On
the 2nd of April 2015, I was invited by Kellen Europe as one of the panellists during
the Brussels event Euroconference 2015.
I had promised the participants that I would not use a PowerPoint presentation,
but that I would publish a blog message about some ideas on working with the EU
affairs media. I will share this content also with other interested persons
working in the area of communication for EU federations.
There
are approximatively 1000 accredited journalists in Brussels, representing:
Ø National
correspondents from EU member states (like TF1, Le Monde, France Press, etc)
Ø National correspondents
from non-EU countries (journalists from China, Africa, etc)
Ø International correspondents
(like Financial Times, Reuters, Bloomberg)
Ø Sectorial
specialists (like Chemical Watch, ENDSEurope)
Ø EU specialists (less
than 5% of the Brussels based journalists)
Why
do you need to interact with the Brussels media?
Ø To communicate your
position regarding the legislative process
Ø To move an issue up
in the policy agenda
Ø You are organising
an event
Ø Your President is
coming to Brussels
Ø You are publishing a
study
The
important mix in your strategy to approach a journalist:
Ø Policy hook
Ø Relevant timing
Ø Something to say
Practical
advises, if you what to approach the EurActiv Media:
How
do the journalists choose stories and links?
Ø Monitoring EU
institutions and private sector
Ø Decide on coverage when
relevant for EurActiv’s policy section
Ø Balance fact-based
reporting – not only based of one press release (media of the EU stakeholders)
Ø Weekly planning on
Monday morning (9:30 – Brussels & 11:00 – Network)
Ø Long-term planning
for LinksDossiers, Special Reports and policy news
How
to inform the journalists about your policy papers?
Ø Identify the
relevant policy section (call for info the general number 02-226 58 10)
Ø Contact the
relevant section co-ordinator
Ø See if EurActiv has
a LinksDossier on the topic
Ø Still subject to
editorial decision
Ø Do not forget about
the language and EurActiv Network (present in 12 EU capitals + Serbia +
Istanbul)
What
would a journalist like?
Ø Have a clear
website (who you are and what you represent)
Ø Anticipate the
dynamics of EU legislation
Ø Send your message
to the correct journalist (press release, policy paper, report, etc)
Ø Call in order to
offer extra information
Ø Scope regarding a
specific dossier
Ø Be on Twitter –
active, retweet, engage with the journalist on social media
Ø Have an opinion
blog – launch it for free on EurActiv’s blog platform www.blogactiv.eu
DO
NOT FORGET: You can also submit an opinion (Op-ed) – see the conditions at www.euractiv.com/opinion (750 words,
picture, etc)
Regarding
press conferences – no, please! Especially if you are a niche organisation!
More
information regarding the communication of EU federations at:
Dan
LUCA / Brussels
@DanLucaEU
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