HOW TO USE NEW MEDIA TO ACCESS
OLD MEDIA
By Bihongoye Erica
We hear a lot of talk these days about the
death of “old media” like TV and newspapers and the unstoppable rise of “new
media” in its place. Well, CBC-TV still aired The National last
night, The Globe & Mail still arrived on my doorstep this
morning, and the last time I checked, my local radio stations were still
reporting on traffic conditions every ten minutes. So I think it's a little
premature to declare the revolution complete.
Here are some thoughts about ways in which
you can use the much-vaunted new media to make an impact in venerable old
media.
Blogs: If you take away only
three words from this article, they are these: Journalists read blogs. I say
this both as a former journalist and magazine editor, and as someone who has
received multiple media inquiries from the U.S. and the U.K. based
on a single blog post. Not only do reporters subscribe to blogs, but they
constantly conduct Google searches, and Google loves blogs for a host of
search-engine-related reasons.
The internet is filled with general
“employment law blogs” and “personal injury blogs,” so I recommend focusing
your blog’s editorial mandate as tightly as feasible. Stand out from the crowd
with a niche or specialization: a collective bargaining blog, a brain injury
blog, a patent protection for start-ups blog, and so forth — your designated
specialty, the thing for which you want to be known. If you have multiple practice
focuses you want to promote, publish a blog on each one. If you have a truly
general practice, focus the blog along other lines: your city or town, your
province or region, your most common type of client, your alternative billing
system.
Finally, tell all your blog visitors that
hey, by the way, you’re available to speak with the media or contribute
articles to periodicals. If you’re hankering after an interview, post a
two-minute video clip of yourself in conversation about a trending subject in
your area, so that producers can preview the goods. If you want to write
articles, make brief (up to 800 words) sample articles on topical issues
available for download. And provide a suite of personal contact information
prominently on the web page.
Twitter: I think we can now
dispense with the tired jokes that Twitter is for telling people what your cat
is doing or what you had for lunch. Twitter is an extraordinary personal
branding and communication platform, one through which you can show off
expertise, curate specialized knowledge, build subscriber bases, and strike up
valuable networking relationships. Twitter is “headline news” for the internet,
and reporters are coming to rely heavily upon it.
Once you’ve established a valuable Twitter
feed along these lines, the easiest way to start attracting the attention of
the media is to find reporters on Twitter who work for your target broadcasters
or publications, and follow them. More often than not, they’ll follow you back,
and they'll soon start to see just how much you know. Then comes the
opportunity to correspond via Twitter’s Direct Message function and start
building relationships.
LinkedIn: Relationships, of
course, are what LinkedIn — the world’s online Rolodex — is all about (Twitter
contacts, in fact, often lead to LinkedIn relationships). That can make
LinkedIn especially valuable for lawyers where the media are concerned, because
the best and most productive collaborations between lawyers and reporters take
place in the context of a relationship of mutual appreciation and respect. But
building those relationships takes time and effort.
If you have pre-existing relationships
with members of the media, you can use LinkedIn to deepen and strengthen them.
But more caution is called for when using LinkedIn to initiate a relationship.
Cold-call connection requests to reporters, bearing no message or explanation
of who you are and why you’d like to connect, can meet an equally frosty
reception. Connect through existing mutual contacts, in response to a recent
story, or to offer a no-charge conversation about a current subject in your
area of expertise.
“New
media” isn’t really that different from “old media” — they’re both platforms
through which knowledge is distributed and around which people gather for
information. The key differences are that (a) new media are based on
conversations and relationships, and (b) anyone, including you, can use them to
establish authority and trustworthiness without the massive organizational
support required by networks or newspapers. You don’t need to choose between
mew media and old media; you can use one to help you access the other.
Jordan Furlong is a Senior Consultant with Stem Legal who advises clients on web
strategy, communications and social media. He is also a partner with Edge
International who analyzes the extraordinary changes underway in the legal
marketplace
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