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Musts for Media at Your Event

Media must-do's if your plans include attracting media to your Lights On Afterschool celebration.

Create A Media List 

Identify Key Messages for Your Event

Structure Your Event with Media in Mind

Keep Communicating

Use Media Kits

Manage Media at Your Event

Don’t Let the Story End

 

        Create A Media List

If you don't already have a list of reporters, editors, columnists, photo editors and producers who cover education, children and families, parenting, workplace and feature stories in your media market, this is a good time to create one. Some United Ways have media guides that are available to community agencies for a nominal fee, and the public relations offices at community colleges are often willing to share their media lists with other education agencies.  You can also use our Action Center to find media contacts in your community by simply entering your zip code.

Then, make a list of all local TV and radio stations (including college and university-affiliated stations), daily and weekly newspapers (including ethnic, community and other specialty papers), wire services and magazines, locally oriented Internet sites, and newsletters or bulletins from interested community and faith-based organizations. Call and ask for the name of the editor, reporter or producer who covers education, children and families, parenting, workplace and features. Request the phone, fax and e-mail address for each person. Ask also for the names and contact information for producers at broadcast news and talk shows that cover issues like afterschool, and columnists who cover education and family issues at local newspapers of all kinds. Media lists should be updated twice per year, as journalists tend to shift beats and jobs fairly often. You will use it often, to promote Lights On Afterschool and other activities.

        Identify Key Messages for Your Event

Develop key messages for your Lights On Afterschool rally. These messages will be integrated into all your media materials and will be the focus of remarks by your spokespersons. If possible, narrow your key messages to three, and keep them simple, clear and concise. The following is an example of messages, but be sure to tailor yours to reflect what afterschool programs mean to your community and the challenges facing afterschool programs in your state.

The [name of program] keeps kids safe and healthy, inspires students to learn and helps working families. Children who come to our program every afternoon have a safe place to go, a range of fun and challenging activities, and supervision by adults who help them learn and stay out of trouble. Afterschool is key to kids' success.

Afterschool programs need more resources and more support. Funding shortages are denying too many kids the opportunities that afterschool programs offer. Too many afterschool programs are being forced to cut back or even close because of budget cuts, or because they were unable to secure enough funding in the first place. We ask lawmakers, business and community leaders, parents and others to do more to make afterschool available to every family that needs it. (Consider using state data on afterschool demand, supply and parent satisification from the America After 3PM study to bolster your case.)

We're proud to join students, parents, educators and community leaders at 7,500 rallies across the country in calling for 'afterschool for all' for Lights On Afterschool! The Afterschool Alliance organized this event to underscore how important it is to keep the lights on and the door open for kids at afterschool programs. We support the Afterschool Alliance's mission to give every child access to an afterschool program.

        Structure Your Event with Media in Mind

Plan your event with media in mind. Some things to remember:

The media - particularly television reporters and newspaper photographers - look for good visuals. Make sure your event has lots of color, action, and signs or banners with your program name and Lights On Afterschool prominently placed.

Journalists need to file their stories during late afternoon hours, so plan the program for your Lights On Afterschool event as early as possible. If your event goes from 3 p.m. to 5 p.m., for instance, hold the program at 3:15 or 3:30 p.m.

     Keep Communicating 

About one week before the event, email, mail or fax a media alert about your Lights On Afterschool event to everyone on your media list. It serves as an invitation to reporters to cover the event. An alert is very basic and gives journalists information on who, what, where, when and why the event is important to the community. It is not a news release and need not include quotes or give great detail. A media alert should never exceed one page. If you have a wire service in your community (Associated Press, United Press International, Reuters or a local City News Service), fax a copy of the alert to the "Daybook Editor" there. She or he publishes a calendar of newsworthy events for other reporters to check each day.

One week before the event, update the media alertyou sent the previous week by adding new speakers or more information about student activities, and email or fax it again first thing in the morning. Make phone calls to everyone on your media list over the next couple days to make sure they received your media alert and to ask if they (or someone from their media outlet) can come. If they are unable to make it, plan to email or fax them a news release immediately following or during the event. Many news outlets may be willing to write a story from a press release if they are unable to send a reporter to an event. If you call a talk show producer, ask about booking your afterschool program director as a guest on a future show to discuss the benefits of afterschool and the harm that would come from budget cutbacks.

A few days before your event, write a news release. A news release is written like a news story, but has the advantage of being written from your point of view. It contains quotes from important people, background on your afterschool program and Lights On Afterschool, and features your key messages. It should not exceed two pages. It is essential that it list a contact person, with daytime and evening (or cell) phone numbers. Because the news release will be distributed at your event in the press kits, it should be written in the past tense. You should also fax it to journalists who do not come to your event.

     Use Media Kits

Assemble media kits to distribute at your event - enough for all the journalists you expect will come, and then a few extra. The kits can be assembled in plain folders with a label from your afterschool program on the cover or, if you want to be creative, have students decorate the covers and write "press kit" prominently under the drawing. The kits should contain:

They may also contain:

  • Letters from parents, volunteers or students describing why they support the program
  • A proclamation from your mayor or governor for Lights On Afterschool 
  • Notable facts - for example, how has your program grown since its inception, how many students are on your waiting list, how many volunteers the program has, etc.
  • A page describing your program's upcoming events
  • Information on how to enroll in your program
  • See our Marketing Toolboxfor other ideas of documents you can create to showcase your program

 

     Manage Media at Your Event

Set up a "media sign-in" table. It should be easily recognizable to reporters and be placed at the entrance to the room or area where your Lights On Afterschool event will take place. Assign a staff person or volunteer to be at the table throughout the event to assist journalists. Have a sign-in sheet with "name of reporter," "media outlet," "phone number" and "email" written in columns at the top. Each reporter who signs in should be given a press kit and verbal information about your rally. If something special is happening in half an hour, make sure to tell him/her that. Give each reporter a badge or nametag to wear so everyone at the event can easily identify press people. Do not be surprised if journalists (photographers and camera crews in particular) "take over the room" briefly by setting up special lights for cameras, clipping their microphones to the podium or putting tape recorders on the podium. Be prepared to help them, as long as their needs do not disrupt your event. Think about assigning someone to stay with reporters, to introduce them to people, explain activities and answer questions

     Don’t Let the Story End

Make copies of any articles or broadcast stories about your Lights On Afterschool event that appear and circulate them to your board of directors, funders, parents, volunteers and policy makers at all levels. Assign people to monitor local TV news shows on the day before, day of and day after the event.  Tape any stories about your event. Keep those tapes to show at fundraisers, orientations or meetings you have in the future.

Stay in contact with reporters who attend your event or produce stories. Contact them in May or June to see if they'd be interested in doing an end-of-school-year follow-up on your afterschool program. Or have the students in your program create a thank-you card to send the week after Lights On Afterschool in appreciation for a good story. You might even contact the reporter to see if he or she would host a group of kids from your program, so they can see what it's like to work at a TV, radio or newspaper office. Maintaining that relationship after the event will help you the next time you are looking for publicity.