Communications training 2013 update

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Welcome and Overview Welcome and Overview

description

Communications training for field units--demonstrates strategy from the National perspective.

Transcript of Communications training 2013 update

Page 1: Communications training 2013 update

Welcome and OverviewWelcome and OverviewWelcome and OverviewWelcome and Overview

Page 2: Communications training 2013 update

NAACP Communications Team

-Eric Wingerter: Vice President of Communications & Digital Media-Derek Turner: Communications Director-Ben Wrobel: Sr. Communications Associate-Jessica Neal: Communications Associate, Voting Rights-Nicole Kenney: Communications Associate, Economic Programs

202-463-2940

NAACP Communications Team

-Eric Wingerter: Vice President of Communications & Digital Media-Derek Turner: Communications Director-Ben Wrobel: Sr. Communications Associate-Jessica Neal: Communications Associate, Voting Rights-Nicole Kenney: Communications Associate, Economic Programs

202-463-2940

Welcome and OverviewWelcome and OverviewWelcome and OverviewWelcome and Overview

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•Identify Your Goal

• Identify Your Audience

•Create a Message

•Know your Tools/Build Your Tools

•Set a Timeline

Areas for ReviewAreas for ReviewAreas for ReviewAreas for Review

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Identify GoalsIdentify GoalsIdentify GoalsIdentify Goals

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Why Should Communicate?Why Should Communicate?Why Should Communicate?Why Should Communicate?

INSPIRE INFORM

INFLU

ENCE

ACTIVATE

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Audience IdentificationAudience IdentificationAudience IdentificationAudience Identification

The media is not your primary audience, it is a conduit to get to reach your primary audience.

Your Primary Audience Can Be:•Community Members•Local Officials•National Officials•Opponents

Your Secondary Audience Can Be:National or Local TV/RadioPrint Outlets (Including Websites)Niche Press

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• MESSAGE: What you are trying to communicate about your issue -- what you care about, your values and who you are.

• FRAMES: Familiar concepts people feel comfortable with and taps into stories carried in our minds with heroes, villains, morals, causes and solutions.

• VALUES: The ideals, customs, institutions, etc., of a society toward

which the people of the group have an favorable or emotional concern for. Values may be perceived as positive (freedom, education) or negative (cruelty, crime).

Message/ Frame/Values Message/ Frame/Values Message/ Frame/Values Message/ Frame/Values

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• A message is what you are trying to communicate about your issue what you care about, your values and who you are. It defines your campaign and ultimately your vision of the world.. Without a coherent message you will be unable to mobilize people, communicate your thoughts to your audiences or create the understanding that you need to advance social change

• Messages are shaped by factors, such as current political realities, key news items of the day and the audience you are trying to reach.

• You often will need to tailor a message to a particular audience to emphasize the aspects of the issue they most care about.

MessageMessage MessageMessage

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• Frames are the familiar concepts that people feel comfortable with. Framing is the idea that communications—whether in a news story, a speech, an op-ed, or a water cooler conversation—carry implicit values, stories and world views that shape the terms of debate and determine whether problems and solutions are part of the conversation. Framing taps into stories that we carry in our heads, with heroes, villains, morals, causes and solutions.*

• When a message fits within familiar frames they are easier to internalize. When the facts don’t fit the frame, sometimes the facts are rejected.

* The Opportunity Agenda, Talking Human Rights in the United States, A Communications Toolkit pg. 9

FramesFramesFramesFrames

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ValuesValuesValuesValues

Values are the intrinsic, enduring beliefs that shape how we perceive ourselves and the world around us. There are both primary and secondary

Primary• Responsibility to care for one’s family• Responsibility to care for oneself• Personal liberty• Work• Spirituality• Honesty/integrity• Fairness/equality

Secondary• Responsibility to care for others• Personal fulfillment• Respect for authority• Love of country or culture

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Crafting Your MessageCrafting Your MessageCrafting Your MessageCrafting Your Message

Packaging Your Story•Assess the issue you are trying to promote. •Determine your spin or perspective/angle of the story.•Provide a local perspective

Human Interest•Put a human face on the issue; project aspects of story that affect people emotionally

Sound Bites•Short statements that cleverly sum up the message•Should fit familiar frames and reflect your values.

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Talking PointsTalking PointsTalking PointsTalking Points

Once you have crafted your message it is time to develop talking points. Talking points give spokespersons on the issue they key messages to be delivered to the public via the press.

There should be no more than 5 points for each issue that address the top level message. Additional points can be added as background to support the top level messages.

Points should be short, memorable and to the point. Spokespersons should be able to speak the points on air and persuasively argue an issue.

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VOTER SUPPRESSION/DEC 10th RALLY TALKING POINTSTOP LEVEL

• Our country in the midst of the greatest coordinated legislative attack on voting rights since the dawn of Jim Crow (over 100 years). In 2011 alone, 34 states legislators have introduced voter suppression legislation, with laws passing in 14 of those states, and laws pending in 8.

