How Can I Get on TV? 22 Short Steps to Get in the Spotlight to Double Your Business

How Can I Get on TV? 22 Short Steps to Get in the Spotlight to Double Your Business

Many people see getting on TV as holy-grail to getting publicity. Often the first words out of a new client’s mouth are: “How can I get on TV.” Even if they’ve never been on a local TV show they want to be on national TV for the instant recognition, prestige and power that being seen on TV brings in today’s visually driven world.

Oprah was the leader in making careers overnight for her show for authors and anyone with a business, book, product, service or cause.

Other shows don’t necessarily have the same instant influence that Oprah had, but a four-minute segment on a major morning TV talk show, news or late night show can still have that magic formula effect.

While getting on TV can be a powerful way for founders, entrepreneurs, authors, leaders, coaches and consultants to increase their sales and grow their business on the spot, it can also be something of a dud if not done correctly.

Here are twenty-one ways you can get on TV and then make your appearance count.

1. Write a Segment Not a Pitch to Get on TV.

When I work with my clients I write up a segment – exactly what you would see if you watched the show that caters to the hosts strengths and personality. I’ve watched the shows so I have a sense of the subject matter they like to cover and the format they prefer. I’ve read up on as much as I can to best angle my segment to the preferences of the hosts and show.

This process is the same when I work directly with PR firms. But typically the PR agency creates the initial segment idea and then the client and I work on personalizing that so it makes it easy for them to deliver the information they want to their right-fit audience so they get real results from their appearance. This means developing the questions they’ll be asked, the answers to those questions, the B-roll (background footage), props and points they want to make.

2. Know the TV Show.

When you are a guest on a TV show you need to be familiar with that show. That’s essential. Think of it as a job interview for your dream job. You would want to know the background of the person interviewing you, their personality and pet peeves and their style and pacing. You would want to understand the culture of the company. You would want to know what kind of products or services have been successful for them and the way they like those things packaged.

3. Be Privy to the Hosts’ Perspective.

For Dr. Sara Gottfried, Harvard trained integrative physician, yoga diva meets science nerd, and author of The New York Times best-selling book The Hormone Cure, and several other best-sellers, we developed a segment called, “What does every woman have in her purse that can balance her hormones naturally?” for the 10am slot on NBC’s Today show.

This segment has automatic gal appeal to women hosts and their audience, plus addresses one of the most difficult issues women deal with – cortisol, the culprit behind stress. She went on to be a guest on the show and on the todayshow.com website as an expert and thought leader discussing women and their hormones a number of times after that.

Once the producer and host see that you are a great guest and have ongoing information that’s valuable to their audience they often invite you back because you’re tried and true and they can count on you to give good value—which in turn makes them look good.

4. Develop Your 5 Points and 5 Questions.

For Dr. Sara we first found the 5 points we wanted to focus on and then reverse-engineered the questions that the hosts could ask. Next, we crafted the women-centric visuals that would drive the segment and create interaction between the hosts and Gottfried.

5. Give Extra Perks to TV Show Producers.

Then we created quick teaser copy (that’s what you hear when the hosts let you in on the secret of what’s upcoming so you don’t change the channel or tune out). In other words we did the job of the producer which gave us the advantage of positioning Dr. Sara exactly as she wants to be perceived. So it does double duty of controlling our content and image.

Finally, we chose a special report for a website giveaway. TV producers want to drive website traffic to their website not yours. So their audience goes to their site for the “extras” and then can jump to the guests’ website from there. Extras can be anything that takes you deeper into a guest’s work and world: a book excerpt, a recipe, an infographic, an audio or video clip.

6. Integrate Stories into the Conversation that Bring You Business.

After that we honed each example down to a 20 second or so response that included a story or vignette of how Gottfried wanted her business to grow. Since she has an online community and courses one of our examples included a success story about women in her courses.

It may seem like a “duh” moment, but it’s an essential that most TV guest forget first — especially under the pressure of hot lights and a tight timeframe. By using specific success story examples you drive the kind of business, partnerships, opportunities, experiences and sales you want directly to you.

7. Be Natural and Engaging On-Camera.

Being natural and engaging is pretty much rule number one: You must mention the kind of business you want in an example in order to increase it. The hard part is that it needs to be integrated seamlessly into the conversation in a natural and engaging way that is totally on target to your point.

8. Practice Your SoundbitesYour Key Messagesin Every Media Interview.

That’s where lots of practice comes in and it’s where I spend the majority of time with my clients — role-playing the entire segment in different ways so they can speak their sound bites smoothly and don’t crumble under pressure or slip up when surprised. If you don’t have this element down pat, then you’re not getting the full value of your media appearances. In other words, you’re losing, business, sales, experiences and opportunities that you may never get again.

9. Time Your Soundbites.

Once we’ve completed the segment I pulled out my timer and we set it for four minutes and raced through in real time so Gottfried could manage her own time and get a sense of the pacing. I played the part of the chatty hosts, complete with interjections and comments to make sure that Gottfried could stay on message even if the hosts aren’t asking the exact questions we prepared.

10. Package Your Program.

By creating this segment ourselves and not waiting for the producers to tell us what they envision we invite them to take advantage of our ideas. We’ve done the work for the producers. We get a segment in which we’ve prepared the package we want presented, shaped the perception of our business, book, produce, service or cause, strategically outlined the presentation of our information, and done it all in a lively and entertaining way which delights the audience and the hosts and producers. The result: great segment, media trained guest, good ratings, engaged audience, happy hosts, thrilled client. Everyone ends up winning.

