"When you meet the press, know what you want to say."Put this form into your trial notebook. It's a quickly read text for you and your client, listing public relations tips and tactics for responding to the public media reporters. Be prepared before the reporter phones. |
Every attorney should have a standard, compact, easily memorized, operating plan (an SOP) for handling the public press and television media. There are reasons for always having an SOP (ready for both you and your client to review before you pick up the phone call or grant an interview).
We have a quick, inexpensive, short list form you can use to educate you and your client for talking to newspaper and TV reporters. It's a "must have". It gives you a mentor's advice in much less time than it would take you to think it out and dictate it, even if you were an expert media advisor yourself. All of the DepoForm™ forms are for you to print and use --- today. As the last part of the automated purchase process, your browser is sent to a page where there is a link for you to click to instantly download the form into your computer. Print as often as you wish for your own use, from your own computer, today! I suggest you put a copy of this Media Handling Form in your trial notebook, anytime you have a case that is newsworthy, and anytime that you have a case going to trial. You will need it for your client's public relations if a reporter contacts you or your client. The media is not there to determine the truth. The media is there to get something from you that they can use to sell newspapers or keep people watching the 6 pm news. Be friendly, but realize that reporters do not regard you as a friend. Discuss handling of the press with any client before the client gets to the courtroom door. You do not want an unprepared client buttonholed in the corridor by a reporter when you are inside the judge’s chambers. Use this Media Handling Form. Think of the form as emotional insurance. A note about ethics: A lawyer shall not make an extrajudicial statement that a reasonable person would expect to be disseminated by means of public communication --- if the lawyer reasonably should know that it will have a substantial likelihood of prejudicing a trial. This means that if you are trying to influence the jury by what you are saying, don’t do it. There sometimes is a fine line between seeing that your client does not suffer in the press and influencing the jury, but you will need to not cross that line. Look for that line before you talk. We are selling How to Handle the Media - Public Relations today, , for only $7. Click the "Buy Now" Button to get How to Respond to the Media --- Now!
-- Advice worth every penny -- Advice that gives you emotional insurance --- In a quick no-nonsense easy to use format! We are selling the #TIP3013 Respond to Media until midnight of ,for only $7.
All The Best,
|