Preparing For The Crisis News Conference by DR. Noha Sami
Preparing For The Crisis News Conference by DR. Noha Sami
Preparing For The Crisis News Conference by DR. Noha Sami
Conference
By DR. Noha Sami
When to Hold a News Conference
Successful news conferences have similar and important components. This checklist will help
you decide whether a news conference is a useful approach for your crisis, even it satisfies the
press only temporarily.
Telephone/Skype:
The telephone is used increasingly because of its instant availability, convenience, and real-
time value. Limitless ports are available through dozens of service providers. Telephone-
type conferences are usually one-way where the reporter e-mails or texts questions, which
are responded to, hopefully, in real time as well.
The “analyst call” technique can also be used. In this format, an operator assists the person
who convenes the teleconference by serving as the contact point during the call for listeners
who want to be put in a queue from which they can ask a question in real time. All parties to
the call hear participant questions along with the spokesperson’s response.
Mass call providers today offer three kinds of teleconferencing services:
1. Hosted, one-way, listen-only call in which participants simply dial a designated number,
are greeted by an operator, and placed in a queue until the conference call begins.
2. Fully automated conference call in which no operators are involved, the host notifies
participants of the call-in numbers (which have been selected by a computer), and time of
the call by e-mail or another convenient means. The call proceeds without any telephone
company intervention.
3. Operator-assisted call in which an operator notifies participants, starts the call, stays on
the line, and takes question requests from participants. The operator either queues
questioners on a first-come basis or queues callers in the order suggested by the
teleconference convener. Using this format you can control which questions get asked and in
which order.
e-Conferences
The Internet has become a useful tool for news conferences. So-called e-conferences have
revolutionized the news conference. This format not only permits excellent back-and-forth
between reporters and subjects, but also allows the use of a variety of media, examples,
and prepared material. Reporters may make specific requests, and responses can be e-
mailed back immediately, even while the e-conference is in progress.
What sets the e-conference apart is that reporters not only can “attend” from their desks or
another convenient location of their choice, but they can also be transported electronically
to other locations and sites to look at and ask questions about what is happening on that
scene, or to get information from other resources. The goal is twofold: a better-educated
reporter and a better chance of the news conference resulting in the stories that reflect
your desired messages.
Webcast/Web streaming
Streaming technology is improving and is becoming a dominant crisis response
methodology. For example, most investment houses now have literally non-stop telecasting
from their broker floors – either to various news outlets or to networks of their own
viewers, listeners, and customers. The content is edited and broadcast to traditional
television channels.
News Conference Planning Checklists
Setting Communications Objectives :
Here is a procedure for identifying your communication objective and defining the messages
that you need to convey.
Step 1: Write out your communication objective for the news conference in up to 150 words
(about one minute of speaking time) each.
Step 2: Try to state, in a sentence or two each, up to three really important messages or
themes about the topic or subject of your news conference.
Step 3: Say your communication objective and your messages out loud (rehearse) and refine
the language so that you can say them comfortably and often.
Step 4: Draft your second or third communication objective as described in step 1 and
develop messages as described in steps 2 and 3.
Achieving a single communication objective supported by a handful of messages is a major
accomplishment in the brief time you will have available in the crisis news conference. The
purpose for constructing the language and the words in the way described here is that they
become a script. No matter what happens during the news conference in terms of questions
or answers, you will always be able to come back to your scripted communication objective
and messages.
The Opening Statement
Once you have completed the development of your communication objective, drafting your
opening statement becomes relatively easy. Nevertheless, here are the attributes of a good
opening statement:
- Up to 150 words in length (one minute of speaking time).
- Positive words and language.
- Packaged or bundled key ideas in groupings of three facts, five ideas, four key thoughts,
etc.
- Constructed to generate specific and positive follow-up questions first.
- Stands on its own and gives complete information (who, what, why, where, when, and
how).
- Creates the positive perception you seek from reporters and, therefore, from their
readers, viewers, and listeners.
- Contains benefits to the reporters and their audiences beyond the features of the topic
or reason for which you are having the news conference.
Preparation
Learn to relax in intense circumstances. Focused preparation, proper diaphragmatic
breathing, and tension releasing exercises can reduce stress. Before you move into the news
conference area, try some sequential isometric exercises beginning in the lower part of your
body and then moving upward to your neck muscles, loosening or tightening muscle groups
in sequence.
Use a voice or video recorder to rehearse your statements, ideas, and messages out loud.
Listen to yourself. Be self-critical. Edit the language. Make it sound like you. The more time
you truly rehearse out loud, the better you’re likely to be in-person in front of the
microphone.
Set Ground Rules
Ground rules outline what will be permitted and what will not be permitted along with what
is expected of the presenter(s) and of the reporters who attend the news conference.
Typical examples of ground rules relate to the: