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Casual Articles - Media Training: When Reporters Bully You
How The Brain Learns mply a conduit to a larger audience and that she had full control of her own words.Do you remember when you moved the furniture in your room? Do you remember how you kinda bumped into everything a couple of times and then figured it out. The funny thing is that it took you two to three turns of bumping into things in the dark, before you worked out things had changed.And the brain learned. Through repetition.But remember when you put your finger into a candle flame and got burned? You never ever did that again, did you? The brain learned a lesson very, very It worked. When the interview aired, Susan’s quotes were right on message. By sticking to her messages and consistently repeating her most important points, she ensured that Dateline’s millions of viewers heard the most important things she had to say. WHY CAN’T I BE MORE…REAL? The Lead Generation System Secrets of a Lead Generation Coach - Part 2 UNDER FIREA Lead Generation System can be split in 5 key areas…1. Set your objectives 2. Allocate your time and budget 3. Select your marketing approach 4. Test 5. Evaluate1. Setting Objectives.The first part of creating your Lead Generation System is to set your objectives. One of the best ways to decide upon what your objectives are going to be, is to do a marketing audit, to identify what has already worked, what hasn't worked, what your marketing achi A friend whose organization is often in the media spotlight recently told me a story about her boss. Her boss, let’s call her Susan, is on the leadership team for a lobbying group that represents a somewhat unpopular industry. Susan was interviewed a few months ago by Dateline NBC Correspondent Lea Thompson about a topic that could make her organization look bad. She knew she’d have to answer tough questions. Nervous about saying something embarrassing about her organization, Susan carefully prepared for the interview. She developed her main messages, thought about the worst questions she could possibly face and practiced her responses. When the interview began, Susan stayed on message. Thompson tried to throw her off, but Susan wouldn’t budge. Thompson pushed and prodded, trying to get Susan to say something – anything – more controversial. She wouldn’t. That’s when Ms. Thompson employed the old journalistic trick of trying to intimidate her subject. In middle of the interview, Ms. Thompson asked the cameraman to stop recording, scolded Susan for not answering her questions, and asked for a five minute break. And my sources tell me that this is not the first time Ms. Thompson has used this tactic – she’s used it before with at least one other interviewee from a different organization. An inexperienced spokesperson would have been flustered. He or she would have returned from the break with something different to say. Not Susan. She knew that Dateline NBC was simply a conduit to a larger audience and that she had full control of her own words. It worked. When the interview aired, Susan’s quotes were right on message. By sticking to her messages and consistently repeating her most important points, she ensured that Dateline’s millions of viewers heard the most important things she had to say. WHY CAN’T I BE MORE…REAL? The Secret of Success: Stubborn Determination bad. She knew she’d have to answer tough questions.On most days you will be surrounded by people who are smarter than you are. All the brains in the world won't matter unless you have determination, determination to see a project through no matter what happens. If you have stubborn determination it levels the playing field against others, that might be smarter, or have more money.In small business it is very important to think outside the box. You need to step back and look at things objectively, removing yourself enough to Nervous about saying something embarrassing about her organization, Susan carefully prepared for the interview. She developed her main messages, thought about the worst questions she could possibly face and practiced her responses. When the interview began, Susan stayed on message. Thompson tried to throw her off, but Susan wouldn’t budge. Thompson pushed and prodded, trying to get Susan to say something – anything – more controversial. She wouldn’t. That’s when Ms. Thompson employed the old journalistic trick of trying to intimidate her subject. In middle of the interview, Ms. Thompson asked the cameraman to stop recording, scolded Susan for not answering her questions, and asked for a five minute break. And my sources tell me that this is not the first time Ms. Thompson has used this tactic – she’s used it before with at least one other interviewee from a different organization. An inexperienced spokesperson would have been flustered. He or she would have returned from the break with something different to say. Not Susan. She knew that Dateline NBC was simply a conduit to a larger audience and that she had full control of her own words. It worked. When the interview aired, Susan’s quotes were right on message. By sticking to her messages and consistently repeating her most important points, she ensured that Dateline’s millions of viewers heard the most important things she had to say. WHY CAN’T I BE MORE…REAL? The