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Working with Journalists as a PIO: Five Do's and Don't's
1. Working with Journalists as a PIO:
Five Dos and Don’ts
Ivan Oransky, MD
Executive Editor, Reuters Health
Adjunct Asst. Professor,
New York University Science, Health, and Environmental Reporting Program
Blogger, Embargo Watch and Retraction Watch
National Association of Science Writers
New Haven, Connecticut
November 6, 2010
3. Don’t
1. Call to make sure I got your emailed press release
2. Pitch me stuff I never cover
In my case: basic science, facility openings, studies that
haven’t been published or presented at a reasonably
prestigious conference
4. Don’t
1. Call to make sure I got your emailed press release
2. Pitch me stuff I never cover
In my case: basic science, facility openings, studies that
haven’t been published or presented at a reasonably
prestigious conference
3. Embargo studies that are already published
5. Don’t
1. Call to make sure I got your emailed press release
2. Pitch me stuff I never cover
In my case: basic science, facility openings, studies that
haven’t been published or presented at a reasonably
prestigious conference
3. Embargo studies that are already published
6. Don’t
1. Call to make sure I got your emailed press release
2. Pitch me stuff I never cover
In my case: basic science, facility openings, studies that
haven’t been published or presented at a reasonably
prestigious conference
3. Embargo studies that are already published
7. Don’t
4. Ask me to agree to an embargo that you plan to let
someone else break
8. Don’t
4. Ask me to agree to an embargo that you plan to let
someone else break
9. Don’t
4. Ask me to agree to an embargo that you plan to let
someone else break
10. Don’t
5. Send embargoed material before I’ve agreed to any
embargo, then expect me to uphold it
11. Don’t
5. Send embargoed material before I’ve agreed to any
embargo, then expect me to uphold it
12. Do
1. Convince your researchers to return my staff’s phone
calls -- by deadline
2. Get to know what I’m interested in, by reading it, and
seeing what I do on Twitter
3. Send me stuff you think I’d be interested in that isn’t
from your institution
4. Send me stories from high-impact journals that don’t
embargo
5. Convince your researchers not to talk in jargon