It is simply amazing in this day and age that prominent people will do media interviews without any preparation. “Winging” a media interview is a prescription for disaster.
Would a business executive enter a negotiation without any preparation? Of course not.
But doing a media interview that will be seen or heard by thousands of customers and stakeholders without planning is ignorant.
Recently a CNN Analyst did just that (LINK). Civil rights attorney Areva Martin went on a Sirius XM radio show and accused her host of not understanding issues because of white privilege.
“David, by virtue of being a white male, you have white privilege,” said Martin. Unfortunately for her, the host David Webb, is black.
“Areva, I hate to break it to you, but you should’ve been better prepped,” he said. “I’m black.”
That exchange never should have occurred. Martin should have been thoroughly briefed on who was interviewing her, what topics would be covered, his or her biases, interview tactics, race, views, religion, etc.
The key is no interview surprises. The way that is accomplished is by diligent preparation by your media professional.
As an example, we prepped a telecom executive on an upcoming newspaper reporter interview. It was to be conducted via phone.
We explained to the executive that the reporter was very knowledgeable about his industry. The reporter had been with the paper for more than 10 years. We discussed his age, religion, family, where he lived, the tone of previous stories, his goals, etc. No item was too small.
We had spoken to the reporter before setting up the interview and were told the general areas that would be covered. However, we let the executive know this reporter will likely try to get into other challenging areas.
The reporter generally started interviews with puffball questions (Your company has really grown. Why is that? Why has your leadership style been so successful?) At this point, the executive frequently felt he was in charge of the interview. Wrong.
The third or fourth question was guaranteed to be a killer (I understand competitors are stealing market share. How do you respond to that charge? I’ve been told morale at your company is extremely low…).
Without preparation, most executives would wilt as questions went from puffball to crushing. However, if they know it is coming they are ready.
The goal for all media interviews should be for no surprises. And that is only accomplished through preparation.







