Archive for the 'Media' Category

Make it stop

liz joss 2 150x150 Make it stopThink back with me, children, to a time when something happened and we didn’t learn about it until minutes or even hours later—if ever. Every syllable spoken by boys in balloons and senators from Vermont wasn’t flashed across our screens instantaneously, and explaining a complex subject like health care or the designated hitter rule took thousands of words instead of 140 characters. And, if you can imagine it, some things even happened without anyone, anywhere, caring to comment.

Is it any wonder we’re all stressed out by the never-ending parade of things to worry about? Just on Monday, I worried about the vote in Afghanistan, the sincerity of George Clooney’s new girlfriend, whether there will be any swine flu vaccine left for me, the Dow’s rise, North Korea’s nukes, Ruth Reichl’s job prospects, college students’ mental health, and on and on.

But if I try and make it stop by staying away from screens for a day, I know I’ll be at a dinner party staring at the centerpiece while people all around me enjoy lively discussions on the news of the day, the hour, the minute.

So which is better? Information overload? Or willful ignorance? And is there some happy medium?

Weekly Insider 10.20.09

Drug delivery methods
Today’s Pharm 101 lesson: who decides whether medicine is in the form of a pill, a shot, a snort or worse?

Dethroning email
Email’s reign as king of communications is over. Read more about why always-on email successors such as Twitter and Facebook are faster and more fun.

If you’re happy Facebook knows it
Do you have a case of the Mondays? Thanks to Facebook’s new Gross National Happiness Index we know Thursdays are happier than Fridays and holidays make us happy.

Scary methane leaks

Read about what energy experts say is a no-brainer solution for curbing global warming.

Letterman’s lessons in crisis communications

Bruce HetrickLet’s set aside, for a moment, David Letterman’s sexual trespasses. Let’s focus, instead, on his public relations strategy.

Having advised and counseled many clients and their attorneys facing crises, I’ve watched Letterman do what too many individuals and organizations are too frightened to do: Go public first with bad news. Too often, folks facing crises hope and pray the news won’t get out; or opt not to comment because of litigation; or choose to respond in arrears with excuses and evasions.

But Letterman played offense. Here are some pages from Hetrick’s media training playbook well executed by Letterman this week and last.

Get bad news out fast for a quick story death. No, the Letterman story’s not gone. But it’s fading faster than it would have had it been unearthed by blogs, tabloids and prosecutors, then played out in the courts.

Control the first story. Because it’s used as a reference point for all the coverage that follows, whoever controls the first story often wins. By going first, Letterman controlled the message, the medium, the timing, the setting and the “I’m the victim” positioning.

Be honest. Letterman admitted wrongdoing, painful as that proved for him, his wife and his staff. Those who duck and weave lose even more credibility as the story drags on.

Say you’re sorry. Until and unless you do, no one hears anything else you have to say.

Now it’s your turn. Did Letterman turn lemons into lemonade with good PR? Or will he ultimately be crushed despite some short-term spin?