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Suggest You - Media Training Tips: Maximising Your Media Moment
So, What is Project Management? Try Project Based Working, it Will Help You foyle that slow, fluid and deliberate movements will give you more referent power, charisma and personal magnetism.Look around any organisation – large, medium and small. You have people, professional staff engaged in projects. These can include for example:1. service improvements 2. costs reduction 3. product development 4. staff development 5. improved salesWhere someone or a team are engaged in delivering a change, then you have a clear project and need to apply project management principles. But as we will show below, many people fail to recognise that the application to day-to-day work of some of the tools within project management can help them enormously and answer a key question!So, what is that questions? By far the most popular asked on any of our project management events is…..what is a project and what is not as TIP: Watch your interviews with the sound off to get a better idea of what your body language is doing in the interview. 5. Keep Calm. Assertive, aggressive, even angry reporters will fire off questions at you quickly, like bullets spitting from a machinegun. Their speech patterns will be intense and fast. Do not get drawn into mirroring and matching these patterns. In these situations, take a breath and speak more slowly than the interviewer. 6. Memorise Your Three Key Points. You must be able to deliver these flawlessly without reading notes. Firstly, write them down. Writing things down helps fix them in the mind and seeing them written down also helps. Then compose a visual picture of the actual words. Visually place them in Gossip and the Destruction of Careers Media training is a 'must do' professional development program for any serious leader or manager.Does your career have a worm embedded in it, destroying it secretly, as you perform the tasks you believe will assure success. Nothing makes standing in a supermarket line more enjoyable than reading the tabloids, finding out some gossip on the celebrity of our choice. And it's so innocent, harmful to no one. As a matter of fact, it seems the more gossip piled on an individual in those pages, the higher the salary they're able to command for their next project. But you can be assured, this equation doesn't apply to you. Gossip not only will not enhance your salary, it has the potential to take it away completely.I've seen it all, wherever people gather under one roof for a common purpose. The common purpose is the employer's. Everyone else Media interview training provides you with the skills to effectively deal with the media. Media relations training, with a specific focus on media presentation training for television can be seriously nerve wracking for first timers. Here's why you should consider doing a media training course and some essential tips from our media skill training courses. If you go to the archives of any commercial television station and pull out footage from a news bulletin from the 1960s and view that footage with a stopwatch, you will find the average length of the quote (known as a sound bite or news grab) from the person being interviewed for the story is around 60 seconds. If you watch commercial television tonight with your stopwatch at the ready, and measure each sound bite or news grab, the average length will be seven seconds. This is why its being called McNuggett News! Its quick, slick, fast and tasty, but not very satisfying. There are three reasons for this shortening of length. 1. Increased competition for our ever diminishing attention spans, 2. Increased choice, noise and clutter in our lives, and 3. The merging of information and entertainment dressed up as news. So how do you get your message across about a complex, detailed issue through the media in seven seconds? Well, you need to work out your key message and deliver it flawlessly as a media friendly quotable quote. Remember, you have only one chance to get it right. The professional TV news crews I work with are constantly telling me about people who ring them after the interview and say "can you come back, I forgot to say this and that?" Of course, the media are so time poor and deadline driven they never come back. So you only have one opportunity to maximise your media moment. How do you do this, especially for TV? Here are my Top 10 Tips: 1. Dress Well. In the powerful visual medium of television you will be judged by your appearance. Clothing patterns and colours will contribute to the impact of your on camera interview. Avoid clothes with lots of designs or patterns. A dark jacket (blue, black, charcoal or navy) with a white shirt/blouse always looks good on camera. Take your cue from what TV newsreaders are wearing. Heed my mother's advice: "it is better to pay the extra and buy one really good suit than have many of inferior quality." 