Ask a Reporter
Questions
Cypress Media Group, Inc.,
http://www.cypressmedia.net
cypressmedia@mindspring.com
By Randall P. Whatley
Your telephone rings and a news reporter asks you if it would be all right
to ask you a few questions. You freeze because you are caught by total surprise. You do
not know this reporter. You do not know anything about the angle of the story. You wish
you had more time to gather your thoughts.
If you were a Hollywood celebrity or business mogul, your agent would screen this type of
call for you and ask the questions that you need answered to be prepared for an interview.
Since you are not a bigshot with an agent, here is what you can do to help yourself in
this situation.
First, understand that you have every right to ask the reporter questions to get an idea
of the story so that you can decide if you want to submit to an interview.
Perhaps you could open the dialogue with something like, "Yes, I would like to help
you with your story. To get a better idea of what you are working on, may I ask you a few
background questions?
It is most unlikely that any reporter will refuse this request. If they do, this is a
warning signal that perhaps you should not talk to that reporter.
Proceed by asking the following questions:
How did you happen to contact me about this story?
What is your story about?
Whom else have you talked to about this story?
What did they say?
Whom else do you plan to talk to about this story?
What is your deadline?
Once you have obtained the answers to these questions, decide whether you are fully
prepared to speak to the reporter. If you are not, tell the reporter that you need to
gather your thoughts and some information and agree on a time for you to call back.
The following are a few caveats about this dialogue:
Speak in an open and friendly tone.
Frame your questions in the context of a desire to help the reporter.
Do not convey the impression that your answers will change once you learn what the
reporter already knows from speaking to others.
Once you hang up the telephone, gather your thoughts, and compile any research that you
will need to refer to in an interview and then return the reporter's call as soon as
possible.
Copyright 2001, Randall P. Whatley
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