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Oct
20

Winning Media Interviews, Part II: What Reporters Are Looking For in a Story

By Jeannette Paladino

When you have the opportunity to be interviewed, you will no doubt have thought about the key messages you want to communicate.  This is important and the right thing to do.  It comes under “being prepared.”  But you also need to know what reporters are looking for in a story and it may not always be what you are interested in talking about.  Before the interview, be sure you’ve researched the media outlet and read/watched the last few stories the reporter has written.  If the reporter feasts on controversy and you don’t want controversy, think twice about doing the interview.    But if you are good to go, this is what you need to know about what reporters want:

  1. What’s new. Reporters are always looking for “what’s new.”  Are you announcing a new service, a new president, sponsoring an important event, releasing the results of a survey?
  2. Trends. Trends in your industry that are affecting the way business is being done, impacting large numbers of people, influencing public policy.
  3. Stories with a beginning, middle and an end. Reporters love to hear the words, “For example,” because they know they are likely to  hear an interesting story that will clarify and possibly even entertain.
  4. Conflict. Differing points of view on important subjects of wide interest, i.e., health reform, the economy, the environment, etc.
  5. Visuals. Charts, graphs, product samples and other visuals that will improve their understanding of the story, and stimulate the interest of their readers or viewers.
  6. Juicy quotes. A sound bite for television, a lead or “grabber” for a newspaper article.
  7. Oddball angles. Man bites dog.  The expected turned on its head

So, when you’re preparing for your interview, see how many of these “wants” you can include.

Related posts:

  1. Winning Media Interviews, Part I: Ten Most Common Mistakes in Dealing With the Media
  2. Winning Media Interviews, Part IV: The Fine Art of “Bridging”
  3. Winning Media Interviews, Part III: Structuring Your Answers to a Question
  4. Twitpitch — the New Way to Pitch Reporters
  5. How Obama’s Story Telling May Shift the Conversation on Health Care

Comments

  1. mikeyNo Gravatar says:

    The most recent interview I had was for about fifty minutes with a newspaper columnist. I had previously commented on an article he wrote (and asked for comments on). Later I invited him to my LinkedIn community.

    He emailed me about my comment and asked permission to use it. However, I did not make the cut for the follow up article

    Then I had the interview over the phone. By the time we were done, he was using words like “expert” and “I trust you”. Sure enough, within two weeks I was one of the featured people in his column!

    Be prepared is the Boy Scout motto and song from The Lion King. I liken it to the motto Luck is when Preparation meets Opportunity!

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