How
to Write Faster When You're Faced with a Newsroom Deadline
Plan Your News Story
As you're leaving the newsroom to
cover a story, use the time in the car to plan what you want to say. Sure,
you're not even on the scene of the huge fire, news conference or ribbon
cutting, but you already know something about the story or else you wouldn't be
going.
Try to get the focus of your story
down to one sentence. That will be the basis for writing the lead, whether
you're trying to come up with something for a TV news anchor to say or you're
trying to write headlines for the web.
Think about the Visuals
Shooting great video used to only
apply to television news. Today, newspaper reporters and web journalists are
often required to bring back video to go with their stories.
That's why you should think about
what viewers or readers will see along with your words. Considering what will
make the most compelling visual images will help you get started with your
writing. One of the top 10 tips for TV newswriting is to write to your video --
that is, to say something about what viewers are seeing, rather than going off
on an unrelated tangent.
Conduct Focused Interviews
If you're in a rush while on the
scene of a news story, you can save time when conducting interviews if you know
what you want to ask and stick to that. Otherwise, you'll easily fall victim to
a rambling interview that you won't have time to review or use in your
story.These TV interview tips can apply to all media. Get the facts quickly,
ask the necessary follow-ups and stop. Develop the self-discipline to know when
an interview is over so that you'll save precious writing time.
Conducting an interview in a
combative news situation presents its own challenges that can eat into your
time. But even then, the same planning beforehand will pay off because you'll
know exactly what you must get out of the interview and can cut it off before
it veers off into an unwanted direction.
Produce a Focused Story
You already thought of your lead
sentence, so now comes writing the rest of your story. Some basic writing
tricks can help you write faster.
Think in groups of threes -- the
three points your interview made, the three parts of the issue you're covering,
the three reasons why your story matters to people at home. These items
construct the backbone for your story. Then you write to fill in the gaps.
Check out these specific tips on writing crime stories, writing political
stories or writing retail business stories.
No matter what type of deadline you
face, avoid making critical errors in your writing. Your boss would undoubtedly
rather have you miss a deadline than be hit with a lawsuit because of your
rushed reporting.
Prepare for the Follow-Ups
Writing faster usually means leaving
out related, but unnecessary parts of the story. Many of those parts would make
for excellent follow-up stories for the coming days.
Knowing that you can always report
on these aspects of the story in the future makes it easier to leave them out
of your initial report. It'll be easier to fight the temptation to simply dump
every bit of information into the computer and then face a struggle of getting
it all organized.
The parts of your story that need
further investigation or confirmation can often wait for when you have time. As
long as you can accurately report the basic facts, you can publish a story.
Writing faster news stories will be
a skill that you'll constantly work on throughout your career. Sometimes you
have an entire day to develop a perfectly-executed news story, sometimes you
have only minutes. Be ready for both situations and you'll have success.
www.takeoneschool.com
No comments:
Post a Comment