This is the way most organisations choose to work with us. You get to choose the workshop, nominate who you want to sit the session, fix a time and date that suits everyone and decide whether you want online or in-person delivery. We do the rest – even down to tweaking the training to match your specific needs. All we need is a bit of information about you so click the organise button to get the ball rolling.
Price | From £499 per session |
Our media interview training is based on a unique system designed and developed by ACM over the past 25 years and rated as highly effective by more than 12,000 individuals and 2,000 organisations. We call it the 3P® approach - a hugely practical yet remarkably straightforward way of equipping interviewees with the skills they need to stay in control of the media – even under hostile questioning. The three initials of the title stand for the planning that should be done before an interview, the process of managing an interview to avoid being dictated to by the interviewer and the promotion of key messages during an interview.
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AIMED AT
Anyone who comes into contact with the media in both good and bad news situations.
CONTENT
Introduction
A short, introductory discussion in which the programme is outlined, participants who perhaps don’t know one another are introduced, learning outcomes are shared and the methodology agreed. We also spend a little time exploring issues such as the consequences of being unavailable or making no comment and the value of shared messages e.g. all singing from the same hymn sheet in public relations terms. Throughout the day, at appropriate moments, “bite sized” examples of good and bad practice are related to participants – for example the consequences of speaking “off the record” to journalists who frankly would sell their grandmothers for the sake of a good story. Where appropriate these form the basis for further group work and discussion.
Session One – Message Process
The first session explores the process of being interviewed – whether on radio, television in print or for the web - so that interviewees understand how they can switch from being led by the questions (something that’s beyond their control) to response-led (something very much within their control). It’s an experiential session where participants acquire the practical and intellectual skills needed to switch from reactive to proactive through a series of realistic one-to-one interviews on subjects drawn from their own general or specific field of experience. These interviews (and those which follow) are recorded either as TV or radio interviews for later evaluation and feedback (both on the day and post-course).
Specific points covered include:
Session Two – Message Planning
This session builds on the first and looks at how planning in advance of the process of being interviewed can help make the whole experience much more productive, less nerve-wracking and reduce the potential for unhelpful coverage. Participants are shown and get to try for themselves a number of simple but effective planning tools and techniques. As before, it’s an experiential session where participants acquire and practice the skills needed to plan for and conduct a series of realistic one-to-one interviews.
Specific points covered include:
Session Three – Message Promotion
This session, as before, builds on the knowledge and practice of those preceding it. It explores the techniques interviewees need to deploy to make their key messages stand out so that they are remembered by a live audience or passed on via the editing process to readers, viewers, listeners and Internet users in pre-recorded interviews. The techniques are analogous to highlighting the important bits of a written document by CAPITALISATION or by bolding or underlining. Again the newly acquired skills are put to the test in a series of interviews that build on the knowledge learned in the preceding sessions.
Specific points covered include:
Close – Medium and Messenger
Having spent the majority of the course on the crucial part – message delivery - we close with a brief discussion on the other two components of the media experience – the medium and the messenger.
This session covers things like:
Additional learning material is available online and all participants can view and download their interviews after the event.
FACILITATOR
Your facilitator will be the former BBC broadcaster, Richard Uridge. He's been leading our media and communication workshops for the past 25 years and has been a journalist for 35. Which means he's highly experienced (as well as ancient) both as a trainer and as a broadcaster - a combination of huge value to his trainees.
FEEDBACK
To find out what other people think about this and other workshops click here to read their comments.
IN HOUSE
This workshop is available for in-house delivery which is cost effective if you've got more than a few people who need training with the added advantage that course content can be tailored to your specific organisational needs. Contact the trainer to discuss your requirements.
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"An excellent training session, very well run and very engaging. I would go as far as to say probably the best training session I have ever been on."