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  • Mad About Your Message

    It’s March Madness time.  And even people who don’t have a clue about sports know that means the NCAA basketball tournament is getting underway.  It should also be a reminder of how you can do better at “getting noticed” in the media.

    March Madness is one of the most popular sporting events in the country.  That didn’t happen by accident.  One of the big reasons for its success is that the schools and breathless sports reporters created a whole series of catchy, memorable phrases to describe the tournament.  Along with March Madness, the lexicon includes the Big Dance, Selection Sunday, Bracketology, Sweet 16, Elite 8, Final 4, and more.  All point to something about the games and create a kind of special lingo players, coaches, fans and the media all use and understand.

    The lesson here is that like the NCAA, a great way for you to score points in the media is by having your own catchy phrase that will help people remember your message.  It can’t be forced or corny, but something simple and seemingly unrehearsed (of course it will be rehearsed) that captures what you are trying to say.   Think about the great corporate slogans–  “Just do it,” “We bring good things to life,” “The king of beers”– they are both memorable and say something about the company and/or its products that paints the firm in a positive light.  That’s exactly what you are looking to do for yourself.

    So, what word or phrase helps explain what you want to convey?  If you don’t already know, take some time to consider what it is that makes your message stand out from the crowd.  Then create a quick and simple way of expressing it.

    By having a strong “slogan” of your own, you will really help yourself excel in another “Big Dance”–  the competition for good media coverage.

    Leave a comment and see more at my official blog site: http://www.mediamakersconsulting.wordpress.com

  • A Higher (Media) Power

    I have to give the folks at the Vatican credit…they really know how to use the media!

    When I first heard that white smoke was pouring out of the Sistine Chapel chimney, I immediately flipped on the broadcast of the breaking news from Rome (I actually checked out TV, radio and online coverage).  Along with billions of others around the globe, I anxiously waited for the announcement of which cardinal had been chosen pope.  And waited.  And waited.   And as all of us waited (and news people struggled to fill the time), we were treated to chanting crowds, beautiful music and exquisite pageantry.  Throughout the more than one-hour wait, the excitement built to a fever pitch.  The Wall Street Journal quoted someone in the square who compared the atmosphere to a U2 concert.  It was a fantastically-positive display for the Roman Catholic Church, orchestrated perfectly by the Vatican.

    Now obviously, the choosing of a pope has the weight of a huge historic event and major news story behind it, but still the Vatican got every ounce of good media coverage out of it.   That’s because the curiae understands the value of that coverage and had clearly prepared meticulously for this event.

    I have often discussed in these blogs the importance of preparation in order to take advantage of your media opportunities.   That’s especially true when, unlike the Vatican, you don’t know when those opportunities will present themselves.   It’s very easy to miss a great chance at “getting noticed” if you aren’t ready for it.  And as we’ve seen from the Vatican, the more you understand about the message you hope to send, the more effective your messaging will be.

    Pope Francis seems to be solidly tuned in to the Vatican’s messaging effort.  His greeting of the crowd and early comments have gotten a very positive response…and positive media coverage.  He has used his big media opportunity to make a solid first impression.   I suspect that was just the beginning of what we will see in the future.

    So for some excellent examples of how to build your media strategy, keep an eye on Rome.  Like the faithful who walked out of St. Peter’s Square uplifted, you, too, may come away with your own special gift from the Holy See.

    Leave a comment and see more at my official blog site: http://www.mediamakersconsulting.wordpress.com

  • Making Your Message Memorable

    When the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose to an all-time high this week, news reporters–as they are want to do when a market milestone is set–spent a lot of time trying to put the record in perspective.  One of my favorites was from an old colleague of mine, Joe Connolly, a Wall Street Journal reporter who works for CBS Radio.  Joe noted the last time the Dow was at record levels (October, 2007), the RAZR was the hot cellphone, the iPhone was just coming out and Bernie Madoff was running an investment firm in Manhattan.    It was a funny line that really caught my attention because it put the story in a simple frame of reference that a lot of people understood.  Joe is a great broadcaster in part because he often uses these kinds of audience-grabbing comparisons in his reports.

    Joe’s technique is a valuable one that you should remember in your efforts to get noticed in the media.   In education circles, it’s a teaching method called “compare and contrast.”  Explaining how your message compares and contrasts to something the audience already knows makes it easier to understand…and be remembered.   And nothing is better for media success than being clear and memorable.

    Of course, all this takes preparation.  You need to know exactly what message you want to deliver…then determine what well-known examples are out there to which you can compare and contrast that message.

    So start today to think about how you might “compare and contrast” your own message.  Then, when a media opportunity does come around, you will be ready to deliver a unique line that will make you stand out from everyone else.