2. Warm Up Your Voice. Tiger Woods wouldn't go and play a championship round of golf without warming up. You, as a professional communicator and official spokesperson should never engage with the media without warming up your voice. 3. Speak With Increased Energy. Speak at a higher volume, range, tone and pitch than you would normally. Imagine having a conversation with someone and speaking at a slightly more animated level than you would normally. 4. Anchor Your Feet and Slow Deliberate Movements. The more you move around the more your body language will distract from your message. Doing interviews standing, even radio interviews, will change your whole physiology and give your more energy and authority. Stand with your feet about shoulder width apart and firmly anchored to the ground. It is hard to sound credible standing on one foot. At the book launch of Understanding Influence For Leaders At All Levels, I learnt from co-author Des Guilfoyle that slow, fluid and deliberate movements will give you more referent power, charisma and personal magnetism. TIP: Watch your interviews with the sound off to get a better idea of what your body language is doing in the interview. 5. Keep Calm. Assertive, aggressive, even angry reporters will fire off questions at you quickly, like bullets spitting from a machinegun. Their speech patterns will be intense and fast. Do not get drawn into mirroring and matching these patterns. In these situations, take a breath and speak more slowly than the interviewer. 6. Memorise Your Three Key Points. You must be able to deliver these flawlessly without reading notes. Firstly, write them down. Writing things down helps fix them in the mind and seeing them written down also helps. Then compose a visual picture of the actual words. Visually place them in t Consensus - What It Is And When To Achieve It re each sound bite or news grab, the average length will be seven seconds.Tom was working hard to change the culture in his organization. He wanted to create greater collaboration, teamwork and empowerment. He envisioned an organization where people loved coming to work each day. He knew that when these things were a part of working life that productivity would sky rocket, and greater business results would flow naturally from this new culture.Since he really wanted people to have more ownership in their work and results, he felt he needed to drive more decisions through consensus. He reasoned that if he or other leaders made all the decisions, he’d never achieve the culture he hoped for.So after he explained that consensus was his goal for most decisions, people tried to reach it. They had longer meetings, This is why its being called McNuggett News! Its quick, slick, fast and tasty, but not very satisfying. There are three reasons for this shortening of length. 1. Increased competition for our ever diminishing attention spans, 2. Increased choice, noise and clutter in our lives, and 3. The merging of information and entertainment dressed up as news. So how do you get your message across about a complex, detailed issue through the media in seven seconds? Well, you need to work out your key message and deliver it flawlessly as a media friendly quotable quote. Remember, you have only one chance to get it right. The professional TV news crews I work with are constantly telling me about people who ring them after the interview and say "can you come back, I forgot to say this and that?" Of course, the media are so time poor and deadline driven they never come back. So you only have one opportunity to maximise your media moment. How do you do this, especially for TV? Here are my Top 10 Tips: 1. Dress Well. In the powerful visual medium of television you will be judged by your appearance. Clothing patterns and colours will contribute to the impact of your on camera interview. Avoid clothes with lots of designs or patterns. A dark jacket (blue, black, charcoal or navy) with a white shirt/blouse always looks good on camera. Take your cue from what TV newsreaders are wearing. Heed my mother's advice: "it is better to pay the extra and buy one really good suit than have many of inferior quality." 2. Warm Up Your Voice. Tiger Woods wouldn't go and play a championship round of golf without warming up. You, as a professional communicator and official spokesperson should never engage with the media without warming up your voice. 3. Speak With Increased Energy. Speak at a higher volume, range, tone and pitch than you would normally. Imagine having a conversation with someone and speaking at a slightly more animated level than you would normally. 4. Anchor Your Feet and Slow Deliberate Movements. The more you move around the more your body language will distract from your message. Doing interviews standing, even radio interviews, will change your whole physiology and give your more energy and authority. Stand with your feet about shoulder width apart and firmly anchored to the ground. It is hard to sound credible standing on one foot. At the book launch of Understanding Influence For Leaders At All Levels, I learnt from co-author Des Guilfoyle that slow, fluid and deliberate movements will give you more referent power, charisma and personal magnetism. TIP: Watch your interviews with the sound off to get a better idea of what your body language is doing in the interview. 