CHECK YOUR ATTITUDE
THEN
STRIVE TO EXPRESS,
NOT IMPRESS
Why do so many executives, lawyers, scientists, and
engineers sound like executives, lawyers, scientists, and engineers when they
write?
As
a mentor of mine – John L. Beckley -- a prominent executive noted for his clear
writing would routinely point out --
“Because they wouldn’t want people to think
of them in any other way.”
His
analysis continued: “They’re more concerned about the personal impression they
make than about the message they deliver.”
The biggest
stumbling block to clear communicating – especially via the written word –
isn’t a matter of technique or even writing ability.
It’s a matter of
mental attitude.
Mr. B (and yes, he was known and addressed as Mr. B or, sometimes, JB) maintained, the reason most
people don’t write better is –
Because they are too
self-centered.
Self-centeredness is the curse of good writing.
In
all good writing, one person – and one person alone – is important:
THE READER
Yet
what happens when the average exec or business person sits down to write a memo
or report or bit of ad copy or blog post or online bio or social media
commentary or …or …?
Somewhere
inside his or her conscious or unconscious mind an insidious thought raises its
head:
What will the reader think of ME?
The
more that thought interferes with concentrating on the reader -- answering the
readers ever present question “What does this mean to me?” -- the poorer the
writing will be.
TGIM ACTION IDEA: In writing of any
kind, the important thing is to plant an idea in the reader’s mind or to
stimulate feelings or emotions.
·
Perhaps
you work for the largest, most powerful organization in your industry.
·
Perhaps
your entrepreneurial business is uniquely linked to traits or skills that are
uniquely yours.
Either
way, or at any place in between, when you start to write –
FORGET IT! Remember, your audience, your corporation or
market, consists of people.
You are writing to people.
TGIM IDEA IN ACTION: Write to express,
not impress. Write in the same language you would use if you were to carry on a
conversation across a pleasant restaurant table during an enjoyable meal. As
much as possible given the subject matter, keep the tone pleasant and friendly.
Get politely to the point, wrap it up, and wish your “correspondent” well.
And
what happens when an executive or entrepreneur comes along who isn’t trying to
impress anybody; who’s just trying to get his or her ideas across in the
simplest, clearest fashion for the reader?
Impressive payoff: More often than not,
this person impresses far more than those who are striving to be impressive.
Thanks for everything
JB.
I hope I’ve done right (and write) by my old mentor and there was something
worthwhile in this TGIM for you.
Geoff
Steck
Chief Catalyst
Alexander Publishing & Marketing
Chief Catalyst
Alexander Publishing & Marketing
8
Depot Square
Englewood,
NJ 07631
201-569-5373
tgimguy@gmail.com
201-569-5373
tgimguy@gmail.com
P. S. “And how
is clarity to be achieved? Mainly by taking trouble and by writing to serve
people rather than to impress them.” F.L. Lucas (1894-1967), a quite impressive English
classical scholar, literary critic, poet, novelist, playwright, political
polemicist, and Fellow of King's College, Cambridge said that.