Association – www.Ipranet.Org
- Pr in Press Through Internet pr Week (London) – www.Prweek.Com
- News and Inquiries Sources