5. Keep Calm. Assertive, aggressive, even angry reporters will fire off questions at you quickly, like bullets spitting from a machinegun. Their speech patterns will be intense and fast. Do not get drawn into mirroring and matching these patterns. In these situations, take a breath and speak more slowly than the interviewer. 6. Memorise Your Three Key Points. You must be able to deliver these flawlessly without reading notes. Firstly, write them down. Writing things down helps fix them in the mind and seeing them written down also helps. Then compose a visual picture of the actual words. Visually place them in The Labor Shortage Wave is Here! rgot to say this and that?"2007 will be a year of competition to fill jobs, especially for employers of 500 or fewer people. The United States average jobless rate is 4.5 percent; 3.5 percent is typically considered full employment. Twenty-six states are now below the national average and the pinch is on.Employers are having a tough time filling positions at all, so getting highly qualified help is a luxury. The competition is fierce for the best candidates. Companies need to be creative and aggressive to create positive conditions to attract the right people for their open positions.Attracting the Right EmployeeSmall businesses must evaluate what job candidates are seeking in an employer. Drastic changes may need to be made to attract high-quality employees. Of course, the media are so time poor and deadline driven they never come back. So you only have one opportunity to maximise your media moment. How do you do this, especially for TV? Here are my Top 10 Tips: 1. Dress Well. In the powerful visual medium of television you will be judged by your appearance. Clothing patterns and colours will contribute to the impact of your on camera interview. Avoid clothes with lots of designs or patterns. A dark jacket (blue, black, charcoal or navy) with a white shirt/blouse always looks good on camera. Take your cue from what TV newsreaders are wearing. Heed my mother's advice: "it is better to pay the extra and buy one really good suit than have many of inferior quality." 2. Warm Up Your Voice. Tiger Woods wouldn't go and play a championship round of golf without warming up. You, as a professional communicator and official spokesperson should never engage with the media without warming up your voice. 3. Speak With Increased Energy. Speak at a higher volume, range, tone and pitch than you would normally. Imagine having a conversation with someone and speaking at a slightly more animated level than you would normally. 4. Anchor Your Feet and Slow Deliberate Movements. The more you move around the more your body language will distract from your message. Doing interviews standing, even radio interviews, will change your whole physiology and give your more energy and authority. Stand with your feet about shoulder width apart and firmly anchored to the ground. It is hard to sound credible standing on one foot. At the book launch of Understanding Influence For Leaders At All Levels, I learnt from co-author Des Guilfoyle that slow, fluid and deliberate movements will give you more referent power, charisma and personal magnetism. TIP: Watch your interviews with the sound off to get a better idea of what your body language is doing in the interview. 5. Keep Calm. Assertive, aggressive, even angry reporters will fire off questions at you quickly, like bullets spitting from a machinegun. Their speech patterns will be intense and fast. Do not get drawn into mirroring and matching these patterns. In these situations, take a breath and speak more slowly than the interviewer. 6. Memorise Your Three Key Points. You must be able to deliver these flawlessly without reading notes. Firstly, write them down. Writing things down helps fix them in the mind and seeing them written down also helps. Then compose a visual picture of the actual words. Visually place them in Direct Response Marketing ng up. You, as a professional communicator and official spokesperson should never engage with the media without warming up your voice.The effectiveness and reach of traditional media has devolved: With the growing number of magazines and television stations in the UK, it is hard to find a medium that can support an effective national broadcast campaign. Target audiences are scattered across a plethora of magazines and stations and buying enough advertising space for effective reach has gotten out of hand.Then there is the option to buy highly targeted mailing lists and send your direct mail to your future prospects. And that would work a charm if it wasn’t that a dozen other marketing professionals a day are sending their marketing materials to the same prospect. Remember your mailbox when you left for work this morning? How many leaflets were shouting f 3. Speak With Increased Energy. Speak at a higher volume, range, tone and pitch than you would normally. Imagine having a conversation with someone and speaking at a slightly more animated level than you would normally. 