Media Training for Executives – Insights from Munir Ahmad

media training for executives and leaders

Remember the last time a CEO said something completely wrong on live television? Maybe they got flustered. Maybe a journalist caught them off guard. Maybe they just froze, and millions of people watched it happen in real time.

Now picture the opposite. A leader who sits down, stays relaxed, answers every question with confidence, and leaves the room with their reputation stronger than before. Same pressure. Same camera. Completely different result.

So what separates those two people? It is not experience. It is not even intelligence. It is one thing, preparation. And that is exactly what media training for executives is built around.

In over 20 years of working with business leaders and public figures across Pakistan and beyond, I have seen smart, accomplished people fall apart in front of a microphone. Not because they lacked knowledge. But because nobody ever taught them how to handle that specific situation. The good news is — it is a trainable skill. Every single time.

The Media World Has Changed — And Most Executives Have Not Caught Up

Ten years ago, a bad interview stayed in one news cycle. Today, it gets clipped, shared on WhatsApp, posted on Twitter, and watched on YouTube for years. The stakes are simply higher now.

A Weber Shandwick survey found that 87% of executives believe reputation directly impacts business results. Yet most organizations spend heavily on PR strategy and almost nothing on preparing the person who actually speaks to the press.

Think about that gap for a moment. A company hires a PR team, builds a media strategy, pitches journalists, and then sends an unprepared executive to do the actual interview. That is where things go wrong.

Journalists are trained professionals. Their job is to ask uncomfortable questions. A good journalist will circle back to the same topic four different ways until they get the answer they want. An executive without media training often gives it to them without even realizing what happened.

What Does Media Training for Executives Actually Cover

A common mistake is thinking media training means learning how to speak in public. It goes much further than that.

The first thing a good media trainer works on is message clarity. Before any interview, an executive needs to know their top three to five points — the things they want to communicate, no matter what gets asked. Without that foundation, a conversation can go anywhere. With it, a leader always finds their way back to what matters.

After that comes question handling. It is important to know the difference between a question you answer directly, one you redirect, and one you reframe entirely. Real Media Training for Executives teaches exactly how to do each of those, without sounding defensive or rehearsed.

Body language is another area that most people underestimate badly. Research from UCLA suggests that up to 93% of communication impact comes from tone and body language rather than actual words. A leader who says the right things but looks tense, avoids eye contact, or speaks too fast sends a completely different message than they intend.

Crisis communication is also a core part of real media training. At some point — a difficult quarter, a public controversy, an unexpected event — most senior leaders face a media situation that carries real risk. The first time that happens should never be live on camera. Training prepares executives for those moments well before they arrive.

And then there is digital media. Podcasts, YouTube interviews, and LinkedIn Live — all of these have their own dynamics. The audience is different. The format is different. And the way content gets clipped and shared creates entirely new challenges for leaders who are not prepared for them.

media training for executives

The Mistakes I See Most Often

After working with executives across industries for two decades, certain patterns repeat themselves constantly. It is worth knowing what they are.

The most common mistake is over-explaining. A journalist asks a simple question, and the executive responds with a five-minute answer packed with qualifications and background that nobody asked for. The key message gets lost somewhere in the middle. Journalists stop listening. Audiences move on.

The second mistake is filling the silence. A journalist asks a tough question, the executive answers, and then the journalist just… stays quiet. Most untrained leaders feel that silence is pressure and keep talking to fill it. That is almost always when they say something they regret. A trained leader knows how to sit comfortably in silence and let the journalist move on.

The third mistake is going emotional when a question feels provocative. A journalist who asks, “Why did your company miss its targets this year?” is testing whether pressure gets a reaction. An emotional response, even a subtle one, confirms the test worked. A calm, factual answer shuts it down immediately.

