Video Storytelling & Your Press Conference
How To Own Your Story and Control Your Narrative
St. Louis, MO – October 19, 2022 –
It was my experience with a January 2020 press conference that drove us to develop the brand journalism video storytelling service we currently offer clients around the country.
My experience during and following that one press conference sealed the deal with me that video storytelling must be part of the routine press conference.
To be clear, this wasn’t a great epiphany for me. I’ve long been an advocate for controlling your narrative, owning your story and sharing it directly with your audience. That said, it took a press conference about lights to have the lightbulb go off in my head about how STORYSMART could help.
I’ve been a PR professional for more than two decades. Over that time, I’ve attended literally hundreds of press conferences. I have organized hundreds of them as well.
Believe it or not, an MLB team has essentially two a day. A pre-game scrum with the manager and then a post-game presser. I don’t even count those in my numbers above.
I share those simply to give you some context of my background and perspective, as well as share my bona fides as a PR flak. This post is for all my fellow PR professionals who are responsible for handling media relations.
You should be using video storytelling to improve your media relations. You can check out our companion post on that topic. Your investment in video storytelling would be for both your friends in the media and the audiences who follow them (presumably the audience you seek to reach when you are pitching to the press).
I’m a firm believer that you are committing PR malpractice if you are not sharing your own story directly with your target audience these days. You have a fiduciary duty to your client that compels you to invest in telling your own story.
For what it is worth, your press release itself is born of this notion.
My experience with my lighting client illustrates the point well.
My client was a technology startup
that was invited to demonstrate their innovative lighting system to the media as part of a press event organized by the PR company of their client, Downtown STL
(a chamber of commerce like group).
To make a long story very short, I sent Julie Tristan
, a STORYSMART reporter, to cover the same event media were invited to attend. The PR company had written scripts for the multiple spokespersons, but didn’t distribute a press release or any informational materials.
The PR team relied on the journalists in attendance to do their thing and craft their own stories.
The press coverage following the event was positive for the community and Downtown STL. It delivered the message that new lights were installed downtown to make things safer, but it fell short on mentioning my client, the local startup that pioneered the innovative system.
My client was disappointed that their name didn’t make it into the stories. But in the end, the fact that the traditional media coverage didn’t hit the mark for my client wasn’t a problem as the video story produced by our reporter was a home run for the client.
That one video story allowed our client to share the news in a targeted way that resulted in an investment in their company by someone who saw the story.
All our client really needed was a shareable link to an honest and authentic video story. It didn’t matter who produced the story. They just needed a shareable link to a compelling story that an interested person would watch.
It didn’t matter that it wasn’t from a traditional media outlet.
Even if the St. Louis Post-Dispatchwrote a great story, it would have been difficult to share that story easily because of the pay wall the paper uses to wall off their stories. I’m a subscriber and I find it a challenge when I click a link to story they share via social media. It is frustrating.
The fact is that news and information is shared is vastly different ways today than it was in the past. Few read actual papers. News is consumed from a screen. Most likely a handheld screen.
Today, people get their “news” and “information” from all kinds of sources, reliable or otherwise. Nothing illustrated this phenomenon more than a global pandemic. I am still blown away by the level of ignorance I see spread online by people who should be much more discerning.
It is hard to stop misinformation from spreading because of how we connect with one another these days. In a way, it is job security for those within PR and media relations, while also being a cross to bear.
Most of the work that those of us in PR do is getting our story organized so we can share it with the media and other audiences. Honestly, I felt like gathering the information internally before sharing it externally was always the hardest part of media relations.
Since you have already done that part, it should be relatively easy to get that to a reporter working for you to prepare a video story.
The bottom line is you a fiduciary duty to your client to help them tell their story in an honest and authentic way that connects with their audience.
If you are going through the effort to host a press conference, you owe it to your client to help them tell their own story with video storytelling.
The benefits are that they will control the narrative and own the content. When you own your story, you can share it easily with whoever you want – whether that is your target audience or the media you invited to your press conference.
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




