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Thursday, May 17, 2007

10 Dumb Things That Smart Communicators Do


Our friend and former colleague Joy Jennings has penned an informative post exclusively for Media Orchard readers that we're delighted to share with you.

Joy, by the way, recently left the comfort of corporate life to start her own communications consulting business -- so if you're looking for a talented freelancer for your marcom or PR projects, Joy would be an excellent choice.

Without further ado, here are Joy's "10 Dumb Things That Smart Communicators Do":

1. Use business jargon

Try to avoid cliches and jargon and speak in conversational English. (I'm sympathetic if the clueless COO is twisting your arm.) Like the proverbial bath, good writing couldn't hurt and might help.

2. Put a copyright symbol on your press materials

Press releases, fact sheets and bios are meant to help journalists. So if you want them to use your stuff, don't mark your materials as copyrighted.

3. Capitalize the name of your industry and other non-proper nouns

Do you promote your company's role in the Fitness market or the Mainframe Maintenance space? Do your press releases quote the Vice President of System Push - CRM Resource Adjunct? Just stop. The names of industries are not proper nouns and neither are job titles.

4. Forget the online readers

Remember to use hyperlinks to get online readers involved. In a press release, you can link the quoted exec to his or her bio and link the product you're describing to its page online. Link to external resources such as Wikipedia listings and even YouTube videos to enhance your text; links can be made from photos and logos as well as words. And while I'm on the subject, stop using the clunky phrase "click here" to create links. Very 1996.

5. Use the same style manual you've had since college English

I respect the Chicago Manual of Style and the authoritative Elements of Style, but today's resource is the Associated Press Stylebook. Because it is used by media and PR folks alike, it has become the dominant style for non-academic and non-literary writing. Audiences today are subconsciously familiar with it because they see it in newspapers, magazines and online copy.

6. Bury the news

Don't make journalists wonder what your release is about or mention your real news nonchalantly in the third paragraph, such as your CEO's resignation or the launch date of the new product. Look at your announcement objectively and acknowledge what the real news will be.

7. Describe your company in such flowing terms that no one can tell what it actually does

I've seen this too many times. You're so focused on the benefits of your services that you gloss over what it IS and what it DOES. Don't make your vendors, investors, prospective employees, media, analysts and other non-customers guess.

8. Put more than four bullets per slide on your PowerPoint presentation

Brevity is the soul of presenting. If your presentation is going to be displayed or projected onto a screen, give your audience a fighting chance and make the bullets brief. Resist the urge to paste in a 20-cell spreadsheet or a dizzying pie chart. Crowded presentations defeat the objective of communication.

9. Focus on the words and forget the visual

What a nice case study you've written. So many words and paragraphs to dig into. Now step back and consider what could enhance it visually: your customer's logo, a photo of the quoted subject, a beauty photo of the product or of people using it, a stock photo that conveys the service's idea, a graph of the money saved or efficiency gained, a screenshot of the software, a photo of your building or your customer's building, a callout quote of a significant statement in your text. You'll find lots of simple ways to enhance communication. Do the legwork and don't leave it to your graphic designer to "make it pretty."

10. Be inflexible about your writing because you're so proud of it

My favorite line to clients is that this isn't my ninth-grade poetry. I can write their document nine ways to Sunday, so they aren't hurting my feelings if they want to edit it. I'll champion effective communication, and I'll keep them from presenting themselves poorly, but I certainly won't pout if they start making changes.

Effective communication is deceptively simple. Remember and respect your audience, and your communications will be the better for it.

---

Joy Jennings is a freelance writer who helps organizations with marketing and public relations projects.

2 Comments:

  • Love the comment about copyrighting a press releases. That's a new one I'll have to add to my list.

    Another favorite of mine is sort of a combination of numbers 1 and 7: press release boilerplate that uses terms like "cross-platform," "web 2" and "mission critical."

    Almost everybody struggles with press releases. So I created a free press release tutorial that shows people how to write releases not only for humans, but for the search engine spiders.

    You can opt into it at http://www.PublicityHound.com/pressreleasetips/art.htm

    By Anonymous Joan Stewart, The Publicity Hound, at 5/18/2007  

  • Thanks Joan. I also loathe "mission critical." Why can't these folks just say critical?

    At a previous company, I had a colleague who was smacking (c) on every bio, fact sheet and press release -- as if he would prosecute anyone who tried to use them. The symbol should be applied to collateral but not press materials.

    By Anonymous Joy, at 5/18/2007  

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