The fourth mistake is the belief that experience is enough. Some executives have been in business for 30 years and assume that means they can handle any media situation naturally. That confidence is almost always misplaced. The best communicators in the world — politicians, global CEOs, major public figures — all prepare seriously before every significant public appearance. Experience matters. Preparation matters more.

How Real Media Training Works

The best media training for executives programs do not involve sitting in a room listening to theory. Real training means practice — on camera, under pressure, with difficult questions thrown at you in real time.

A good program starts with an honest assessment. A trainer needs to see how an executive currently communicates before anything else happens. What are the natural strengths? Where are the gaps? That assessment shapes everything that follows.

Then comes message development. The executive and trainer build a clear framework together — the core points, the evidence behind them, and the real-world stories that bring each point to life. A message without a story is forgettable. The right example makes it stick.

After that, the real work begins. Mock interviews on camera. Recorded sessions reviewed together. Specific feedback on tone, pace, word choice, body language, and message delivery. The goal is to make good habits automatic — so that when the real interview happens, the executive is not thinking about technique at all. It just runs naturally in the background.

At Munir Ahmad, media training programs are built around each client’s specific industry, audience, and the actual situations they are likely to face. A CEO preparing for a financial media interview needs different preparation than an entrepreneur going on a podcast or a corporate leader handling a press conference. The training reflects that difference.

Media Training and Personal Branding Are Connected

Here is something most executives do not consider until someone points it out. Every media appearance either builds or erodes a personal brand. A strong interview adds credibility. A weak one takes it away. And in 2025, every appearance lives online permanently.

The executives who become go-to voices in their industries — the ones journalists call back, the ones who get invited onto panels and podcasts repeatedly — did not get there by accident. They showed up consistently, communicated clearly, and handled pressure well. Over time, that consistency built a reputation that opened doors on its own.

At Munir Ahmad, personal branding strategy and media training are treated as connected work. A leader’s public communication is part of their brand. It should be intentional, consistent, and strong. When those two things align, authority builds faster than any paid marketing campaign can replicate.

Who Should Be Getting Media Training Right Now

The honest answer is more people than currently do.

Business owners who want media coverage for their brand need it. Corporate executives who represent their organizations in public need it. Entrepreneurs who are building investor relationships and need to tell their story compellingly need it. Professionals who appear on panels, speak at events, or participate in industry conversations need it.

It is also important for leaders who currently avoid the media entirely. Avoidance is not a long-term plan. Every serious business eventually needs its leaders to be visible and credible in public spaces. The question is not if that moment comes, it is whether the leader is ready when it does.

People also ask

How long does a media training program take?  

A core intensive program usually runs one to two full days. Ongoing sessions can be structured monthly or quarterly, depending on how often a leader faces public communication situations.

Does media training cover podcasts and social media interviews?

Yes. Modern media training for executives specifically covers digital formats, podcasts, video interviews, LinkedIn Live, and social media Q&A sessions all require their own communication approach.

Is media training only useful during a crisis?

Crisis communication is one part of it. The bigger value is in everyday media performance — building a credible, consistent public presence over time so that the crisis preparation is already in place if it is ever needed.

How is media training different from public speaking coaching?

Public speaking focuses on prepared presentations. Media training focuses on reactive, unscripted communication — interviews, press conferences, hostile questions, and live situations where a leader must think and respond in real time.

Does Munir Ahmad offer group media training for corporate teams?

Yes. Both individual executive programs and group sessions for corporate communications teams are available. Visit munirahmad.pk to start the conversation.

Final Thoughts

A strong reputation takes years to build. One poorly handled interview can damage it in minutes. That reality is not a reason to stay away from the media; it is a reason to prepare properly before stepping in front of it.

The leaders who perform well under media pressure did not wake up that way. They trained. They practiced in low-stakes environments before the high-stakes moments arrived. They got specific feedback and used it. And when the camera turned on, it showed.

If you are serious about how your brand is perceived and how your voice lands in public conversations, the investment in proper media training is one of the smartest ones you can make.

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