Sometimes when discussing the importance of media training a potential client will say, “I think I can handle a media interview myself.”
“Oh, have you done TV interviews previously?” I will ask.
“Well, no. But I give a ton of speeches and negotiate major contracts all the time. I can certainly handle a TV interview. I can wing it!
Business people often fail to realize veteran reporters can instantly tell whether a person being interviewed knows what he/she is doing or not. Without training, in essence, you have just entered a gunfight with a knife. Or you are simply unarmed.
At this point I often review just a few aspects that make a media interview (particularly a TV one) far different than anything a person will face during day-to-day business operations.
Let’s just look a few unique questions that can be asked about a TV interview:
* Where will the interview take place? Your office? At the news station? A neutral site?
* Who is the reporter that will be interviewing you? What kind of stories does he/she do? Friendly? Not so friendly?
* What is the topic? What is the deadline?
* Will this be an informational (we call it a Chamber of Commerce) interview or a tough one?
* How should you dress for the interview? Should you wear make-up (guys)?
* When you are asked to do a microphone check what will you do?
* Where should you look during the interview? What should you do with your hands?
* What is your plan to your key points across in 15-20 seconds?
* Will you control the interview or effectively be a TV pinada?
* If you are asked a hypothetical question how will you answer it?
* If you are asked a tough question how will you get the interview back to the points you want to make?
These are just a handful of the questions and issues that arise involving just about every TV interview. For some individuals a TV interview can be a career maker or—breaker.
Remember, this is not a presentation to ten co-workers, but an audience that numbers in the thousands. When you add in social media feedback your audience can climb into the millions!
At Bottom Line Communications our goal is to even the playing field when doing a TV interview. We want clients to understand the basic media rules before they jump into an interview and we have trained more than 450 individuals to achieve positive results.
The reality is most executives have moved up the ranks due to their business and management expertise, not their TV interviewing skills. They wouldn’t go into a Board of Directors meeting without doing their homework. The same applies to media training.
Email John Landsberg to learn how Bottom Line can help you handle media interviews like a professional.