11. Post a Demo Media Interview on Your Website.

National TV show producers need to make sure that you’re mediagenic. They want to see that you know how to dress, handle yourself in a tight-time frame, entertain, enlighten and inform in 10-20 second sound bites-all while being completely natural and engaging. You want to have an example of you interacting in a TV interview or a mock one so you can pass the pre-audition and then move on to the actual audition. It’s OK to create a mock one if you haven’t yet done any media appearances. If a producer sees that you’re capable and lively then they’ll most likely move forward to the next step – the audition.

12. Create a Sizzle Reel that Includes On-Camera Media Appearances.

Later, when you have a series of interviews you can cut them together into a sizzle reel so producers can see clips of the best of the best and get the total picture of your capabilities.

13. Help Shape the Show.

Typically guesting on a TV show process works like this: a producer and publicist discuss some topics and story angles and then the producer gets on the phone or Zoom with the client so they can hear the kind of responses the “potential media guest” (you) will give and to bat around ideas and shape the show. You have to be fluid with your topic and think like a producer in helping to lay out a visually dramatic, fast-paced, enthralling show.

14. Be a Great Guest.

Now you’re on the show. Waiting in the green room. Sitting in the chairs across from the hosts. Hot lights. Count down. You’re on camera…

Gulp!

15. Review Your Notes.

Even though we had practiced for hours, and this wasn’t his first media tour, one of my clients, a New York Times best-selling author said, “Susan, everything you taught me went to hell in a hand-basket as soon as the interview began.” I told him that he could keep his notes handy and glance down at them when needed. Especially when quoting breaking news statistics. You’ll often see experts bringing their notes onto panel discussions on news shows or when they are commenting on current events.

It’s quite common for your brain to fritz out. A combination of anxiety, nerves, jitters and being in an unfamiliar and foreign setting can upset your internal applecart in the blink of an eye.

That’s why it’s super important to plan, prepare and practice so you can be free to be spontaneous. This way the information is in your long-term memory and not short term which cortisol can block when you’re in freeze “deer in the headlights” mode. 

16. Calm Your Nerves.

When I media trained my author-client on-camera I taught him some relaxation exercises to practice that involved both movement and breathing. The key word here is practice. A lot of it. Before you contact the media. Before you get the call.

17. Practice on Video.

I highly recommend that you turn on that video camera, pull out a kitchen timer and have a friend or media trainer run you through the questions you’ve created so you can answer them in your sleep. That way you’ll get used to the sensation of being video taped and it won’t seem as foreign once you’re in a studio. Of course the TV studio cameras are much bigger than your compact camera and the very setting itself can be intimidating. Really intimidating.

When clients come to town for media training I take them into the same studio that PBS and CNN use in San Francisco so they get the real experience of being on-camera and during a satellite interview. They get the feel of the hot lights, experience the countdown, the cameramen, being in a chair with a green screen behind them so they get the sensations of what it feels like in a studio. 

How Can I Get on TV

18. Relax and Settle On-Camera.

Once you’re on camera you don’t want to be thinking about what you’re going to say next. You want to relax, be in the moment, create connection, and tell your audience what you want them feel and to remember.

Not easy, I know.

19. Feel My Support and Guidance.

The next big interview my “hell in a hand basket” client told me, “I had you in my head the entire time.” So he could keep his cool and stay true to his message. Did he do it perfectly? No. Did he tell stories that had emotion and dignity that brought tears to my eyes? Yes. Did he remember everything he was supposed to cover? No.

There is always….next time.

20. Self Assess.

But every interview is a process. And I suggest that after every media appearance you ask yourself two questions.

  1. What did I do well that I want to keep?
  2. What would I have done differently that I’d like to shift?

Then on the very next interview you incorporate both of those things. Knowing that someone believes in you gives you a solid foundation and confidence you didn’t know you had.

21. Discuss Your Success From Your Media Appearance.

The way you double or triple your business during a media interview is by doing three things.

  1. Talking about successes you’ve had through your clients. This is how you avoid bragging. It’s about them, not you.
  2. Addressing the needs of your audience by telling a story that relates directly to a deep longing or something practical they want.
  3. Being human and authentic while sharing a personal story or accomplishment that is meaningful to you that creates emotion, connection or curiosity.

22. Process is Progress.

Process is everything. It’s in the doing that things shift. More to the point it’s the doing and doing and doing that creates change. After you’ve sent in that segment and when you get called for that golden opportunity to be on a national TV show know that preparation is key.

Now is the time to map out exactly what you’re going to say, time it to the second, and practice until you can do it in your sleep under any circumstance being your natural, inviting, engaging self.

Then when you’re on TV your four minutes of fame will be the beginning of many more media appearances that will sustain you for a lifetime.

Do you want to get on TV and make your appearance count? Let’s work together!

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Disclosure: Some of the above may be affiliate links that I will be compensated for at no cost to you. They are products or services I’ve either used, vetted or trust. Enjoy!

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susan-hi

Hi, I'm Susan

I’m a media coach, martial artist + marketing strategist who helps you communicate your values, mission + message during media interviews to multiply your revenue while building your brand + business. I believe that you don’t need to brag, beg or whore yourself to get the publicity you want. Nor do you need to be an axe murderer, a shamed sports star, or be involved in a sex scandal. There is another way…

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