    Leave a comment and see more at my official blog site: http://www.mediamakersconsulting.wordpress.com

  • By The Stroke Of His Pen

    By The Stroke Of His Pen

    By Kimoy Leon Sing
    Story Updated: Mar 1, 2013 at 11:46 PM ECT

    Saving lives is what Dr Emile Allen does. His weapon of choice was once his scalpel but now he uses a pen and his voice to forge ahead in life.

    Taking life’s adversities and finding ways to turn them naturally into gifts, Dr Allen is proud to share his story from surgeon to patient through his inspirational book, Eaten By The Tiger- Surrendering to an Empowered Life.

    This book is the first for the retired urologist turned writer and motivational speaker who came to Trinidad recently to promote the book.

    A graduate of Northwestern University Medical School in Chicago, Illinois, USA, Dr Allen completed his general surgery internship and urology residency at the University of Iowa Hospital and Clinics. He is the former chairman of urology and vice chairman of surgery at Scripps Memorial Hospital in La Jolla, California. Despite having to give up on his chosen profession, the once active urologist has turned his passion for helping others in a different direction. He believes that through his motivational speeches and astute writing, he can touch more lives than he could as a surgeon.

    For the doctor, the switch in profession was indeed sudden and the self- realisation that followed shortly after that was a breakthrough in his life; something he wishes that could have happened to him a lot sooner.

    Dr Allen, “In 1998 I was operating on a patient trying to save their life when a piece of medical equipment malfunctioned and I barely escaped being electrocuted. I had a near-death experience. After the accident I had a traumatic brain injury and other injuries that took quite a few years for me to recuperate from. It had gotten to the point where I could not read a book; I could not count change because my concentration was so disrupted from the brain injury that I had to close down my practice.

    “I was 38 years old at the peak of my career. What was going through my mind at that time was gosh it’s gone; I’ve lost it all; how can I put my life back together again,” Dr Allen said.

    “With physical injuries in time it heals but what happens is the emotional injuries are often greater and sometimes linger on even after we have fully

    recovered physically. This was something I was struggling with after the accident because I was still trying to hold on to my shattered identity as that of a surgeon. After the injury I was not able to practise surgery so I had to transition and find a new purpose in life,” he said.

    “It lead to a journey of self-discovery; realiSing what was really important in life. Is it your identity that you are holding on to or is it the connections you have with others or was it with life in general? I realised that in order for me to overcome this adversity that I was going through at the time I realised that the quality of our life is determined by the emotional attachments we have placed on an event. So if you change the meaning of that emotional attachment to whatever life adversity you are facing; you will change the quality of your life. One of the major things I did was I reframed the incident into a gift and found a way to share that gift with others,” he added.

    Eaten By The Tiger—Surrendering to an Empowered Life the title of book, seemed fitting to the author who says it describes in length his personal journey and the tools needed to overcome hardships in life.

    He said, “From my book people will have specific steps that they can take to overcome life adversity and take a negative and turn it into a positive. People will understand that the emotional attachments we attribute to certain events in our life can be controlling and can control our identity. If we control the meaning of what has happen to us, again we can change our life.”

    Dr Allen admitted that although he misses surgery and being a surgeon his life has been more fulfilling than ever before.

    He said, “I have a different view of life now. I have the opportunity now to help thousands and potentially millions of people with my inspirational writings and public speaking.

    Whereas when I was a surgeon, I was only able to help a few people at a time—which was usually just the people that walked through my door—I feel now my reach is much greater. If I can in anyway share a thought or message with someone to improve their lives then I feel like I am doing the work that I was asked to do.” Eaten By The Tiger—Surrendering to an Empowered Life was launched February 10 on amazon.com as an e-book. Hard copies of the book are set to be released very soon at all major bookstores in Trinidad and Tobago and other parts of the world.

    http://www.trinidadexpress.com/sunday-mix/By_The_Stroke_Of_His_Pen-194424191.html

  • Winning Gold with the Media

    It was one of the most memorable pictures of the 2012 Summer Olympics in London.

    That face!

    American gymnast McKayla Maroney, after stumbling during her vault routine and only taking a silver medal, produced the now-famous “unimpressed” look on the medal stand.

    The picture was splashed all over the media, so much so that during the team’s celebratory visit to the White House, even President Obama took note, joining Maroney in reproducing the look for an official photo of the event.

    Wisely, Maroney has recognized the value of what was actually an unhappy reaction to her lack of success.  Instead of seeing it as a negative, Maroney has been using the picture to her advantage, helping her secure business opportunities and stay in the spotlight.

