Video Storytelling To Improve Media Relations

Ron Watermon • October 17, 2022

It Is Malpractice To Fail To Tell Your Own Story

St. Louis, MO – October 17, 2022 – I am a firm believer that you should invest in telling your own story before expecting anyone else to do it for you. Anyone who manages media relations for a living knows that the real work of media relations is getting your story organized to share with the media.

I couldn’t expect a media member to get a fact right unless I had it first and shared it with the journalist.

How can you get mad they got it wrong if you didn’t help them get it right?

I’ve spent a few decades working with the media as a public relations and communications professional. I’d estimate that I’ve written or edited close over a thousand press releases during my career. When I worked for the St. Louis Cardinals, we issued nearly a press release a day. No joke.

My point to you is I understand the challenge you face with getting your information or story together to share with journalists. Much of your battle is internal. It is a lot of work. Trust me, I get it.

You know journalists appreciate it when you take the time to make their jobs easier. You can’t expect them to get the story right if you haven’t provided them every fact they need. And you make that point to your internal customers or clients constantly don't you?

Your job is to support journalists doing their job responsibly. Journalists are on deadline and are juggling a lot these days. And everyone is a critic. What is more is that social media has changed the job of a journalist in profound ways.

That is why I believe the modern media relations professional must insist on doing video storytelling as part of their routine work.

I believe you are committing malpractice if you don’t invest in telling your own story.

The first place journalists covering your brand will expect to find information about your brand is from your brand. They will go to your website, your blog and your social media to find information about your brand.

The modern journalist expects you to be telling your story.

That wasn’t always the case, but it is the baseline expectation today. Journalists expect you to be sharing your story, and they have a higher opinion of brands that do storytelling well.

That alone should be the reason you invest in telling your story.

When the media or anyone else goes to your website, what shows up?

What will they find? Do you do justice to your own story?

If you were evaluating you as journalist news outlet covering yourself, how would you rank?

If you don’t tell your own story well, how can you expect others to do it for you?

The main reason to invest in video storytelling today is that everyone expects to go directly to the source to get news and information. You are the ultimate authority on you. You have already done the work of pulling your story together. Those are just some of the reasons why you should invest in video storytelling.

Anything short of that is media relations malpractice.

About STORYSMART

If you want to be remembered, share an amazing story on screen. Whether developing a brand for your business or preserving a family legacy, nothing is more powerful than a great video story.

While there are a lot of DIY apps out there to help you produce a video, no app will turn you into a great filmmaker. Telling your story well with video can be hard. You need the right skills and equipment, not to mention time, money and talent to do justice to your story.

STORYSMART helps you tell your story in the amazing way you deserve with our done-for-you premium video storytelling service. Using a nationwide network of talent, STORYSMART provides you an experienced television reporter or journalist filmmaker to tell your story professionally following our proprietary STORYSMART system.

STORYSMART provides a nationwide premium video storytelling service that empowers individuals, families, celebrities, small businesses, and other organizations to have their stories told professionally while still retaining their intellectual property rights. Learn more at getstorysmart.com

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