BEACHHUT

Enter password

Not quite. Try again.

BEACHHUT
Beachhut PR

Media Training

Getting your story across, on any platform.

BEACHHUT
In this session

Four things, one goal.

01 · The media opportunity

What happens when an interview lands, and how we make the most of every one.

02 · Interview preparation

Formats and mediums, from live TV to podcasts and print, and how to prepare for each.

03 · Language & messaging

What to say, what to avoid, and how to steer the conversation back to your story.

04 · The mock interview

Putting it all into practice, with feedback in the room.

BEACHHUT
The media opportunity

Before you're in the room.

1 · The invite

Once the interview is confirmed, we share the calendar invite outlining the format: Google Meet, Zoom or in person.

2 · The briefing document

In advance, we provide a media briefing covering logistics, the purpose of the interview, a bio of the journalist with relevant articles or clips, possible questions and key messaging.

3 · The mock interview

Where necessary, we schedule a short mock interview to run through the messaging together.

BEACHHUT
Why it matters

An opportunity to engage.

With the journalist

Coverage is the goal, but a relationship-building conversation with a journalist can bring long-term results.

With the audience

Tell people about your business, product or event in clear, accessible language, without sounding like a sales pitch.

With your customers

Media opportunities feed GEO (generative engine optimisation), SEO, brand recognition, credibility and company storytelling.

BEACHHUT
Interview preparation

Broadcast: TV, radio and podcasts.

  • TV: short soundbytes, live or pre-recorded. Always behave as if it's live.
  • Radio: news programmes use shorter interviews than magazine-style shows. Expect a webcam in the studio.
  • Podcast: more relaxed, more time; longer formats of 30 to 45 minutes.
  • Formats: in-studio (formal), on location, or "down the line" (remote, speaking to a camera or mic).

Live

One and done. Not edited, not scripted.

Pre-recorded

Edited, and you can ask to start again.

BEACHHUT
Interview preparation

Print and digital.

  • Longer, more in-depth interviews focusing on a news announcement, the background of the company or a feature profile.
  • Print journalists need quotes. Give them lines worth printing.
  • Formats: in person, over the phone, or virtually via Zoom, Teams or Meet.

Virtual interviews: make sure your lighting is good and your sound is clear, and look at the camera, not at the interviewer.

BEACHHUT
Interview preparation

Four things to remember.

Off the record

The journalist can't quote you or use any of the information you gave them.

On background

The journalist can use the information without quoting you, as in "a source said".

BEACHHUT
Language & messaging

Try to...

BEACHHUT
Language & messaging

Avoid...

Q: "There's been massive anger about product glitches. It's obvious you rushed the release?"
A: "We're addressing the issues some users are experiencing, and this update is part of a longer-term upgrade to our security infrastructure. We want every customer to get the seamless experience they expect."

BEACHHUT
Language & messaging

Say it with confidence.

Instead of...

Try saying...

"We may..."

"We will..."

"I think..." or "I feel..."

"I believe..." "Here's what we know."

"It seems..."

"It's clear that..."

"We're trying..."

"We are doing..."

And never say "No comment."

BEACHHUT
Language & messaging

Bridging statements.

A bridging statement steers the conversation back to what you'd like to talk about.

The ABC technique

A · Acknowledge the question in a brief, honest way. Don't ignore it.

B · Bridge with a short transition phrase towards what you'd like to discuss.

C · Communicate your message.

Bridges that work

"What's most important here is..." · "Actually, that relates to the bigger issue, which is..." · "Another thing to remember is..." · "That's not how I see it. Going back to..." · "That's a concern, but our clients are telling us that..." · "I can't speak on their behalf, but what I can tell you is..."

BEACHHUT
Language & messaging

...it's the way that you say it.

Bridging is obvious, so it needs to be done well.

"Yes, we missed the launch date of our product, but we wanted to make sure our customers experience the best quality we have to offer. It's out now and we're delighted with the final result."
Then: can you dangle any other information of interest?

BEACHHUT
In the moment

Don't know the answer? Take your time.

If you don't know

Admit it, and offer an explanation.

If someone else can answer it, tell the journalist you can connect them. Then follow up.

Every interview is also a relationship-building opportunity, making it more likely they come back to you next time.

Buying seconds

Get comfortable with silence. Give yourself a few seconds to develop your answer.

Ask the journalist to repeat the question.

BEACHHUT
Content

Let the opportunity drive your content, not the other way around.

  • Research the journalist, the outlet and the opportunity.
  • Be tactful: if the interview relates to job losses, it's not the time to gloat about profits.
  • Touch on your key messages, but an interview is not always a sales pitch. Be a thought leader when called for and a salesperson when needed.
  • Let the journalist know why you're the expert, without coming across as braggadocious.
  • Offer to stay in touch: follow the journalist on LinkedIn and X.
BEACHHUT
Visuals

Look the part, on camera.

What to wear

Plain colours and simple textures read clearly on camera.

  • Check your background.
  • Sit up straight.
  • Make eye contact.
  • Be aware of your movements.
  • Compliment your speech with the occasional gesture.
What not to wear

Busy patterns strobe and distract on screen.

BEACHHUT
On the day

Bring yourself.

Don't waffle. Be clear, concise and quote-worthy.

BEACHHUT

Questions?

BEACHHUT
Putting it into practice

The Mock Interview

Photography: Unsplash (ThisisEngineering, Jacob Hodgson, Christin Hume, Bank Phrom, Nimble Made, Jonathan Adams, Headway, Austin Distel)