• New state laws are (1) Requiring voters to present unnecessary government-issued photo identification in order to vote; (2) Cutting early voting opportunities in half and ending Sunday voting; (3); Ending same-day voter registration/voting; (4); Stripping Ex criminal offenders of their right to vote.

• Reports by the Brennan Center for Justice show that these new voter suppression laws disproportionally impact people of color, working women, blue-collar workers, college students, seniors, and immigrants.

• On December 10th – Human Rights Day – The NAACP, in conjunction with dozens of civil, labor, and human rights organizations from across the country are taking a “Stand for Freedom” in New York City and protesting this attack on voting rights.

Talking Points SampleTalking Points SampleTalking Points SampleTalking Points Sample

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Press Release&

Advisory

Opinion Editorial(Op-Ed)

Press ConferenceMedia Event

Public ServiceAnnouncement

(PSA)

Letter to the Editor

Editorial BoardMeeting

Interviews

PitchingReporters

Utilizing the MediaUtilizing the MediaUtilizing the MediaUtilizing the Media

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• A brief statement from your organization or a spokesperson commenting on a breaking development, providing important background information and context, or responding to a controversial issue of concern to your organization or constituents.

• Your version of the story you want picked up by the press.

• Press releases can be distributed via email, fax or mail and can be posted on wire services.

• If you need help finding local press contacts, please let us know

Press ReleasePress ReleasePress ReleasePress Release

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Contact: NamePhoneEmail

HEADLINESub-headline

Paragraph 1: (Date Line) – Introduction to the issue

Paragraph 2: Quote from Primary Voice

Paragraph 3: Key detail(s) about the issue

Paragraph 4: Quote from second voice or additional details

Paragraph 5: Any Additional secondary information on issue

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Boilerplate

How to Write a Press ReleaseHow to Write a Press ReleaseHow to Write a Press ReleaseHow to Write a Press Release

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Contact:

Ben Wrobel

(917) 846-0658

[email protected]

NAACP President Meets with MD Governor to Discuss Death Penalty Repeal

(Annapolis, MD) – NAACP President and CEO Benjamin Todd Jealous and Maryland NAACP State Conference President Gerald Stansbury met with Maryland Governor Martin O’Malley this morning to discuss the future of the death penalty in Maryland. The NAACP has advocated for abolishing the death penalty in Maryland and other states. The meeting took place this morning from 9:30 – 10:00 am at the Maryland State House.

“We must end the death penalty in Maryland this year,” stated NAACP President and CEO Benjamin Todd Jealous. “This is a matter of justice and a matter of safety. We are optimistic that Maryland will be the sixth state in six years to abolish the death penalty. We are moving closer to abolishing it in the country as a whole.”  

A bill currently at the Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee would repeal the death penalty while reallocating $500,000 of savings annually to the Maryland Victims of Crime Fund, devoted to the needs of murder victims’ families.

“Today’s meeting went very well,” stated NAACP Maryland State Conference President Gerald Stansbury. “Our branches across the state, in conjunction with our partners, will continue to do everything they can to keep the momentum going and repeal the death penalty this year. The Prince George’s County Branch is particularly integral to this effort.”

A 2003 University of Maryland study commissioned by then-Governor Parris Glendenning found that the primary factors leading to a death sentence in Maryland are the race of the victim and the jurisdiction of the crime. Since 1978, every prisoner executed for murder in Maryland was accused of killing a white person, even though three-quarters of homicide victims in this state are black.

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Founded in 1909, the NAACP is the nation's oldest and largest civil rights organization. Its members throughout the United States and the world are the premier advocates for civil rights in their communities, conducting voter mobilization and monitoring equal opportunity in the public and private sectors.

Press Release SamplePress Release SamplePress Release SamplePress Release Sample

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• A shorter version of a press release announcing news conferences, media events, breaking news or the impending release of a report.

• The advisory should be short and alert people to the five W’s: who, what, where, when and why.

• Advisories should be sent to local press outlets as well as to the Associated Press Daybook

• A follow-up calls should be made 2-3 hours after the advisory is sent

Media AdvisoryMedia AdvisoryMedia AdvisoryMedia Advisory

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Contact:NamePhoneEmail

Advisory: NAACP & Gov. O’Malley to Make Announcement on Death Penalty Today

WHO: Name, Title and Organization; Name, Title and Organization;

WHAT:Describe the event in 2-3 sentences

WHEN/WHERE:Indicate location and time of the event

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Boilerplate

How to Write a Media AdvisoryHow to Write a Media AdvisoryHow to Write a Media AdvisoryHow to Write a Media Advisory

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Contact:

Ben Wrobel

(917) 846-0658

[email protected]

Advisory: NAACP & Gov. O’Malley to Make Announcement on Death Penalty TodayWHO:

National NAACP President and CEO Benjamin Todd Jealous; Maryland Governor Martin O'Malley;  U.S. Representative Elijah Cummings;  Maryland NAACP State Conference President Gerald Stansbury; Maryland clergy, legislators and activists.

