Writing Boots

On communication, professional and otherwise.

When good communicators do bad work

04.07.2011 by David Murray // 7 Comments

"If we don't do bad work, bad work won't get done."

That was easy for my dad to say back in 1972, because he was writing to the staff of his just-opened advertising agency. They hadn't done any bad work yet, unlike the rest of us, who if we have been employed by any organization for awhile, are each mired in a traditions of bad work: ain't-broke-don't-fix-it rituals and we've-always-done-it-that-way mores and shabby games where grownups play pretend.

For instance: An association's speechwriter writes to tell me she has to write the same speech every year "when our executive director gives his year-end report to the membership at our national conference. His goal is to touch on each area of the organization and mention names of as many member volunteers as possible … in 20 minutes. My goal is to make this litany of accomplishments and names as interesting as possible for the audience. To that end, I would greatly appreciate any thoughts you may have as to how I might better accomplish both goals in the future."

What did I tell her? I told her what she already knew. Her first goal was idiotic and the second was an impossibility. That's not exactly how I said it.

You'll never write a truly elegant speech that is also a litany. As one of the Cicero [Speechwriting Awards] judges said about [a] speech that didn't win an award, "But a great speech can't be a list; it just can't."

What I'd recommend to your executive director is that he put out a print document of some kind with the litany of volunteers and the roundup of activities, and focus the speech on the most pressing issue of the moment. (One of the consequences of your current format is that the audience gets to the end of the speech without knowing what's the most urgent fact of life at [the association]. Is it the bad economy? Is it the new web portal? It's hard to know. But don't members deserve to know that from their leader?)

Given the format of this speech … I can't imagine how you could have done a better job. It's nicely crafted. But if the speech is going to ring anybody's bell, or be remembered or be influential, the format is going to have to change.

The way I describe this to clients is this: When you have the unique and rare opportunity to look your constituents in the eyeballs, you ought to take advantage, and communicate something to them—a strong conviction, a hard truth, a bold new plan, a call to action—that you couldn't do via print, via intranet, via Internet, etc.

Phone books (and ceremonial speeches) hold litanies. Books (and memorable speeches) hold singular, coherent messages.

Not to be too obtuse about all this, I will offer one suggested compromise: Next year, you might open with a strong message—I have something very important to talk to you about, a crossroads in our association (or whatever) but first I want to give you a brief rundown of some amazing things we've accomplished this year, and the people who made them happen. Then hold them in some kind of suspense while he breathlessly runs through the highlights, and then returns to the big message.

That's not ideal—ideal would be to dispense with the fancy opening metaphor, "Traditionally this speech has been a litany of the accomplishments … and we've made lots of those this year too. But this year I'd like to talk about one issue in more detail …."

Once he does that ONE YEAR, it sets the precedent for doing it every year hence. And a focused, strategic message (rather than reading a list of names and achievements, however nicely crafted) is what a leader owes his constituency.

Did I tell her the right thing? What would you have told her? It seems to me somebody ought to create a book that lists—in a litany, you might say—the 100 dumbest communication rituals and common worst-practices (the news-free news release, the hollow CEO's letter in the employee publication, the ribbon-cutting story) and collects strategies like the one I've offered above, for breaking the spell.

Here's the title of the book: If We Stop Doing Bad Work, Bad Work Will Stop Getting Done.

Categories // Uncategorized Tags // " advertising agency, "If we don't do bad work, bad work won't get done, Murray & Chaney, rituals, speeches, Thomas Murray

The only thing employees want to know

04.06.2011 by David Murray // 3 Comments

Yesterday communication veteran Robert Holland published his list of "Things Employees Want from Communication."

Robert Holland's Opus, in a nutshell: Employees want to be treated like adults, and to be communicated with by adults, through modern communication media and also direct contact with both senior management and direct supervisors.

Rookie communicators ought to have that sentence laminated for their wallet.

But once they've got that down, the question is: What exactly do employees want to know? (Don't go asking them, because they don't know themselves.)

We'll call it Murray's Manifesto:

They want to know what kind of people they are working for.

Let me repeat: They want to know what kind of people they are working for.

That's all they want to know: What kind of people they are working for.

But that's a lot: They want to know how smart are the people they're working for. How honest. How empathetic. How interested in new ideas. How down to earth. How consistent. How careful. How generous of spirit. How forward-looking. And how committed to the welfare of the employees.

Seriously. That's all they want to know. You may want to give them other kinds of information, and they may be pleased to get it.

