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The Right Way and Wrong Way to Do Media Interviews by Email

March 20th, 2008 @ 1:56 pm

3 Comments

Categories: Crisis PR, Mainstream Media, Management, Media Relations, PR Ethics, PR Tips, Public Relations

Tags: Media, University, College Athletic, E-mail, Online Communications, Jon Greer

An emerging PR tactic is to insist on being interviewed by email. It allows the interview subject to have almost total control of the information provided to the journalist, and creates a record of what was said.

I recommend this tactic when appropriate. Times when it is appropriate include: when time is short and the interview subject doesn’t have time for a verbal interview; when the journalist has a known track record as a bully, distorter or poor interviewer; and when the interview subject has something terrible to hide and wants to avoid as much scrutiny as possible.

None of these conditions existed, as far as I can tell, in the University of Michigan-Ann Arbor News case. To summarize, the Ann Arbor News was preparing a story on “how and why many student-athletes land in the [university's] general studies degree program.” The series, which ran this week, is a damning portrayal of the use of easy courses to keep student athletes from losing their eligibility to play big-time collegiate sports.

This is sad but hardly devastating. Big-time college athletics is a corrupt system through and through.

The paper sought an in-person or phone interview with university president Mary Sue Coleman, who would only agree to an email interview, which the paper declined. So as a result, the series ran without comment from the leader of the university.

From the story:

A university spokesman said Coleman was too busy to be interviewed, but eventually offered to answer questions via e-mail.

Too busy? Puh-leeze. That line begs for a Freedom of Information Act request to review her schedule. How could she not have an hour or two to prepare for and give an interview? After all, she was willing to be interviewed by email, and that would have required some time, even if an underling drafted the responses.

It was lame of Michigan to duck legitimate questions about its student-athlete program. Once again, here we are talking about something we would have heard little about if they had just given the interview.

The paper isn’t without fault, either. I don’t blame them for not wanting to be manipulated, but they could have accepted her emailed answers and reprinted them with a caveat about their origin. To get into a tiff about the terms of the interview so that a major figure in the story is excluded is short-sighted and detracts from the impact of the story.

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    1

    richy@...

    03/20/08 | Report as spam

    Email intvws: lazy journos?

    "An emerging PR tactic is to insist on being interviewed by email." Huh?

    Jon - apparently you haven't had the pleasure of dealing with vertical and horizontal IT trade journalists recently. They're actually the ones who, more often than not, insist upon email interviews. Why? a) It's easier and more efficient for them to take a few approved email soundbites to weave into their story rather than spending 45 mins on the horn b) more and more they're freelancers who just want to submit the job, no matter what c) they don't have a care in the world about what they're writing about, nor do they know the topic, but who cares, as long as they file the copy...

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    2

    jongreer

    03/21/08 | Report as spam

    Good point

    This is why I write the posts -- I definitely don't know all there is to know in PR, and I invite dialogue!

    In the tactical sense, I was referring to the tactic as a proactive step by the source, not coming from the journo side. And obviously in this case, the media wanted the in-person interview and the source offered email only.

    As to journos who don't even bother asking for the face to face -- this is a great opportunity for us! Create some well-crafted, media-friendly messages, fire them off and get them placed in the story, without having to rely on the poorly trained spokesperson! I'm serious -- don't look this gift-horse in the mouth...

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    3

    bugmenot@...

    03/21/08 | Report as spam

    RE: The Right Way and Wrong Way to Do Media Interviews by Email

    I disagree. The newspaper's full of jerks. They're babies. They didn't get their way, so they threw a fit to make the uni look bad. Probably a bunch of rich white kids who were spoon fed so much self-esteem ******** growing up that they can't handle rejection. No wonder public trust in the media is in the gutter.

    Listen, the university DIDN'T DECLINE to answer their questions. IT ANSWERED THEM. The university, or any organization or individual, has the right and prerogative to determine HOW it will answer a reporter's questions.

    If I was the university, I would post the newspaper's questions and the president's answers 1) on the university Web site, 2) as a letter-to-the-editor to the newspaper, and 3) if possible, as comments to the story on the newspaper's Web site (just like this comment you're reading right now).

    We can't stop punk ******* with journalism degrees from being babies. But we can still get our messages out and expose them for the morally bankrupt sluts they are. Peace, *******.

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