4. Anchor Your Feet and Slow Deliberate Movements. The more you move around the more your body language will distract from your message. Doing interviews standing, even radio interviews, will change your whole physiology and give your more energy and authority. Stand with your feet about shoulder width apart and firmly anchored to the ground. It is hard to sound credible standing on one foot. At the book launch of Understanding Influence For Leaders At All Levels, I learnt from co-author Des Guilfoyle that slow, fluid and deliberate movements will give you more referent power, charisma and personal magnetism. TIP: Watch your interviews with the sound off to get a better idea of what your body language is doing in the interview. 5. Keep Calm. Assertive, aggressive, even angry reporters will fire off questions at you quickly, like bullets spitting from a machinegun. Their speech patterns will be intense and fast. Do not get drawn into mirroring and matching these patterns. In these situations, take a breath and speak more slowly than the interviewer. 6. Memorise Your Three Key Points. You must be able to deliver these flawlessly without reading notes. Firstly, write them down. Writing things down helps fix them in the mind and seeing them written down also helps. Then compose a visual picture of the actual words. Visually place them in What is your Fundraising Goal? foyle that slow, fluid and deliberate movements will give you more referent power, charisma and personal magnetism.If you don’t know what you’re raising funds for or how much you want to raise how will you ever know if your campaign was a success? Just knowing what organization you’re trying to help isn’t enough either. Knowing you’re fundraising for the drama club or soccer team is better than nothing I suppose, but far better to know you’re fundraising to build the set for this year’s play or to send the kids to a weekend tournament. We have a model in NLP for goal setting, and I think you’ll find using it effective to target your fundraising efforts:1. State what you want specifically in a positive way. It seems obvious, but saying that you don’t want your choir to have mismatching uniforms at a recital isn’t nearly as easy to achieve as saying you want TIP: Watch your interviews with the sound off to get a better idea of what your body language is doing in the interview. 5. Keep Calm. Assertive, aggressive, even angry reporters will fire off questions at you quickly, like bullets spitting from a machinegun. Their speech patterns will be intense and fast. Do not get drawn into mirroring and matching these patterns. In these situations, take a breath and speak more slowly than the interviewer. 6. Memorise Your Three Key Points. You must be able to deliver these flawlessly without reading notes. Firstly, write them down. Writing things down helps fix them in the mind and seeing them written down also helps. Then compose a visual picture of the actual words. Visually place them in the top left part of your brain. When remembering these points, look to the top left hand part of the brain and they will come to you instantly like magic. In technical terms, brain experts have shown the left-side of the prefrontal cortex (just behind the forehead) experiences increased blood flow as new information enters our episodic memory. In fact, the brain's thesaurus is dispersed in many separate parts of the left cerebral hemisphere (Source: The Odd Brain by Dr Stephen Juan, Harper Collins, 1998). 7. Never Say No Comment. Journalists will believe 'where there is smoke there is fire'. Say no comment, but back this up with a valid reason. 8. Drink Plenty Of Water. Keep hydrated and avoid caffeine and milk prior to an interview. Milk gums up your saliva glands leading to a dry mouth. This manifests itself in the common nervous habit of licking dry lips. 9. Get In The Moment. Elite athletes talk about and practice getting in the zone to achieve peak performance. You need to do the same. Try this: Relax, close your eyes and take three deep breaths, focussing on clearing your mind. Then visualise a moment in the past where you felt very motivated and very confident. Capture this moment in your mind and anchor those feelings. Place this mental picture inside your right hand and clench making a fist. Cover this fist with your left hand. Repeat this process until you can instantly put yourself into a state of peak performance. 10. Review, Evaluate and Improve. After each media interview always review: What worked well? What could be improved? What will I work on for next time?
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