    Media opportunities can come in all different forms…and at different times.  I’m pretty sure at that moment on the stand in London Maroney didn’t plan to make a face she could parlay into real gold.  However, once she saw how it took off, she made sure not only to embrace it but to also make it her signature mark…a brilliant media strategy.

    You, too, may find yourself in a surprise or unlikely situation that suddenly provides you with a chance to make a big media splash.  If you do, it’s important to take advantage of the opportunity.  And the only way you can do that successfully is to be prepared–  by understanding what your message is and how you want to present it.

    So take a tip from McKayla Maroney, who stumbled on a big opportunity and then took advantage of it.  She may have only won silver at the Olympics, but she owns a media strategy of gold.

    Leave a comment and see more at my official blog site: http://www.mediamakersconsulting.wordpress.com

  • Painting Danica’s Portrait

    One of the most important aspects of a successful media strategy is for you to control how you are portrayed…not the media.

    A great example of someone really trying hard to do that is race car driver Danica Patrick.

    Patrick of course gets tremendous media coverage because she is a woman succeeding in a male-dominated sport.   All the headlines going into this year’s Daytona 500 was how she was the first female to ever win the pole position to start the race.

    Patrick ended up finishing eighth, and every post-race news story was the same— the first mention was that Jimmy Johnson won, then it was how Patrick made history with the highest finish ever for a woman.

    She didn’t like that.  In her post-race comments, Patrick made it clear that WINNING was what mattered and that being happy with a top-10 finish would be setting herself up for failure.

    Patrick doesn’t want to be known as the best FEMALE race car driver…she wants to be the best race car driver, period.   And in every media opportunity, she tries to hammer home that point.  It’s a tough battle, because obviously her gender is a big part of the story and will likely be so for a long time to come.  But we should give her kudos for trying to change the discussion from male/female to just  NASCAR racing.

    The way you present yourself to the media will go a long way to determining how you are portrayed.  If you have a clear understanding of your message and keep that message always front and center, there’s a good chance you will be seen in the way you want.  Bad preparation and loss of focus allows others to step in and paint you in a whatever light they choose…and it’s likely you won’t like the result.

    So remember, be like Danca Patrick.  Know what your message is and deliver it every chance you can.  Do that and you’ll have a great chance finishing first in the race for good media attention.

    Leave a comment and see more at my official blog site:  http://www.mediamakersconsulting.wordpress.com

  • Jolt ends surgeon’s career, jump starts new outlook on life

    Jolt ends surgeon’s career, jump starts new outlook on life

    By Nicole Brochu, Staff writer

    6:33 AM EST, February 22, 2013

    Just seven years into a promising urology practice, Dr. Emile Allen was operating on a cancer patient when a jolt of electricity threw him off his feet — and out of the practice of medicine forever.

    His 10-year odyssey to self-discovery and healing taught him that when you think your life is over, it’s time to come up with a new definition of life.

    Allen is no longer a practicing surgeon, but he has dedicated himself to healing people in new ways. At the end of the month, the Boca Raton man, today an author, medical consultant and inspirational speaker, will release a new book he hopes will motivate the many people struggling like he was to make sense of tragedy.

    “When I had my near-death experience, I realized that in life, everything is on lease. Anything can be taken away from you in a heartbeat,” said Allen, 53. “You have to learn to let go of the physical and emotional attachments and start to be thankful for your struggles, because they help give you character.”

    In “Eaten by the Tiger: Surrendering to an Empowered Life,” Allen uses personal anecdotes from his time as a physician, patient and son of a cancer-stricken father to sketch out a path to healing that starts with eight steps: awareness, acceptance, letting go, faith, lack of judgment, gratitude, fighting fight-or-freeze reflexes, and reflection.

    The biggest lesson he hopes to impart: Tragedy doesn’t have to be the end of the road, just the beginning of another.

    “My accident was actually the best thing that ever happened to me,” Allen said. “I believe my life was saved that day so I could help the millions of people in the world who are struggling.”

    Of course, it took him years to come to that conclusion. On the day of his accident, in 1998, Allen was 38 and at what he considered “the height” of a career he had spent a lifetime building. A urologist who specialized in diseases of the urinary tract, he was using an electric scalpel to remove a patient’s cancerous kidney when the tool, which wasn’t grounded properly, sent an electric jolt through the patient’s bowel, into Allen’s left hand, up his arm, through his heart and brain and out his right ankle.

    Allen said he briefly passed out, then heard a voice say, twice, “I’m not ready for you yet.”