WHAT:NAACP leaders will join with Gov. Martin O'Malley, Rep. Elijah Cummings, leaders of other civil rights and human rights organizations, as well as Maryland clergy, legislators and activists, to call for ending the death penalty in the state of Maryland. A press conference will be held at Lawyer’s Mall outside the Maryland State House on Tuesday, January 15th at noon.

The NAACP has made abolishing capital punishment in Maryland a national priority and is working with several other organizations in the state.

WHEN/WHERE:Tuesday, January 15, 12:00 noon

Senate Judicial Proceedings Committee Room,Miller Senate BuildingAnnapolis, MD 21401

To Listen in By PhoneCall in #: 866-508-2264

###Founded in 1909, the NAACP is the nation's oldest and largest civil rights organization. Its members throughout the United States and the world are the

premier advocates for civil rights in their communities, conducting voter mobilization and monitoring equal opportunity in the public and private sectors.

Media Advisory ExampleMedia Advisory ExampleMedia Advisory ExampleMedia Advisory Example

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Opinion Editorial (Op-Ed)

An article expressing a personal viewpoint written for the op-ed section of a newspaper. These often provide a subjective take on the subject matter and bring the issue back to a core value.

Tips for Op-Ed• Op-Eds should offer key facts to the audience in a persuasive way• The length should be between 500 and 750 words • Op-Eds often require exclusivity for publication by the newspaper/outlets. Once

the outlet accepts, check their guidelines to see if you can have it published elsewhere as well.

• Engage the reader in the first paragraph or else they will never read the second

Opinion/EditorialOpinion/Editorial Opinion/EditorialOpinion/Editorial

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A letter to the editor is a short letter printed in a newspaper or magazine usually responding to a story or editorial the paper has published. It provides a way to position your organization, correct an error or distortion, raise a perspective not considered and respond to negative coverage.

• Letter to the Editor Tips– Keep it short. You only have time to make one point or contradict one point – Pithy and focused– Clever and well written

Letter to the Editor Letter to the Editor Letter to the Editor Letter to the Editor

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A meeting to which members of the press are invited to hear a prepared statement and usually to ask questions about that statement

Reasons to Call a News Conference• “Breaking News“ is being released • Release of a dramatic new report • Issuance of a statement by prominent organizations or individuals• Announcement of an important campaign or action by well-known

groups or individuals • Response to tremendous press interest in an event

Media events should have visual appeal

Media EventsMedia EventsMedia EventsMedia Events

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A Public Service Announcement is an advertisement broadcast on radio or television, for the public interest. PSAs are intended to modify public attitudes by raising awareness about specific issues. A typical PSA is part of a public awareness campaign to inform or educate the public about an issue such as smoking or compulsive gambling.

• Tips For Designing A Public Service Announcement – Determine the goal of the campaign – Target your audience – Decide on spin – Identify Program Affairs Director at the station– Determine what format needed for the PSA by the outlet – After sending PSA, follow-up with a phone call to make sure it was

received. – Pitch contact on airing the PSA

Public Service AnnouncementsPublic Service AnnouncementsPublic Service AnnouncementsPublic Service Announcements

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Pitching the StoryThe best tool for garnering media attention is to pitch a reporter on a story. Develop an short persuasive statement that summarizes what makes your story (or your angle on a story) so important to cover.

Pitch Tips

• Utilize press lists to identify reporters. Keep press lists updated.

• Become knowledgeable about reporter’s prior work.

• Determine pitch prior to calling reporter & keep it brief and to the point.

• Anticipate resistance and don’t exaggerate story. Consider possible arguments and effective

responses.

• Don't give up if reporter is not interested in the story.

• If pitching television, emphasize visual nature of media event and offer a human story as

part of the package. TV usually doesn’t confirm until the day of.

• If you get voice mail, leave pitch on the voice mail.

Pitching ReportersPitching ReportersPitching ReportersPitching Reporters

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Once you have hooked a reporter with a pitch, you may be asked to be interviewed. The best person to submit for an interview is your spokesperson or a leader of the project. No matter who does the interview it is essential to prepare.

Interview Tips

• Decide if interview advances your goals and promotes your cause

• Set goals for the interview and state your message first

• Identify three key messages to deliver (Talking Points)

• Stay on message. Advance your agenda, not the interviewer's

• A reporter may try to divert you off message. If an interviewer changes the subject, bring

your answer back to the key messages of the campaign (pivot).

• Never restate the message the reporter is using to divert you during the interview.

InterviewsInterviewsInterviewsInterviews

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A sit-down meeting with newspaper editors and issue-specific reporters intended to give them in-depth information about the issue and encourage editorial support.

• When Do You Set Up Editorial Board Meetings?

• An Editorial Board Meeting should be requested if your issue is topical, your organization is pushing for a particular action, or new information is available that could persuade the paper to take or change its position.

• To build relationships with the newspaper editors and get to know them for future story opportunities

• This is a once a year request

Editorial Board MeetingEditorial Board MeetingEditorial Board MeetingEditorial Board Meeting