Practice making a long story short
Writing good short prose is a learned skill. It is neither easy nor a quick lesson to absorb, so it pays to practice. Master how to write the concise messages you mean to convey before your target scrolls on.
Upgrade your email game
Do you know how to recognize well written emails? If yours include too much unnecessary information and do not get to the point quickly, you might fail to grab your reader’s attention. Train to write your emails with military precision by going BLUF.
The subtle communications of victory and defeat
Communicating successfully after a victory, or after a defeat, requires a dose of humility injected into your fortitude, and a message of respect and reassurance to those who follow you, buy from you, work with you. Do you know how to strike the right balance?
The art of reactive comms
For every communications team that gets it wrong for a public figure, there should be another one waiting to pounce on the occasion to give an ad rem reaction.
With Audio.
Unrelatable comms are counterproductive
Beware appearing out of touch to your audience. If that was caused by clumsy communications, it can be fixed with better, more sensitive comms.
With Audio.
Brevity in communications
In a sea of content and messages vying for attention, it is important to get to the point quickly. Brevity and clarity matter.
With Audio.
Don’t let emojis alter your message
They are inescapable in our personal communications, but using emojis in a professional context is not the best way to attract attention.
With Audio.
Lost messages and illusive comms
There’s much more to communications than posting regular content. It has to be relevant, and it has to convey consistent messages.
With Audio.
Let’s get to the point
Getting to the point is becoming a lost art in times of content wars. Ad rem communications help you stand out.
With Audio.