Helpful hints to help reporters write tighter meeting stories on deadline. Deborah Potter works with TV folks, mostly, but made a few changes in this handout so it might work for newspaper reporters. Deborah also has some "meeting coverage" tips on her Web site at
www.newslab.org.

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Working Fast
A guide to getting the job done when you don't have time to think.

Prepare and Plan

  • The more you know, the better it will go.
  • Know what you don't know and what you need to know. Make notes of questions you need to have answered.
  • Save information you may need later - not on your desk, but where you can find it. Use a system that works for you: subject files, three-ring binders, computer notes.
  • Keep scripts and notes, and best tape - you may need them.
  • Create your own "futures" file.
  • File and update your phone list every day. (Note information about sources that may help you connect with them again.)

Take good notes

  • Notes should be clear enough to read - imagine you're in television and you have to go live.
  • Mark all good quotes, then narrow the list.
  • Use a tape recorder so you can get exact quotes, verbatim.

Focus in the field

  • Be open to new angles, perspectives, points of view.
  • Find the story within the assignment or topic you are covering.

Think as a team

  • Brainstorm with colleagues, especially reporters and photographers.
  • Use time in the car to plan, not to complain. Find a way to care.

Write as you go

  • Find a focus in the field.
  • Jot down descriptions or explanations that you can use almost verbatim.
  • Make note of themes, connections. Put what you're thinking in brackets.

Organize

  • Select elements that fit your focus. Ditch the rest.
  • Choose quotes for subjective information: opinion, reaction, experience, emotion.
  • Put the elements into blocks (what goes with what?), then organize them in sequence.
  • Make an outline, even if it's just a word or two on a line.
  • Find the thread that holds the story together, then string the pearls.
  • Know where you are going before you start. Have a strong ending.