A list of the top 10 mistakes people make when dealing with journalists
There are any number of mistakes people make when they’re faced with dealing with the news media but, in my opinion as both a journalist and media trainer of long standing experience, here are the top 10 mistakes.
1. Not believing that it’s your interview as well. Thinking that it’s purely the journalist’s interview and worrying, therefore, about what you might get asked. Remember the Henry Kissinger line as he strode into media conferences – “anyone here got any questions to go with my answers?”
2. Giving in too easily to the media instead of standing up for yourself. I’ve seen CEOs who wouldn’t take any rubbish from people at work submit like a pussycat to the news media – and it’s not a pretty sight.
3. Agreeing to instant interviews instead of making sure you allow enough time for proper preparation. Lie to the media if you have to – they’ll lie to you to get their own way and you might have to use similar tactics, like fibbing that you’re in an important meeting and that you’ll call them back in 20 minutes. That much preparation time might be short but it’s a lot better than no preparation at all.
4. Believing every word in the journalist’s questions. Quite often, journos will invent things to try you out – a kind of fishing expedition to see what they can catch. Remember that you’re the expert and that’s why the media are chasing you so don’t let them browbeat you with exaggeration, bluff or downright lies.
5. Being far too polite if you’re asked impertinent or ill-mannered questions. In my media training workshops I always advise participants to think of a social situation like drinks at the bar, a dinner party or a BBQ with neighbours – and react to the journalist as you would if you were asked such a question there. That usually makes them stand up for themselves a little more – see point 2 again.
6. Forgetting your bridging phrases and sitting there with an open mouth and blank mind. There’s any number of these phrases. I heard a new one last night on TV news that I thought was worth repeating – “look, I’m not here today to talk much about that, but I can tell you that….”
7. Failing to have key messages and delivering them. You need to develop three or four key messages and have evidence to back them up. Then, make sure you inject them into the interview - otherwise, why are you there talking to the journalist in the first place? With practice, you should stick to your messages and repeat them, with variations in the words used so it doesn’t sound like you’re repeating yourself.
8. Not injecting some “entertainment value” into the interview. Too many people believe the news media are there purely for information gathering but today’s news media, more than ever before, want that information delivered in an entertaining fashion. That could involve pithy catch-phrases, analogies, humour or scorn – any number of techniques. Perhaps just letting your own personality show is a good start.
9. Not being passionate about your messages. How can you expect to convince the journalist and his/her public about your sincerity and beliefs if you’re not being passionate about them? Nothing kills a media interview more than a lacklustre performance by the interviewee.