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AMSUK ANNUAL CONFERENCE LEICESTER APRIL 2010 Communication & Media (In an Ideal World)

Communication & Media (In an Ideal World)

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Communication & Media (In an Ideal World). AMSUK Annual Conference LEICESTER APRIL 2010. Disclaimer. All images used here have been taken for the purposes of this presentation only and are widely available on the web. What do you get from this picture?. Communications. Why do it ? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

AMSUK ANNUAL CONFERENCELEICESTERAPRIL 2010

Communication & Media (In an Ideal World)

Page 2: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Disclaimer

All images used here have been taken for the purposes of this presentation only and are

widely available on the web

Page 3: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

What do you get from this picture?

Page 4: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Communications

Why do it ? What do we mean by communication?

What are the different types of communication methods?

Page 5: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Purpose of Communication

1. Get your message across to others (effectively)

2. 2 way process – sender and receiver

3. Message is only successful when the sender and receiver perceive it in the same way

Page 6: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Achieving Clarity

SENDER RECEIVERMESSAGE CHANNEL

CONTEXT

FEEDBACK

Know:

•Your subject

•Your audience

•Context

What do you want to deliver?

How do you want to deliver it?

The audience with their actions and reactions and feelings

Verbal and non verbal reactions which ensure whether the audience has understood or not

The situation in which your message is delivered

Page 7: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Barriers to Communication

SENDER RECEIVERMESSAGE CHANNEL

CONTEXT

FEEDBACK

Ability to get message across / lack of insight to communication process / lack of emotional management / not assertive / defensiveness

Too long / disorganised / errors

Wrong method of communication

audience background / culture

No means of feedback / lack of control / offensive and emotional / inattentive listening

Too much information being sent too fast

Page 8: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Forms of Media

Mainstream - TV, Radio, Broadsheets

E-media - Internet, Mailing Lists, Websites Blogs, Chat, Youtube

Advertisements / Magazines

Citizen Journalism – Mobile Phone Uploads, SMS, Online Posts, Personal Blogs, Letters

Community Journalism – Community Newspapers / Media, Newsletters, Leaflets

Collaborative Journalism – More interactive (Wikipedia style)

Graffiti, T-Shirts, Tattoos, Photos, Cartoons, Film, Drama

Social networking - Twitter, Facebook, Myspace

Page 9: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

The Importance of Images (1)

Page 10: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

The Importance of Images (2)

Page 11: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

The Crucial Role of the Mainstream Media

Mass production of influence on public opinion

Acceptability, credibility and legitimacy

The ‘whole story’?

Access: Who gets to have their say?

Accountability & Regulation

Page 12: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Essential Objectives of Media

Tell a story:

Inform

Report

Cover

Analyse / Opinion

Educate (?)

Page 13: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

By-Products of Modern Media

Educate

Communicate

Entertain

Propagate

Instigate Change

Page 14: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Importance of Media

The essential nature of Da’wa

Effective and efficient means of delivery

Instant broadcast and transmission

Absence of borders, obstacles & restrictions

Infinite broadcasting space

Affordable

Page 15: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Hidden Elements of the Media

Proprietors

The Markets

Government Influence (or Control)

Context

Page 16: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

The Context

History

Current and Landmark Events

Over-riding Perceptions

Power Dynamics

Page 17: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Problems In Coverage/Reception

Little appreciation of historic, geographic and demographic

dimensions

Cultural Vs. Religious

Overlapping Identities (Arab, Asian, Pakistani, European,

etc.)

“Lost in Translation”

The “Photoshop Effect”

Volume of presupposed knowledge and stereo-typical

material

Page 18: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Facts to be considered

The quantitative explosion in ‘Alternative Media’, including the Internet and Mobile

Phone uploading have made news and debates more accessible than ever before.

The link between Media establishments and the markets.

Media cannot be isolated from others dimensions of society including government,

public attitudes, etc.

