Getting your story reported
Introduction
Top Tips
- Know how the media works and play to it
- Find a local angle to every story
- Make your stunts exciting, but with a clear and rational aim!
How can you get your story reported? If you know how the media works, with a bit of practise you can be front page news!
Which media should you contact?
Try as many of these as you feel up to - maybe start small and work up! Think where you’ve seen similar stories before.
- Sixth Form newsletter: probably the easiest to start with, and the most useful for you as a group. The best way to do this is to get to know someone who produces the newsletter. They’re usually short of news, and if you get them on side they can become key campaign allies.
- Local papers and radio: They love stories about young people doing interesting things, and especially photo opportunities, so it’s worth press releasing them.
- Alternative media: You can get your stories out to activist networks through all kinds of alternative publications. Two examples are the Independent Media Centre, a website to which you can add your own news, and Schnews, a weekly activists newsletter in paper and email form.
- Press associations: The press association distribute news to media around the country, so if you can get them to include your story, you have instant access to a huge range of media. To do that, you simply send them a news release by email to copy@pa.press.net.
- National media: If you think your story’s good enough, why not release it to the national media? You can send your press release by email or fax (fax by email using The Phone Company’s remote printing service). They hold stories on file, so even if you don´t make it in first time, they may look you up sometime in the future.
Case Study- Arthur Mellows Village College
The P&P group at Arthur Mellows Village College near Peterborough The Evening Telegraph
Background work
You will need to do a little research. Get together the following information for your target media:
- Editorial/news e-mail address (e-mail is the preferred method of getting news for most media outlets now).
- Editorial/news phone & fax number.
- Deadline - find out by when they need stories, as there’s no point sending them news if it’s too late for them to use it!
- Name and contact details of the staff who produce the Sixth Form newsletter.
Now give them a call and introduce yourself. Explain a little about your group, what you do and why. Tell them you’re available for comment (assuming you are) on the issues you work on, and say you will send them press releases whenever your group does things. You might want to offer to write articles on eco/social issues, or help them put together a feature.
This may seem a bit like selling double-glazing, but don’t feel apologetic. You want your story out there, but they also need news to survive, and what you’re doing is good news - exciting, controversial, local action on global issues. You’re in control - with a little confidence, you’ll soon find that they will often come to you for quotes and comments, and you’ll become indispensable!
Getting the story out
Now you’ve done the background stuff, it’s time to get the story out there. You’ll usually do this through a ‘press release’, an interview, a letter to the editor, or some combination of the three.
To get news attention your story must be a current issue, or a current development of a long running issue. If you’re going for local coverage, it must also have a local angle.
Finding the right angle
To get coverage of a story it is important to present it attractively to the journalist. For local news this angle must have some obvious local significance or relevance. Any story that requires complex reader knowledge of financial, economic or political matters will have difficulty in gaining coverage. Examples of good local-angle ‘headlines’ connected to international issues are:
- Students lobby local MP on trade justice
- Local MP endorses students’ Stop Climate Chaos campaign
- Local P&P group raises over £1000 in aid of Fairtrade campaign
- Local factory involved in production of chemical weapons
When writing these stories the journalist will have to include some background information on the issue for the reader. As a result the general public learns of the issues through news stories directly. The amount of coverage a pressure group obtains will largely be determined by the quantity and quality of the stories it provides for the media. The quality, as viewed by the journalist, is related to two things:
- Up to date: in most frequent publications news stories are about current events, not situations. The existence of a given situation - poverty, the unfairness of the international trade system - does not count as news. However, changes in a given situation or the revelation of new facts about a situation often are considered as news.
- Reader interest: for the commercial media the overwhelming priority is news that sell papers or attract viewers. Unfortunately, this does not always mean news of true importance.
Campaigners talk about finding a ‘hook’ - something to make a situation newsworthy and interesting. The hook for a campaign on a company might be a student boycott. Students not being apathetic about politics is a good hook, at least for local media. Finding the hook will be the most important part of your media strategy.
Press stunts
Campaigning organisations frequently to act as a ‘hook’, attracting media attention to the issues they are concerned about. It is often surprising how much coverage small, seemingly insignificant events can get in the local press, especially on slow news days. When planning an event, keep the needs of the media in mind. They look for events that are:
- Imaginative: try to brainstorm creative and original ideas with your group. One of the reasons for the drop in the coverage of marches and rallies is that the media have become bored with them. Your events should therefore aim to capture the attention of the media by being a bit different.
- Visual: by providing a great photo opportunity, your message will gain coverage by accompanying the image.
- Relevant: try to come up with some clear link between the event and the issue.
The range of newsworthy events is very broad, from meetings to demonstrations. Events are sometimes held with the sole intention of gaining coverage. Greenpeace, for example, favour draping large banners from conspicuous structures. Editors are increasingly reluctant to cooperate with these publicity stunts if they feel they are being ‘used’ and it is often better to hold a real event for the media to cover.
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