    The patient was fine, but Allen suffered life-altering side effects — seizures, nerve damage in his hand, depression, memory loss. Unable to drive, read or even count change at the grocery store, he closed his Pennsylvania urology practice and moved in with his parents in southern California. Under a doctor’s care, he was eventually put on nine different medications, taking a total of 36 pills a day.

    “It was really tough,” said Allen, who moved to Boca Raton three years ago. “The physical damage heals. We know that as surgeons. But it’s the emotional trauma that is far, far greater for people to deal with.”

    “Eaten by the Tiger,” from the “self-publishing alternative” company, Inspire On Purpose, is available now in e-book form ($9.99) on Amazon.com, barnesandnoble.com and other major bookstore websites. The hard back version ($21.99) will go on sale March 8. Go to eatenbythetiger.com for more information.

    [email protected]

    http://www.sun-sentinel.com/health/fl-surgeon-injury-book-20130226,0,861265.story

     

    Copyright © 2013, South Florida Sun-Sentinel

     

  • Space. The Final Media Frontier?

    “Luck is preparation and opportunity.” –Bobby Knight

    If you’re like me, you probably never heard of the B612 Foundation before.

    The group, founded by two former NASA astronauts, wants to save the world…from space rocks.   Its mission statement says, “Our goal is to hunt asteroids that could hit the Earth and potentially cause human devastation.”

    Pretty obscure stuff.  Until last week.

    That’s when the Earth had two close encounters of the outer space kind:  One when an asteroid passed very close (in relative terms) to the planet.  And then when a meteor exploded over Russia, putting on a spectacular display of sound and fury, injuring more than a 1000 people.

    Suddenly, the B612 Foundation folks were right in the middle of big news.  And they smartly took advantage of it.

    Members of the group became media stars, popping up on network newscasts and in major newspapers to comment on these headline-making events.  Their organization and mission became front-and-center in the public consciousness.  Now LOTS of people know about the B61 Foundation.

    Luck?  You bet (see definition above).

    I have no idea how the B612 Foundation team prepared for cosmic-related breaking news stories, but it’s pretty evident they did.  And just as important, they knew how to take advantage of it once the opportunity presented itself.

    Sometimes breaking news and other situations occur where you would be the ideal choice for the media spotlight.  But if you aren’t ready to act when that happens, you could end up squandering an incredible chance at “getting noticed.”  That’s not bad luck, that’s bad preparation.

    So be prepared.  That means more than just having your thoughts in order.  You must also stay alert for stories where you could be the “expert” and be available to the media immediately after they happen.

    If you do, there’s a good chance you will have the kind of “luck” the B612 Foundation had.

    Leave a comment and see more at my official blog site:  http://www.mediamakersconsulting.wordpress.com 

  • The Drink Seen ‘Round the World

    Both my parents were born in the early part of the 20th Century and used a lot of old-time phrases.  One of them was that when you were thirsty you needed to “wet your whistle.”

    I wonder if Marco Rubio’s parents said that, too?!

    The Senator from Florida created a major media buzz by reaching for a bottle of water and drinking right in the middle of his nationwide response to President Obama’s State of the Union Address.  Rubio explained afterwards that he made the awkward move because his throat became parched and he was having trouble speaking during his lengthy comments.

    The drinking episode became almost as much of a headline as the President’s speech.  Replays of the now-famous sip showed up on newscasts and Internet sites.  But it was Rubio’s response that’s the real story for those looking to gain an edge in the media.

    He laughed at himself.

    Instead of going on the defensive or trying to ignore the incident, Rubio played into it.  Soon afterwards, he Tweeted a picture of the infamous bottle…and during an appearance on ABC’s “Good Morning America,” he intentionally pulled out a water bottle as he was being interviewed by anchor George Stephanopoulos, who chuckled and complimented Rubio for his ability to laugh at himself.

    By responding the way he did, Rubio helped diffuse a potentially negative situation and may have actually given his image a positive boost.  That’s something you need to keep in mind as you gain media exposure.

    When you are in the media spotlight a lot, inevitably “stuff happens.”  It could be a slip of the tongue, a “wardrobe malfunction,” an unusual water bottle grab or one of a hundred other “oops” moments.  The important thing for you to remember is if it does happen to you, don’t compound the incident by overreacting or underreacting.  Just deal with it in a manner that reflects positively on your personality.   Marco Rubio  chose to poke fun at himself.  For you, maybe it’s something else.   No matter what it is, if you do it the right way, you could actually end up getting some good media exposure from a mishap.

    Successful media players understand how to take advantage of all their opportunities–  both good and bad.

    I’m sure Marco Rubio would drink to that.

    Leave a comment and see more at my official blog site:  http://www.mediamakersconsulting.wordpress.com