Being a Better Communicator & Writer

Post on 01-Nov-2014

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Regardless of our occupation, the truth is that we have to write. The issue is writing well. Looking at practices of interactive copywriting, nonverbal communication, and the traditional written word, I'll reveal some new ways to approach writing that has real effects on our communication and community-building. From writing internal emails to marketing copy, I've shared methods and theories that govern communication, which may lead to approved ideas, closed business, improved relationships, and, ultimately, being understood.

Transcript of Being a Better Communicator & Writer

“I’ll Never Be a Writer”

lies we tell ourselves &why Communication trumps talent

Who Am I?

You don’t get paid to drive...

As humans, we are taught and capable of being

excellent at many things. We chose to specialize out

of the basics.

So what?

Interpersonal Communication

Before large and small brands succeed in it, we each must first

re-learn how to communicate with each other personally. Then, we’ll

see and understand the shift in marketing that ‘gurus’ have prophesied to us for years.

Purposes of Writing

• Reporting (facts)

• Story-telling

• Information gathering

Benefits of Writing Better

• Better understanding...faster

• Ideas approved

• Persuasion

• Agenda setting

• Trust

• Advancement

Back to the Basics8 Simple Rules for Interpersonal Writing

Writing. What, like it’s hard?

What?! Like it’s hard!

Rule 1: Know Your Audience

• Who are you writing to?

• How do they read?

• What do they want?

• How do they want it?

Most Readers:

• Want it brief

• Want it simple

• Want it honest

• Want it easy

• Want to be reminded

Who has the Power?

5 Types of Social Power

• Reward power - perceived ability to give positive consequences (remove negatives)

• Coercive power - perceived ability to punish the nonconforming

• Legitimate power - organizational authority

• Referent power - gained through association with others with power

• Expert power - have distinct knowledge/skills

Writing without Power

• Qualify your directives/suggestions:

• “I think...”

• “I believe...”

• “I feel...”

• Ask for recipient’s thoughts/suggestions

• Provide reasoning/explanation

• Use ‘hedges’ (communicate degree of accuracy)

• ex: “I’m not at an expert, but...”

Rule 2: Soften Your Info

Gossip = Storytelling

• People really do love/listen/remember gossip

• Present hard info as though it’s soft

• Turn data into insights

• Make facts seem fascinating

Do me a Favor:Send a Tweet to @brendanbkbk that I’m praising HUGE ;)

Movie Rec

Rule 3: Spellcheck & Proofread

• Does it make sense to you?

• Misspellings:

• Disrupt message absorption

• Can change meaning

• Take more time from the reader

Rule 4: Know the Language

• Know the connection between language, thought, and perception

• Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis

• linguistic determinism

• linguistic relativity

Sapir-Whorf Hypothesis

Each company has their own language. Organizationally,

their thoughts and perspective on clients, trends, and their

industry are shaped largely by their language.

Rule 5: Think Like a Teacher

• Use active voice where possible.

• Parallelism in bullets & lists.

• Cut out two-fers

• Punctuation matters

• Uncertainty Reduction Theory

• Clarity vs. Sincerity

Rule 6: Reduce Uncertainty

Rule 7: Look Beyond Yourself

• Use insight into personality & previous behavior

• Predict their stance/disposition

• Persuade wisely & with their benefits in mind

Facial Expressions

• S - sadness

• A - anger

• D - disgust

• F - fear

• I - interest

• S - surprise

• H - happiness

Schlitz Beer

Rule 8: Know Thyself

• Know your motivations/needs

• Know how others perceive you

• Know when (not) to be the ________

Have an Alter Ego

Wrap-Up

• Know your audience.

• Soften your info.

• Spellcheck and proofread.

• Know the language.

• Think like a teacher.

• Reduce uncertainty.

• Look beyond yourself.

• Know yourself.

Hollachrisjpitre@gmail.com | chris@chaione.com | twitter.com/chrispitre