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Speaking with confidence

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Title: Speaking with confidence


1
Speaking with confidence
Techniques for the effective spokesperson

2
Todays Goals
  • Staying on message
  • Handling tough questions
  • Maintaining control over story content
  • Avoiding misquotes
  • Understanding soundbites
  • Communicating in a crisis

3
Who is this guy?
  • An investigation of security violations is under
    way at Los Alamos ... As for the reports of
    e-mail security violations, spokesman Kevin Roark
    said
  • ...... Kevin Roark told The Chronicle on Friday.
    Roark also said Holian's statistical charts
    showing Los Alamos' high performance in safety
    miss the point. ...
  • National Public Radio Kevin Roark is a lab
    spokesman. Mr. KEVIN ROARK (Spokesman, Los Alamos
    National Laboratory) No one's been idle. The lab
    has been open. ...
  • CBS News Lab spokesman Kevin Roark said Los
    Alamos officials are "eager to explain all the
    lab has done in response to this latest incident
    and to outline for the ...

4
Resources
http//www.agu.org/sci_soc/MediaGuide.pdf
The Crisis Store James Lucaszewski
http//www.e911.com/
5
A Favorite Interview
6
Media in the Information Age
  • We find ourselves at a crossroads
  • Journalism -- what has become of it?
  • http//www.journalism.org/
  • The Internets effect on the practice
  • Radical ideas

7
New Delivery Systems
  • Weblogs
  • e-Papers
  • Broadcast web

8
New Rules of Engagement
  • New kinds of news sources
  • Reporting opinion as fact
  • Sins of omission
  • Standards of inaccuracy
  • Inconsistent reporter behavior

9
Feeling hopeless?
  • All is not lost
  • Our jobs are just harder
  • Preparation is the key

10
New Communication Techniques
  • Managing expectations
  • Making communications a process
  • Communication planning
  • Key Consent Factors
  • Messaging The Triangle

11
Break
12
Working with a message triangle
13
Working with a message triangle
Key Message Point ?Proof Pointwhere possible,
incorporate throughout your message triangle such
message enhancers as specific examples
meaningful statistics analogies, metaphors
similes the Three Cs (colorful words,
clichés, contemporary references) one-liners,
personal experience quotes from expertsor your
opposition Proof Point Proof Point Subsidiary
bullet Subsidiary bullet Proof Point
MAIN MESSAGE (TYPICALLY UNSTATED)
14
Working with a message triangle
15
Working with a message triangle
Off-message question or issue to
redirect Point Point Subsidiary bullet Subsidiary
bullet Bridge to a key message above whenever
possible
Off-message question or issue to
redirect Point Point Subsidiary bullet Subsidiary
bullet Bridge to a key message above whenever
possible
Off-message question or issue to
redirect Point Point Subsidiary bullet Subsidiary
bullet Bridge to a key message above whenever
possible
16
Working with a message triangle
17
Reduced performance anxiety
  • Stagecraft
  • Rehearsal
  • Simplicity
  • Brevity
  • Enthusiasm
  • Accuracy

18
Anatomy of a soundbite
  • How are soundbites captured?
  • How are they used?
  • How soundbites have changed
  • How to get the soundbite of your choosing into
    the story

19
Break
20
Crisis Communications
  • What is a crisis?
  • Anticipating versus reacting

21
Crisis
  • News clipping research by the Institute for
    Crisis Management shows that 86 percent of crises
    stem from issues previously known to management,
    so-called smoldering crises. Only a small
    percentage of crises arise from the stereotypical
    sudden crisis, such as an explosion, fire, or
    industrial accident. Clearly, the majority of
    crises can be anticipatedand potentially
    prevented from ever becoming a crisis in the
    first place.

22
Crisis defined
  • CrisisAn event, other than a declared emergency,
    that creates or threatens to create an unusually
    high level of harshly negative media coverage and
    external criticism.
  • EmergencyAs defined by your Emergency Management
    organization or police force. Emergency
    Communications are wholly separate from and would
    supersede crisis communications activities.
  • IssueAn external or internal factor, usually
    mid- to long-term, that threatens your
    institutions interests, especially those that
    could prove damaging to the institutions
    reputation.

23
10 steps to effective crisis planning
  • Start now to establish a method for identifying
    and anticipating potential crises.
  • Form a crisis response team.
  • Include individuals from all key functions.
  • The team should be well practiced before handling
    a crisis.
  • The team must be empowered and able to respond
    quickly.
  • Identify and understand interests of target
    audiences.
  • Establish and maintain open lines of
    communication between team members, spokesperson,
    Lab management, and audiences (internal and
    external).
  • Work with the media, not against them.
  • Realize that appearance and tone are important.

24
10 steps to effective crisis planning
  • Identify a central spokesperson during a crisis
    it is vital that the institution or organization
    speak with and through a single voice.
  • Be watchful for and mindful of the emotional
    response intellectual arguments are worthless in
    the face of public anger.
  • Control the information stay in front of the
    release of factsdont be reactive.
  • Constantly evaluate your messages and feedback.
    Dont fear a rapidly changing situation change
    tactics when necessary.

25
Avoid the common failure patterns
  • Mismanaging the victim dimension It is the
    treatment of victims that maintains or destroys
    trust and reputation.
  • Failing to involve the boss For any crisis
    response to succeed, the boss or someone the boss
    trusts must be involved from the very beginning
    of the planning process.
  • The presumption of readiness A 2003 study by
    Guardsmark, a security consulting firm, estimated
    that 75 percent of American businesses are
    significantly under prepared for a crisis or
    serious emergency.

26
Avoid the common failure patterns
  • Over-generalized planning Crisis prevention and
    response require scenario-based approaches -
    picking specific potential problems and working
    them through using a highly organized approach.
  • Failing to recognize that crises are truly
    different Failure occurs when serious problems
    are treated as normal course of business.

27
Beware of revisionist history
  • Sooner or later you will have to answer these
    basic questions
  • What did you know, and when did you know it?
  • What did you do, and when did you do it?

28
Crisis during emergencies
  • Deal with the problemNOW
  • Tend to the victims
  • Deal with employees
  • Manage those indirectly involved
  • Deal with the criticsThe self appointed self
    anointed

29
Crisis communications rules
  • OPENNESS
  • Availability and willingness to respond
  • TRUTHFULLNESS
  • Unconditional honesty is the only policy
  • RESPONSIVENESS
  • Recognize that all concerns are by definition
    legitimate and must be addressed.
  • TRANSPARENCY
  • No secrets behavior and attitude must be beyond
    reproach
  • ENGAGEMENT
  • Actively seek out and contact those with
    concerns

30
Profiles in Jello
  • The seven mistakes managers make in a crisis
  • DENIAL
  • VICTIM CONFUSION
  • TESTOSTERONE POISONING
  • FEAR OF THE MEDIA
  • ARROGANCE
  • SEARCH FOR THE GUILTY
  • INDECISION
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