| Writing
An Interview Script
by Barb Clews
Gathering information from interviews
is really simple. You ask the right questions and get
the right answers.
But what do you think will happen if
you go to the interview without doing any preliminary
research?
Let's imagine you are going to interview
a Chief Executive Office of an organisation. Your brief
for the article includes facts like this person is the
youngest in the history of the company to reach CEO.
He also sits on the boards of several institutes --
Again, the youngest person to attain this level.
As the interviewer, you want to know
as much as possible about the person, the company he
works for and his special interests. You want to go
into the interview as prepared as possible.
During the interview if you mention
information about him or the company, he will know you
have done your homework and you are interested in what
he has to say.
This is how I would prepare:
Telephone the organisation and ask
for the public relations department. If the company
doesn't have one, ask for the name of their consultant.
Request a media pack. This usually contains the latest
press releases, profile of the company, perhaps a brochure,
web site address, and so on. Tell either the public
relations department or the consultant you are going
to write an article about the CEO. This admission will
prompt the person you are dealing with to ensure you
are given everything they have on the top man.
Check the web site and download anything that could
be of interest.
Put the person's name into a search engine in case he
has written any papers or articles that have been published.
Download them.
Look up the web sites for the institutes that he has
a special interest in.
Read through all the gathered material and write a statement
on what the article is about and also write a brief/detailed
outline of what you want to include and the direction
you want the article to take.
Write a script containing all the questions you are
going to ask at the interview. Even if you have managed
to find some of the details elsewhere, still ask the
questions. This is a good way of double-checking the
facts.
Without the script you may not ask
the right questions and the answers will not reveal
the information you need to write a strong well-rounded
article that meets the editor's brief.

Barb Clews (http://www.bcacommunications.com.au)is
an award winning journalist with nearly 1,000 published
articles to her credit. She has been a writer and editor
for 15 years and is the author of "Article Writing
for Freelancers" and "20 Tips to Increase
Writing Skills"
Visit BCA Books (
http://www.bcabooks.com) to subscribe to "Words
that Work", Barb's monthly ezine packed with tips
for writers.
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