Why Identity Gaps Lead to Inaccurate Media Coverage of Your Business

When a company finds itself in the news, most executives assume the reporters will capture the real story. They expect the deeper context to come through. They expect the industry’s nuances to be understood. They expect their intentions to be clear.

But coverage rarely works that way.

Reporters write what stands out in the room. If the company or association doesn’t articulate its identity clearly, the story gets reduced to whatever is easiest to frame. That’s how two different reporters can attend the same hearing or presentation and walk away with the same surface narrative.

It isn’t because they’re biased.
It’s because the deeper identity wasn’t communicated.

The identity gap creates the vacuum

When leaders show up to legislative hearings, public meetings or interviews without anchoring their industry’s identity, the reporter defaults to the simplest version of the event.

A testimony about algorithmic structures becomes “industry opposes regulation.”
A presentation about platform dynamics becomes “group warns of revenue loss.”
A complex business model gets flattened into a headline.

And suddenly the story isn’t wrong, but it’s incomplete.

A real-world example

Recently I read two separate articles covering an industry presentation from the Social Gaming Leadership Alliance (SGLA). Both reports captured the ban debate, the testimony, the projected revenue impact and the political angle. But neither article made the connection that SGLA’s industry operates on the same foundational mechanics as major social platforms.

TikTok, Meta, X, Facebook and Instagram all run on algorithmic reinforcement patterns. SGLA’s companies do the same thing. Same incentives. Same attention economy. Different costume.

When that identity isn’t expressed in the room, the public story loses depth. The reporters didn’t miss anything on purpose. They simply didn’t have the language to describe what wasn’t stated clearly.

Legislators fill in the blanks too

Most lawmakers don’t understand the industries they regulate. They rely on testimony, public commentary and the press to understand what a business actually is.

If your identity isn’t clearly communicated, the legislation that follows isn’t shaped by who you really are, but by whatever the surface story gives them.

Executives underestimate how often policy decisions are built on incomplete narratives.

Your identity is the anchor

When your internal identity is clear, you don’t just influence your customers.
You influence how:

  • reporters frame your story
    • legislators interpret your industry
    • competitors position themselves
    • the public understands your business
    • stakeholders assess your credibility

If you don’t define the deeper narrative, someone else will define the shallow one.

What leaders can do right now

If your business may appear in the news or in front of legislators:

  1. Identify the core truth about who your company is.
  2. Articulate the story beyond the numbers and talking points.
  3. Make sure the room understands your industry’s architecture, not just the issue of the day.
  4. Train your team to express identity in every interaction, not just in press releases.
  5. Never assume the deeper context is obvious. It isn’t.

When your identity is solid, coverage becomes accurate.
When identity is missing, coverage becomes thin.

That’s the difference between shaping the narrative and being shaped by it.

Picture of Jeff Scott

Jeff Scott

If your identity is misaligned, your performance, presence and decision making will collapse no matter how hard you push. I rebuild the internal operating system that is costing you money, clarity, authority and the ability to lead under pressure. If you want to remove the patterns driving your stress and step into the identity that your career and relationships demand, start with a private identity assessment. (See applications in Menu: Services)

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