Categories
Strategic Communications

Launching a New Project

Launching a new campaign, product or service can be a daunting task. You and your team has identified a need and developed an excellent solution. You are getting your supply chain, manufacturing, and sales infrastructures up and running. Now, you must turn your attention to “going to market,” which can feel as though you are about to enter a big city for the

first time. It’s noisy, full of competitors and lacking allies, a maze of streets and avenues, and, yet, ripe with energy and opportunity.

Over the next few weeks, I will outline how your cNASA sls-launching-artommunications team will enable you to rise above the crowd, identify and leverage allies, and navigate through the best communications channels to successfully reach your customers. NASA sls-launching-art

Here are some of the topics I’ll touch on:

  • Communications executives must have a seat at the product development table
  • Creating a strategic vision
  • Establishing a strategic timeline
  • Understanding your audiences
  • Crafting clear messages
  • Mapping your path
  • Building a marketing and communications tool kit
  • Launching
  • What’s next?

(photo: NASA  ISI Rocket)

Categories
Uncategorized

Nuanced Nuances

Software designers turned entrepreneurs often insist that they don’t need to work on messaging. After all, they insist, the value and uniqueness of their new app or device is obvious. Once their startup is properly funded, they say, their “solution” will just fly off the e-shelf.

Recently, an email exchange I had with a climate scientist gave me new insight into why experts often resist preparing for interviews, having speaking points or going through media training. No doubt part of it is arrogance or fear of training. But fundamentally, they don’t understand the nuances of language – word selection, sentence structure, paragraph structure – all change the meaning of what is heard. They think that they can just wing it. Talk about the facts and everyone will understand.

The Right Word: Prune or Dried Plum

On the plus side, my climate scientist does understand the value of naming. He says “climate change” instead of “global warming”. The climate is changing in different ways around the world. In some places, it is literally warming, in others, it is not, but it is still changing. As a result, scientists and science writers have stopped using “global warming” to describe what is being observed.

Sentence Structure: Yes, We Have No Bananas.

During a roundtable radio talk show with a friendly audience, his answers to almost every question began with “no” and could easily fuel climate science deniers. For example, when asked about hurricane Sandy, he said: No, Sandy is not evidence of climate change. No, we will not see more hurricanes. When asked about water level rise, his answers were statistical and in centimeters. And, at one point, he didn’t remember an exact number. 

My take away could have been: There is no evidence of global warming (whatever he called it). It doesn’t sound like the water will rise very much (How many inches is that?). He doesn’t really know his numbers, so why should I believe him (or any other climate scientist)? Obviously, this isn’t what the scientist intended to say. He didn’t understand how he was misunderstood and didn’t think he could have answered the questions in any other way. 

First, if you want to explain something, never start your answer with ‘no’. Your audience won’t hear anything else you have to say. This is especially important when you are talking about a complicated topic and you need your audience to stay with you while you tease out the nuances.

Second, based on what I understand about climate change, he could have said: “Yes, Sandy was a very powerful hurricane. In the future, storms will be stronger than they have been in the past, more like Sandy. There may be fewer storms but the storms we do get will be much stronger. Although Sandy alone is not proof of climate change, it is part of larger patterns that we are seeing around the world.”

Lastly, many questions about climate change beg for narrative answers about how people are and will be effected even by small changes. 

Experts say their ideas or products are nuanced or complicated and hard to explain. They need to take the time and work with professionals to craft clear messages and make sure what they are saying is also what their audiences are hearing. The language used to talk about nuanced topics needs to be nuanced too. 

Categories
Uncategorized

Thinking Out Loud

Thinking out loud is exactly what we do. Collaborating with clients we define the products we are launching, identify the audiences we will reach, and outline and implement the most effective communications tactics needed to meet your goals.

We are an added-value communications consultancy: New Product Launches. Messaging. Communications. Strategies. Media Relations. Traditional and Social Media Campaigns. Project Management.

You have dozens of balls in the air.  We have only one: meeting your communications goals. We’re your communications team.