Getting in on the conversation is a well-trodden means to gain media coverage. This piggy-back method by responding or talking about key issues on the news agenda can be highly productive. It can help to enhance reputation or credibility by showcasing a university or business school’s knowledge and expertise in fields at the centre of the news agenda.
The list of subjects and content is almost endless and can range across a multitude of issues in the news, from leadership and organisational change to climate change.
To achieve results and get the opinions out there in time does depend on knowing your business school or organisation’s faculty or experts so that the response is in time. The news agenda is fast moving. What is news in the morning may have passed by once the afternoon has arrived.
With Dominic Cummings revelations about Boris Johnson, or even Gareth Southgate’s leadership success at the Euros, there is always an opportunity to voice reaction. But any comment or insights has to be interesting and insightful and from an acknowledged expert in that field.
Leadership is one theme that repeatedly raises its head. Anything from politicians to football managers. How an issue could have been handled to achieve improved results, or it could be the psychological approach or the impact to the decisions leaders have made. The scope is considerable.
Organisations are regularly in the midst of change or reorganisation programmes. It could be there is a news story on this issue. Most business schools are likely to have experts or research around this to allow them to be presented for interview or comment.
The workplace as we knew it changed overnight with the outbreak of Covid-19. With most offices having to shut and employees having to work remotely for the first time, we became increasingly reliant on technology in order to function and connect with each other. More specifically, some focus turned to how artificial intelligence could be used to assist organisations during the pandemic. Dr Terence Tse, associate professor of finance at ESCP Business School, was able to share his much-needed expertise on this with Raconteur and The Sunday Times.
Aside from Covid, with the rise in technology, other issues that are regularly on the radar include robotics. Are we being taken over or will man still have a job to do? Or even the effects of cyber-crime, we’ve seen recently the impact of data breaches and the effect they can have on sites like LinkedIn and other organisations around the world.
Thanks to characters like Elon Musk, cryptocurrencies and Bitcoin have also been creeping into the mainstream media. Because of crypto’s risky reputation but potentially high pay off, journalists more than ever want comment from a trusted professor on its legitimacy and, luckily for us, most business schools will have people well placed to comment on the relatively new and volatile investment.
Sustainability is a regular news topic, whether it is climate change, world events or the many elements both physical and human that affect lives. For example, the intensity and scale of the floods in Germany recently have shocked climate scientists.
Here at Bluesky Education, we provide experts with that niche area of knowledge or research that we are able to call upon to give journalists key insights and explanations. We often see these insights being published in the likes of the Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg or even the Financial Times.
So the news agenda offers that perfect opportunity to gather prestigious coverage. What’s happening in the news at the moment that you could share expertise on?
Originally published in May 2017, updated July 2021