Page 19: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Positive Aspects

Increasing number of Muslims working within mainstream and alternative media

Increased understanding of Islam and Muslims amongst European media

professionals

Louder and more effective Muslim voices within mainstream and alternative media

Islam becoming recognised as one of the main religions of Europe

Page 20: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Necessary Steps

Increased awareness and education among all public authorities and services

Increased visible proof of Islam and Muslims in Europe

More effective discourse by Muslims on issues of common concern

More research and surveys as to the impact of Media coverage on rise of Islamaphobia

Page 21: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)
Page 22: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

PART 2

Page 23: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

The Need for Media Strategy

‘Public Opinion’ is not one monolithic entity, but rather a diverse array of

trends and tendencies.Utilising the media through real events

Dealing and interaction with all elements of the media world

‘He who isn’t with us…is not necessarily against us

Page 24: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

The Perception Test

Page 25: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Perception Test

Page 26: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Media Plan: Aims and Objectives

To informTo publicise and promoteTo lobby for changeTo influence Public OpinionTo defend the wrongedTo show supportTo use-up vacant media space

Page 27: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

The Strategy

Develop your organisational vision If you don’t know where you are going, you will end

up somewhere else’ – Yogi Bear

Outline the organisational plan and goals for working with the media SMART(ER) –Specific Measurable Achievable Realistic

Timebound (Extensive Reviewed) SWOT – Strengths Weaknesses Opportunities Threats

The Media Strategy Questionnaire See Section 2 (page 17) of the Media Guide

Page 28: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Strategic Questions USP Vulnerabilities Human Resources Contingencies

Practical questions Budget Skills Agenda

Long Term Message Narrative & Relevance KISS (Keep It Short

and Simple)

Accessing the mediaDifferent types:

News Features Targeting the approach

The Media Strategy Questionnaire

Page 29: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

The Basic Elements of a Media Strategy

Getting to know the Media

Media Monitoring

Developing the message

Media Response

Feedback - Performance Assessment (KPIs)

Page 30: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Getting to Know the Media

Developing a rapport / networking T.V.

Radio

Newspapers

Magazines and Journals

Internet websites

‘Alternative Media’

Page 31: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Getting to Know the Media (2)

Main Editors

Reporters

Presenters

Columnists

Analysts and Experts

Proprietors

Page 32: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Media Monitoring

Coverage of my own organisation

Coverage of country and the region

Coverage of the opposition

Reports of important issues

Page 33: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

The Constituents of the Media Message

News (Content)

Images

Discourse

Page 34: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Developing the Message

What is the message? 3 facts to be considered 5 w and 1 H Method of Delivery Audience

Relevance of the messageType of Message:

News Features Investigative

Page 35: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Media Response

News ReportsPress ReleasesAction AlertsLetters to the Editor‘Phone-ins’InterviewsAudience Participation

Page 36: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Press Releases

Short, Sharp, To the Point (KISS)

DistributionTimingFollow upphotos

Page 37: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Letters

KISS – less is moreNo jargonNo metaphors /

similies / slangComplain /

ComplimentWrite with a cool

headPlan the letterKnow the newspapers

AccuracyAvoid generalisationsAvoid insultingPunctuationUK English /

American EnglishPatience and

perseverance

Page 38: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Tips for Interviews

CalmnessPlanningNo Off the CuffDon’t answer leading questions

Appearing on TV

Page 39: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Feedback

We must encourage feedback of all sorts and from all sectors

of the public.

Remember…you are more likely to learn from the criticism more than you do from the praise.

Page 40: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Assessing Performance

KPIsEffect on issue or policy

Change of Public Opinion

Type and quality of feedback

Immediate and long-term public reaction

Volume of media appearances

Page 41: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Vital Resources

Awareness and understanding

Sound and clear language

Ability to respond instantly

Good and sound research

Professional appearance and performance

Continuous Development

Page 42: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

Media Toolkit

Pre-planning check listDetermine news outletLanguage and approach10 commandments of the media officer (page 43 of the media guide)

Page 43: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

And Finally…

Sincerity (true and correct Niyyah)

Reliance on Allah

Doing our utmost

Abiding by Islamic boundaries

Page 44: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)
Page 45: Communication & Media  (In an Ideal World)

العالمين رب لله والحمد