Managing Creative People usan wouldn’t budge. Thompson pushed and prodded, trying to get Susan to say something – anything – more controversial. She wouldn’t.There are a number of issues to consider when Managing Creative People:Common Characteristics / The Creative TypeDo creative people have common characteristics that we can identify, so that we can hire the right people? Some firms do not engage in creative activities because of a belief that "special" people are needed. Many theorists and practitioners think that there are common characteristics, such as tolerance to ambiguity and risk taking. However, many others argue That’s when Ms. Thompson employed the old journalistic trick of trying to intimidate her subject. In middle of the interview, Ms. Thompson asked the cameraman to stop recording, scolded Susan for not answering her questions, and asked for a five minute break. And my sources tell me that this is not the first time Ms. Thompson has used this tactic – she’s used it before with at least one other interviewee from a different organization. An inexperienced spokesperson would have been flustered. He or she would have returned from the break with something different to say. Not Susan. She knew that Dateline NBC was simply a conduit to a larger audience and that she had full control of her own words. It worked. When the interview aired, Susan’s quotes were right on message. By sticking to her messages and consistently repeating her most important points, she ensured that Dateline’s millions of viewers heard the most important things she had to say. WHY CAN’T I BE MORE…REAL? The No Logo? Launching A Business Without a Logo Can Sabotage You minute break.Initial lack of customers and cash flow often causes a small business to put off designing a logo and marketing materials professionally “until [they] got a few clients” or “until [they] get started.” Designing their own marketing materials when they launch their business, instead of having them professionally created, will make getting those initial clients more difficult, and may result in a business that will not succeed.Many entrepreneurs choose to design their own marketing mate And my sources tell me that this is not the first time Ms. Thompson has used this tactic – she’s used it before with at least one other interviewee from a different organization. An inexperienced spokesperson would have been flustered. He or she would have returned from the break with something different to say. Not Susan. She knew that Dateline NBC was simply a conduit to a larger audience and that she had full control of her own words. It worked. When the interview aired, Susan’s quotes were right on message. By sticking to her messages and consistently repeating her most important points, she ensured that Dateline’s millions of viewers heard the most important things she had to say. WHY CAN’T I BE MORE…REAL? The Buying Wholesale-A General Guide to Sourcing Products mply a conduit to a larger audience and that she had full control of her own words.Finding the right products to sell at the right prices can be the most difficult part of starting an online business. Whether you have an online e-commerce website, or are a seller on EBay, it can be difficult to even decide where to start sourcing your products. The problem is there are many companies out there who will sell you products at “wholesale prices” but you will come to find very quickly that 99% of these companies are not real wholesalers, and the fact is you could go on eBay or It worked. When the interview aired, Susan’s quotes were right on message. By sticking to her messages and consistently repeating her most important points, she ensured that Dateline’s millions of viewers heard the most important things she had to say. WHY CAN’T I BE MORE…REAL? The trainees I work with often wonder if they wouldn’t have more credibility if they acknowledged a few of their own weaknesses during an interview, instead of being perfectly on message. Doing so is occasionally appropriate, but here’s why it’s dangerous: 1. The answer you give which points out your own shortcomings will be the one that is used. Your other answers – including your positive points – will be edited out. 2. It is not your job to be your own critic – that is the job of the reporter and your opponents quoted in the piece. In order for a truly “balanced” piece, you have to be positive toward yourself – your opponents will happily point out your imperfections for you. BUT BE CAREFUL I’d like to raise three cautions with this approach. First, frustrated reporters will occasionally edit together clips of the guest repeating the same answer over and over again and will air it to show the guest’s evasiveness. It’s a technique that can severely damage a guest’s credibility, but is easy to circumvent – if you develop multiple ways of saying the same thing and support your messages with specific examples. Second, this approach works well if you’re defending an ideology or point of view you truly believe in. But if you or your organization did something wrong, it’s not good enough. You’ll need to admit your faults, apologize, and articulate your action plan to make it better. And third, this approach worked because the interview was taped, not live. If the program was live, the a
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