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Working with the Media in Your Community Phil Sparks June 12, 2014 Presentation to Chorus America.

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Presentation on theme: "Working with the Media in Your Community Phil Sparks June 12, 2014 Presentation to Chorus America."— Presentation transcript:

1 Working with the Media in Your Community Phil Sparks psparks@ccmc.org June 12, 2014 Presentation to Chorus America

2 Outline of Presentation Why Utilize the Media? Talk About "Who" the Media Is? Elements of a Media Campaign How to Reach Out to the Media

3 Why Utilize the Media? It’s a megaphone to reach the public and target audiences. Experiences of local Chorus America chapters/members.

4 Who Is the Media? Newspapers – music/arts/culture reporters especially. Radio – especially music/arts/culture reporters. Don't forget both community radio and public radio. TV – focus on mainstream, cable and community affairs programs. Social Media – examples?

5 Elements of a Media Campaign 1.Message 2.Messenger/Spokespersons 3.Target Audiences 4.Timelines 5.Resources 6.Action to Be Taken 7.Feedback/Evaluation

6 Messages – Are You Working to… Raise awareness Increase chorus membership Increase participation in choral events by public Increase community support Secure foundation/public monies Other

7 Messages – Values (Developed by Belden Russonello Strategists) Responsibility to care for one’s family »Related values: Financial obligation to care for family; obligation to care for emotional well being of family; obligation to educate, guide and discipline children; and obligation to care for the physical health and safety of one’s children Responsibility to care for oneself »Related values: Self-reliance; financial security; taking responsibility for one’s actions; and self-discipline Personal liberty »Related values: Freedom of expression; individuality; independence; freedom from obligations; reproductive freedom; and sexual freedom. Work »Related values: Working hard is good and everyone should work. Belief in God Honesty/Integrity Fairness/Equality »Related values: Justice; Golden Rule; equal opportunity; tolerance; and respect for others. 7

8 Messages – How to Design a Message Overview of Issue in Big Picture/Values Language Summary of Specific Facts/Problems Why Action is Needed Action Steps for your Audience 8

9 Possible Targets Who needs to be informed, persuaded or mobilized? Possible Targets: Segments of the public by age, race, sex, etc. Volunteers Influentials Policymakers, elected officials & bureaucrats Community leaders, advocates & activists Media professionals & journalists Business communities Foundations & corporate partners Other 9

10 Timelines Event-specific Organization-specific 10

11 Resources Earned media using volunteers 11

12 Action to be Taken Participation Fundraising Other

13 Feedback/Evaluation How did it go? What can we do better next time?

14 How to Reach Out to the Media – Tools of the Trade 14 One-on-one relationships with journalists Press briefings Press kits and written materials, online and on-paper Editorial board visits Op-ed placements Radio news interviews Video feeds and webcasts

15 The Power of Storytelling Storytelling is both an art and a science. Stories reflect – and evoke – core values and widely held beliefs. Storytelling has become the norm for most mass media. Reporters say: “I need to put a face on the facts for my audience.”

16 Summary Critical Elements for Outreach 16 Message development and framing Strong written materials in one page, 3-5 page summaries User/reporter friendly websites Local mainstream and new(er) social media Op-ed strategies Radio strategy (AM and FM) news and talk Cultivate a reporter corps and develop a beat Made-for-cable events

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18 For More Information: Phil Sparks psparks@ccmc.org 18


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