But if you can convince your employees that the people who run the organization are solid human beings who care about what they're doing … well, that's a team employees will find a way to help.

And if you lack the communication ability to get that across (virtuous executives not included)?

You'd better dance fast.

Categories // Uncategorized Tags // David Murray, employee communication, Murray's Manifesto, Robert Holland, Robert Holland's Opus, what employees want to know

The new communication disease: the “valueless video”

04.05.2011 by David Murray // Leave a Comment

Corporate editors have committed the sin for years, with photography: Communication clichés like the grip-and-grin plaque ceremony, the ribbon-cutting-with-giant scissors, the ground-breaking with shiny shovels.

When comperterized graphic design took the place of x-acto knives and paste 25 years ago, people went absolutely wild with fonts and for several years corporate newsletters newsletters looked like ransom notes.

You know how these mindless, meaningless practices took hold? Because it was cheap and easy to stage and make these photos and use extra fonts, and they satisfied the box-checking, pseudo-creative instincts of not-very-talented communicators.

Well, you know what's also cheap and easy to make these days?

Videos.

Which is why we're starting to see videos inserted as a part of nearly every communication campaign, even when the video does nothing to amplify the message.

Yesterday President Obama told followers he's officially running for reelection. He sent a letter, which he interrupts halfway through to say, "I'd like to share a video that features some folks like you who are helping to lead the way on this journey."

So I watch the video. I figure it's important. And I'm curious to know just what President Obama means when he talks about folks like me.

These numbnuts are nothing like me! "I had this perception that politics was all show. It was all soundbites," says one woman in the video. "But politics is how we govern ourselves."

Now you know darn well that this video didn't get made because somebody in the reelection campaign said, "Hey, there's this brilliant woman who recently learned politics is important, and we've just got to get her on camera to tell her story. It would be perfect for the reelection announcement!"

No, it was, "We gotta have a video. How long will it take us to find people of every color and gender to say a bunch of semi-realistic nice things about President Obama in a documentary-style video bullshitfest?"

To say this video did more harm than good for the reelection announcement is to falsely imply that it did some good.

Similarly in the corporate context, the popularity of video was surely behind its use for the purpose of the sharing of the new vision and mission for a credit union.


I mean, can you imagine a less visual story than the mission and the vision for a credit union? Hence, the agonized metaphor of president carrying around the giant puzzle pieces. This should have been a quick-hitting intranet story.

And here's the problem with valueless videos, even if they aren't hilariously campy.

Unlike photographic or design clichés, whose only harm is to tell the audience that the publication is written by dullards for dullards, valueless videos necessarily grab the faithful reader and drag him away from the main message, probably for good.

After being told by President Obama that that the imbecile woman in his video was just like me, do you think I returned to read the rest of his letter, which probably went on to ask for my support?

Hell to the no. I figured the dummies in the video had the campaign covered.

Them, and the dummies who made the video, because they thought, "We gotta have a video."

As Steve Crescenzo wisely suggests in the current issue of ContentWise, do video only if spoken words and moving images are the very best way to get your message across—or the only way to help your readers grasp it fully.

Hey, I love video; I think it's a way to show the flesh and blood behind the corporate life. I think it's an outlet for spontaneous creativity in communication. I think video, for many uses, has the potential to be more powerful than print.

Hell, I run an awards program for corporate videos.

But it's called the Strategic Video Awards.

For a reason.

Categories // Uncategorized Tags // communication trends, ContentWise, desktop design, grip-and-grins, prose, Steve Crescenzo, strategic video, valueless video, video

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • …
  • 1160
  • 1161
  • 1162
  • 1163
  • 1164
  • …
  • 1464
  • Next Page »

Now Available for Pre-Order

Pre-Order Now

SIGN UP TO RECEIVE BLOG UPDATES

About

David Murray writes on communication issues.
Read More

 

Categories

  • Baby Boots
  • Communication Philosophy
  • Efforts to Understand
  • Happy Men, and Other Eccentrics
  • Human Politicians
  • Mister Boring
  • Murray Cycle Diaries
  • Old Boots
  • Rambling, At Home and Abroad
  • Sports Stories
  • The Quotable Murr
  • Typewriter Truths
  • Uncategorized
  • Weird Scenes Inside the Archives

Archives

Copyright © 2025 · Log in

  • Sign Up for Blog Updates
  • About David Murray
  • About Soccer Dad
  • Pre-order Soccer Dad