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You are here: Home > Business > PR > There's a Reporter on Line One: 4 Failsafe Tips for Talking to Media |
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Member You - There's a Reporter on Line One: 4 Failsafe Tips for Talking to Media
Employee Salary Surveys rrow the world and comment on what you know. No one can know everything, so adapt a reporter’s question to make it fit what you do know. Be the expert on your own world. When a question is too broad for your liking or outside your scope, reign it in. For example, “The economy in general is anyone’s guess, but I can tell you what I see here at our company and with our customers.”Employee salary surveys are conducted by organizations to determine the latest trends in salary and compensation. This is very useful, since companies can set their own salaries on the basis of these results. This would enable the company to attract as well as retain the most talented people in the industry.Companies as such do not undertake comprehensive salary surveys. They use the survey results of special organizations that conduct these surveys. There are many organizations that p 3) Stick your neck out. Make a prediction. The dirty little secret about predictions is that unless you are the chairm Procurement and How It Relates to Office Furniture It’s a typical day at the office. You are doing what you usually do, which is pretty much, well, everything. Your phone rings. You debate answering. Do you really need one more problem dumped on you? You consider letting it go to voicemail. Then, responsible soul that you are, you pick it up and say hello.Office furniture procurement and purchasing departments can have similar responsibilities. Generally, procurement departments are more prevalent in large corporations, universities, and governmental agencies.In addition to purchasing responsibilities, procurement staff can determine standards for the office furniture used in their facilities. This office furniture procurement staff could work with a combination of their own design and planning department, an architectural firm, a desi Turns out it isn’t one of your direct reports or one of your clients or vendors. It’s a reporter. “Hi, this is Francine Smith with Your Industry Magazine.” Your heart races and your stomach feels hollow. “I’d like to ask you a few questions about what’s going on in the industry.” We know we want coverage. We think, wouldn’t it be great if the press called us up instead of us having to send out press releases that never get picked up anyway. We all have visions of the rest of the world valuing us, our companies and our contributions. But what happens when a reporter really is on line one? A blessed few can pick up the phone and say brilliant things. The vast majority of us panic. When we are caught completely off guard, the cortisol kicks in and we go blank. We freeze. It’s like the man-in-the-street interview. There are a small select few who are comfortable, but most people get that wide-eyed, deer-in-the-headlights look. All it takes is a camera, a microphone in our faces, or even just a reporter on the other end of the phone line, and we lose our ability to think and speak. So what’s one to do? The reporter’s on the line, ready to ask questions, and you are completely unprepared. Here are a few failsafe tips for just that situation: 1) Buy time. Ask the reporter what the focus of her story is and when her deadline is. Sometimes the media needs a comment right that instant, and sometimes they’ve got the luxury of a few days. Just an extra hour or two is probably all you need to gather your thoughts. Don’t say you want time to think; simply suggest a later time. For instance, you might say, “I’ve got a break in my schedule at 3; shall we talk then?” 2) Narrow the world and comment on what you know. No one can know everything, so adapt a reporter’s question to make it fit what you do know. Be the expert on your own world. When a question is too broad for your liking or outside your scope, reign it in. For example, “The economy in general is anyone’s guess, but I can tell you what I see here at our company and with our customers.” 3) Stick your neck out. Make a prediction. The dirty little secret about predictions is that unless you are the chairma Your Best Tool - Your Business Card feels hollow. “I’d like to ask you a few questions about what’s going on in the industry.”Instant communication? Palm Pilots, laptops, cell phones, instant messaging devices - of all the communications tools out there, the single best one is still the business card. With it, you instantly communicate your name, your business, your contact information and, with a little design capability, your personal style.A well designed business card marks you as a professional, so make sure you choose a design that reflects the products you represent. Selling high tech computer equipmen We know we want coverage. We think, wouldn’t it be great if the press called us up instead of us having to send out press releases that never get picked up anyway. We all have visions of the rest of the world valuing us, our companies and our contributions. But what happens when a reporter really is on line one? A blessed few can pick up the phone and say brilliant things. The vast majority of us panic. When we are caught completely off guard, the cortisol kicks in and we go blank. We freeze. It’s like the man-in-the-street interview. There are a small select few who are comfortable, but most people get that wide-eyed, deer-in-the-headlights look. All it takes is a camera, a microphone in our faces, or even just a reporter on the other end of the phone line, and we lose our ability to think and speak. So what’s one to do? The reporter’s on the line, ready to ask questions, and you are completely unprepared. Here are a few failsafe tips for just that situation: 1) Buy time. Ask the reporter what the focus of her story is and when her deadline is. Sometimes the media needs a comment right that instant, and sometimes they’ve got the luxury of a few days. Just an extra hour or two is probably all you need to gather your thoughts. Don’t say you want time to think; simply suggest a later time. For instance, you might say, “I’ve got a break in my schedule at 3; shall we talk then?” 2) Narrow the world and comment on what you know. No one can know everything, so adapt a reporter’s question to make it fit what you do know. Be the expert on your own world. When a question is too broad for your liking or outside your scope, reign it in. For example, “The economy in general is anyone’s guess, but I can tell you what I see here at our company and with our customers.” 