25 Years, 25 Lessons: “A four-word master class in media training.”
Thursday, November 4th, 2010Get.
To.
The.
Point.
Take a look at the rest of our health care PR tips from our “25 Years, 25 Lessons” series.
Get.
To.
The.
Point.
Take a look at the rest of our health care PR tips from our “25 Years, 25 Lessons” series.
Conventional thinking says that for a public relations agency to successfully implement healthcare communications around the world it must have offices and staff in multiple locations to be effective in those markets.
The truth is, while the presence of these satellite offices seemed to provide assurance to clients that the job would be well executed, it was far from guaranteeing a positive outcome. Too often, all it guaranteed was a larger invoice.
In a global business economy connected by a range of modern communications technologies, that model is irrelevant.
What remains relevant? Success! Keep that in mind when choosing your partners.
Take a look at the rest of our health care PR tips from our “25 Years, 25 Lessons” series.
It was once possible to painstakingly gather facts and assemble a response, a time-consuming process that would enable the client to have a larger influence in a story. Today, though, a difference of seconds can mean losing the ability to be the source of factual information.
The crisis response must evolve to ensure that an accurate, meaningful perspective is communicated as rapidly as possible.
Two approaches make that possible.
A scenario approach permits a thoughtful, considered solution that can be delivered within time constraints. It requires considerable education ahead of time to fully understand the complexities behind the issues – the players, the science and the data.
A small decision-making group can be assembled and employed in several ways. They can anticipate the obvious areas of concern and create the Standard Operating Procedure to address communications in each crisis: gathering information that would be necessary and creating templates to be used in communicating to every relevant constituency.
It’s not always possible to be in front of every story, especially in a crisis. But it is possible to address it transparently, accurately, productively and rapidly. Careful planning will get you there.
Take a look at the rest of our health care PR tips from our “25 Years, 25 Lessons” series.
In the time it’s taken you to get to this final page, someone has had an idea that will change your job in the next six months. You’ve gotten a dozen emails. And there are 20 new posts in your RSS reader.
It’s a fact of life – as the slogan says, “Life happens fast.”
Rather than let that panic you into a standstill, accept that information is not a measured drip into your inbox.
It’s a river, and you’re standing next to it. Look upstream and downstream. If you try to take it all in at once, you’ll drown. But if you can see what’s coming and where you’re going, you’ll stay in control and on top.
Take a look at the rest of our health care PR tips from our “25 Years, 25 Lessons” series.
In a time when communication occurs in short, brief, and rapid succession, stay away from lengthy and overly wordy emails. Find a way to say it in two sentences. If you’re interesting, you’ll get a chance to expand later.
Take a look at the rest of our health care PR tips from our “25 Years, 25 Lessons” series.
MCS has a significant presence in the annual Healthcare Issue of O’Dwyer’s, the bible of the PR business. This October issue of O’Dwyer’s lists MCS’ ranking as number 11 out of the top 100 healthcare PR firms in the country. It also features a write-up on the agency, which draws attention to our creativity, service and results,
as well as an MCS advertisement on page 20 highlighting our privileged partnership with more than 100 organizations in the pharmaceutical and biotechnology industry.
O’Dwyer’s is the number-one publication for PR and marketing professionals and has provided the latest inside news pertaining to public relations and marketing communications nationwide since 1968.
To read more about O’Dwyer’s recognizing MCS’ 25 years of outstanding creativity, service, and results, read our previous blog post here.
Never forget who your audience is.
When you’re communicating complex data, you must be able to be as technically adept as any professionals, but also able to boil the concept down to its elements for a novice audience. And, you must always remember to which audience you’re speaking.
Using the right language to communicate to them will improve your audience’s understanding and engagement every time.
Take a look at the rest of our health care PR tips from our “25 Years, 25 Lessons” series.
Patients can be surprisingly willing to share their stories, especially when a therapy has made a dramatic and positive impact on their life. Communicating their struggles and triumphs puts a human face on the value of pharmaceuticals and is at the core of all we do in healthcare public relations.
Take a look at the rest of our health care PR tips from our “25 Years, 25 Lessons” series.
Leading pharma analytics company and MCS client Qforma (www.qforma.com) was featured this week in NJBIZ, in a section called “Making It,” which profiles how different NJ businesses are handling the economic downturn’s challenges and opportunities. Al Reicheg, Qforma’s Chief Commercial Officer, was interviewed and photographed for the full-page article, which appeared in yesterday’s issue of NJBIZ. The article explores the colorful history, unique services and recent success of this company, which has offices in Princeton and SantaFe. Check out this week’s issue to read the full article, which NJBIZ subscribers can also access online by clicking here: http://www.njbiz.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=83689:targeted-marketing-keeps-firms-on-track&catid=135:other-news&Itemid=2
With a novel, you read 400 pages to get to the conclusion – but with a media interview, you must begin with the end.
Arm yourself with the single most important point you want them to take away. Then make every effort to incorporate that message into your response to the reporter’s first question – because there may not be a second question. Use the entire interview as an opportunity to bridge back to that message whenever possible and relevant.
And when the journalist wraps the interview and asks: “Thanks, I have what I need, is there anything you care to add?” – don’t miss this opportunity to reiterate your key message one final time.
You want the last thing your interviewer hears, to be the first thing they remember.
Take a look at the rest of our health care PR tips from our “25 Years, 25 Lessons” series.