Satellite Media Tour 101

Everything you need to know — what an SMT is, how it works, and the questions every PR pro should ask a vendor.

What is a Satellite Media Tour?

A Satellite Media Tour (SMT) is a broadcast PR tactic where a spokesperson participates in a series of back-to-back live and taped TV and radio interviews — from a studio, a remote location, or virtually — reaching local markets across the country in a single morning.

The tour can run from a professional studio, from a remote location like a corporate headquarters, or from an event like a trade show. Tours can also be done fully virtually. The vendor's media relations team books interviews with local TV morning shows and radio stations nationwide, typically in 10-minute windows, and the spokesperson moves from one interview to the next throughout the morning. Each interview runs about 2–3 minutes for TV to 5–7 minutes for radio.

A well-executed SMT can place a spokesperson on air in 18 to 24 markets in a single morning. It's particularly effective for product launches, health and wellness campaigns, seasonal consumer stories, and anything with a strong visual or demo component.

SMT vs. Virtual Media Tour (VMT): A traditional SMT is produced from a professional studio or on location with a camera crew; a virtual media tour (VMT) delivers the same TV and radio interviews over video conferencing, so the spokesperson can be almost anywhere. The bookings are with the same local-market stations, but VMTs add location flexibility and are often more cost-effective. Most vendors today offer studio, remote, and virtual options.

Local Market Reach

Reach 18–24 local TV and radio markets in a single morning.

Spokesperson-Driven

Your spokesperson owns the full segment and your brand retains primary message control. There is no brand sharing unless you opt for a co-op SMT.

Typical Turnaround

From booking to broadcast, a typical SMT can be executed in a four-to-six-week turnaround.

Measurable Results

Vendors provide clips, market-by-market placement data, and audience reach figures for every interview.


How does an SMT work?

From concept to media day, here's what the typical Satellite Media Tour process looks like from start to finish.

1. Select your vendor

It all starts with picking the right partner, as they shape everything that follows. Talk to a few vendors, get a feel for how they work, and don't be shy about telling them what you have in mind; the good ones will come back with creative ideas that make your story stronger. When you're ready to compare them more closely, there's a handy list of 10 questions to ask, with a copy-and-send template in the Choosing a Vendor section below.

2. Brief your vendor and define your news hook and talent

Once you've chosen a partner, brief them fully and build the story together. A lot rides on your news hook, so refine the angle until it fits a station's audience and delivers your brand's key messaging: health tips, consumer advice, seasonal trends, and product demos all work really well in the SMT format. Knowing what a morning-show producer will actually book is its own skill, so lean on your vendor's media-relations team, who do exactly that all day. Lock in your spokesperson here too; if you don't have one, many vendors can recommend or even provide media-trained on-air talent.

3. Develop messaging and talking points

Work with your vendor to develop broadcast-ready talking points that are concise and conversational. Most interviews run about 2–3 minutes for TV to 5–7 minutes for radio, so spokespeople need to bridge from questions to key messages naturally. Many vendors offer a talent run-through before media day.

4. SMT day

Your spokesperson arrives at the studio or a remote location, or logs in virtually. The vendor's bookers have pre-scheduled interviews with stations throughout the morning, a mix of live and taped segments, and the talent will work their way through the schedule over a 4–6 hour window. If you can't be on site with your talent, most vendors will offer a virtual greenroom, which is an online link that lets you and your client watch the tour live from anywhere.

5. Extended reach

Many vendors produce a standalone TV or radio segment in the days after media day, placed nationally to give a nice bump to your total reach.

6. Reporting

Your vendor delivers clips, market-by-market placement data, and audience reach figures, often starting with a same-day recap on media day, followed by the full report. This is your reporting ammunition for the client.


How to choose the right SMT vendor

Not all Satellite Media Tour companies are created equal. Here's what to evaluate — and the questions to ask — before you commit.

These are the questions every PR professional should ask. A ready-to-send vendor vetting template with all 10 questions is waiting for you at the bottom of this page.

Vendor Vetting Template — Copy & Send

Send this list with your first outreach. A vendor who answers directly is a green flag. One who dodges the questions is a yellow one.

  1. What is the base fee, what's included, and are there any add-ons?
  2. Can I see clips and a placement report from a recent tour on a similar topic?
  3. How many interviews do your tours typically deliver?
  4. How many broadcast impressions and online impressions (UMV) do your tours typically deliver?
  5. How many interviews typically land in the top 50 U.S. markets?
  6. Do you include produced extended reach media like an audio news release or a placed TV segment?
  7. Can I review and approve messaging before media day, and is there a talent run-through?
  8. Will there be a virtual greenroom?
  9. What are the key deadlines — talking points approval, studio booking, and media day?
  10. If I want to post a clip, will your team request approval from the station?

Insider SMT knowledge

Production quality varies enormously

Not all Satellite Media Tours look the same. Some vendors produce polished segments that look like they belong on network TV; others look noticeably low-budget. Watch recent clips and ask yourself the simple question that's easy to forget: would you be comfortable putting your client in this segment?

Station Disclosure

Stations are required to disclose third-party news content (content that doesn't originate with the station), so don't be surprised if some of your segments include the word "sponsored" or a similar on-screen disclosure like "provided by." This is standard practice required by FCC regulations and is not a reflection of segment quality. Know this going in, and make sure your client knows it too.