3) Stick your neck out. Make a prediction. The dirty little secret about predictions is that unless you are the chairm NeuroMarketing - 7 Secrets To Unlocking Your Customer's Brain That Ignites Profits And Sales p>When we are caught completely off guard, the cortisol kicks in and we go blank. We freeze. It’s like the man-in-the-street interview. There are a small select few who are comfortable, but most people get that wide-eyed, deer-in-the-headlights look. All it takes is a camera, a microphone in our faces, or even just a reporter on the other end of the phone line, and we lose our ability to think and speak.Have you ever wondered ….* Why even the highest priced or lowest quality products sometimes outsell their competitors’?* Why and how your prospects buy the products or services they do, even if their choices seem irrational or impractical?* Why some brands have a devoted cult-like following while others have zero loyalty?A new field called NeuroMarketing – combining neuroscience, marketing and technology – has generated a buzz across every industry and every busine So what’s one to do? The reporter’s on the line, ready to ask questions, and you are completely unprepared. Here are a few failsafe tips for just that situation: 1) Buy time. Ask the reporter what the focus of her story is and when her deadline is. Sometimes the media needs a comment right that instant, and sometimes they’ve got the luxury of a few days. Just an extra hour or two is probably all you need to gather your thoughts. Don’t say you want time to think; simply suggest a later time. For instance, you might say, “I’ve got a break in my schedule at 3; shall we talk then?” 2) Narrow the world and comment on what you know. No one can know everything, so adapt a reporter’s question to make it fit what you do know. Be the expert on your own world. When a question is too broad for your liking or outside your scope, reign it in. For example, “The economy in general is anyone’s guess, but I can tell you what I see here at our company and with our customers.” 3) Stick your neck out. Make a prediction. The dirty little secret about predictions is that unless you are the chairm Headlines Secrets That Double Your Response y unprepared. Here are a few failsafe tips for just that situation:If you want to “ramp up response” from your ad, consider revising the headline. Many business owners don’t realize how critical the headline is to an ad’s success.Over the years, marketers have tested what works and what doesn’t in print ads and direct mail. And tests have proven many times that the headline is responsible for at least 50% and as much as 75% of an ad’s success.So what guidelines can you use in creating your next ad? Here are some powerful ways to create an ad th 1) Buy time. Ask the reporter what the focus of her story is and when her deadline is. Sometimes the media needs a comment right that instant, and sometimes they’ve got the luxury of a few days. Just an extra hour or two is probably all you need to gather your thoughts. Don’t say you want time to think; simply suggest a later time. For instance, you might say, “I’ve got a break in my schedule at 3; shall we talk then?” 2) Narrow the world and comment on what you know. No one can know everything, so adapt a reporter’s question to make it fit what you do know. Be the expert on your own world. When a question is too broad for your liking or outside your scope, reign it in. For example, “The economy in general is anyone’s guess, but I can tell you what I see here at our company and with our customers.” 3) Stick your neck out. Make a prediction. The dirty little secret about predictions is that unless you are the chairm The Importance Of Display For Your Promotional Products rrow the world and comment on what you know. No one can know everything, so adapt a reporter’s question to make it fit what you do know. Be the expert on your own world. When a question is too broad for your liking or outside your scope, reign it in. For example, “The economy in general is anyone’s guess, but I can tell you what I see here at our company and with our customers.”Promotional products are a great way to get your company name out to the attendees of a conference or trade show if you do it correctly. Whether you are handing them out as part of the welcome package at registration time, trading them for names on your newsletter, or just passing them out to anyone who drops by your booth or buys one of your products, you can get even more mileage out of your promotional products by displaying them properly.Presentation says a lot about your company 3) Stick your neck out. Make a prediction. The dirty little secret about predictions is that unless you are the chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank, no one is going to go back later and check to see if you were right. You stand to gain far more by being reported on as someone with a perspective than you do by being silent, even if you turn out to be wrong. Predictions are an engaging sport for media. Think of the number of articles written every January about predictions for the coming year. We read them and perceive those quoted as expert resources, worthy of visibility, but no one goes back at the end of the year to see who was wrong. Those who have opinions about the future make the story; those who play it safe get cut and don’t get called again. 4) Use a cheat sheet. What are three things about your company that the general public would find interesting or want to know? What are three things about yourself? What are three opinions you have? Take out a piece of paper and list them. Then stash the page in the top drawer of your desk. It’s your security blanket. Keep it right there and if you are ever caught off guard by a media call, pull it out. You’ll have the comfort of knowing you’ve got something to say while the cortisol dissipates and your mind catches up. When the press calls, respond. See what they are writing about and when their deadline is. Don’t hem, haw and hedge. Take the opportunity presented to you and reap the benefits of being a visible, expert resource.
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