Sherie Griffiths

December 8, 2011

‘That might be what you said, but it’s not what I read!’

How well do you think you get your message across via email?

Back in the days when physical business letters and documents ruled (whether they were written by hand, on a typewriter or on a computer), they were taken seriously. They were often drafted and redrafted before seeing the light of day – and they were seen as the ultimate evidence of fact and intention. Certainly in the profession I originally trained for, the law, whether or not something was ‘written down’ was hugely important – and still is. If you put a promise – or an admission, come to that – in writing, it’s always been assumed to be binding, whereas if it’s ‘only verbal’, the assumption tends to be that no-one could hold you to it. Those assumptions haven’t always held up in reality, but still they persist – along with the assumptions that a piece of paper has a level of importance – even gravitas – that an electronic copy just doesn’t have.

Email threw the whole world of written communication into virtual chaos!

The plain fact (and I’m writing it down here so it must be true!) is that it always has been and always will be very difficult to get a complete message across in writing – whether in ink or electricity. Research shows that we actually manage to communicate much less than half of what we want to say – no more than 37% – when we only have the words themselves. Without tone of voice etc, the rest is lost. Legal documents try to get over the problem with their belt-and-braces language; but still, they’re open to interpretation. I once read a judgment by the infamous Lord Denning, where he started off passionately advocating one way of looking at what Parliament’s intentions had been when they drafted a particular statute and finished up disagreeing with himself equally passionately – apparently without realising he’d shifted from one side of the argument to the other!

What a lot of people still don’t fully understand is that these days, emails can be as binding in law as anything set down on paper – and they can never be shredded. Hit delete as often as you like – once it’s sent, an email is ‘out there, somewhere…’.

Laws are written and rewritten several times over – and still no-one is quite sure what they’re meant to say. The trouble with emails is that most of us dash them off in a rush, often while doing something else – and thinking about something unconnected with either task! When these spontaneous little outpourings arrive in the recipient’s in-box, they’re skim-read through the filtering lens of their state of mind – and then responded to in as much of a rush and with as many distractions as we wrote the original.

That’s exactly what happened to me on Monday. I asked a friend for some help with a work project. He answered at the end of a long day, probably with one eye on the TV and his mind on whether he could clear the other 199 messages he hadn’t yet managed to rread before the next morning brought another electronic avalanche! I can’t be sure, but I’m guessing he wrote it as quickly as possible on his new IPhone (no mean feat at the best of times!) and hit ‘Send’ without reading it back. I picked it up a couple of hours later, at the end of a personally extremely difficult day. So all I read was: ‘No – I don’t want to help you’. Now, before you glance at that and think ‘how rude!’, I have to say, the ‘no’ was his – the ‘I don’t want to help you’ was supplied by my tired and unhappy state of mind – neither of which had anything to do with the writer of the email! Fortunately, we are friends and we’ve known each other a long time, so when I read the message back the next morning, I could see it more clearly. The only problem was, I’d already answered it the night before…

I heard a similar story yesterday, in a business context (where there was no personal relationship to aid interpretation). A professional writer once had to try to give a tactful appraisal by email of a client’s documentation. He did his best, but the client sent back what the original emailer described as ‘a stinking reply’ saying “How dare you!”’.

In both cases, if the message had been delivered verbally, there would have been a lot less scope for misunderstanding. If my friend had been able to explain on the phone or in person why he couldn’t help this time, I’d have understood immediately that it wasn’t personal – and I didn’t have to feel bad about asking; and if my associate had been able to talk his client through his concerns – about the fact that their documentation was wide open to misinterpretation – , he’d had had a far better shot at taking the sting out of it. The words might have been the same, but the tone, pace – and little asides – could have made all the difference.

 

I hope you can see what I’m getting at just from what I’ve written? I’ve read it back and tweeked it a couple of times, so hopefully it says what I want it to. If not, perhaps I should cover it on the radio some time – or do a podcast – so you can hear what I’m really thinking!

November 8, 2011

Your fairy-PodMother can grant you 5 wishes – in return for a little help

It’s that time of year again – Xmas ads all over the media – and all over the country, pantomimes have reached that final frantic rehearsal stage. There’s even a Xmas ad, of sorts, on our website – so I thought: why shouldn’t we get into the pantomime spirit as well?

So between now and 23rd December, I’m magically turning myself into your fairy PodMother. ‘Oh no you’re not!’ Oh yes I am – and all that.

As this is business, though, I want to do a deal with you: If you can help me out with some research, I’ll enter you into a draw to win your own professionally-produced podcast in the new year. I need your email by 23rd December and I’ll announce the results of the draw on 3rd January.  To get involved, just email me your answers to these questions.  In the multiple choice questions, just delete the options that don’t apply to you – you can leave in as many as you like. 

 

1 – Do you download business podcasts:

At least once a week?
At least once a month?
Occasionally – if something grabs your attention?
Never?

2 – If not, what stops you?

Not being sure what a podcast is?
Not having an IPod?
Not knowing what’s out there which could help you?
Not knowing how the technology works?
Another reason?

3 – If you download, do you prefer podcasts that deliver:

Business news?
Information?
Inspiration?
Something else?

4 – How long do you like your podcasts to run?

Less than 5 minutes?
5-10 minutes?
10-20 minutes?
20-30 minutes?
Other?

6 – Do you prefer podcasts which are:

Audio only?
Enhanced with pictures?
Available in both formats?

7 – Do you watch or listen to your downloads while you’re:

working?
Travelling?
At home?
Involved in leisure activities?
At any other time?

8 – What do you like best about podcasts?

Finding material that meets your needs?
Accessing the information you want, when you want it?
Listening or watching where you want to?
Listening or watching while doing other things?
hearing directly from experts in a particular field?
Something else?

9 –What is most likely to spoil your listening or viewing experience?

Poor sound quality?
Poor picture quality (if appropriate)?
Poor presentation?
Poor interviewing?
A badly planned programme?
Anything else?

10 – If you download a podcast which includes advertising, does it intrude on your listening or viewing:

Generally?
Unless it’s relevant to the subject of the podcast?
Unless it’s relevant to you?
Less than radio and TV advertising?
Not at all?

11 –What are your 5 essentials for a great podcast?

There’s the opportunity of some free publicity for your business attached to this – but if for any reason you want to remain anonymous, just tell me in the email.

 

Why ‘5 wishes?’  Look at question 11.

 

Thanks, in advance, for your help.

October 5, 2011

Sound connections

I meet a lot of people on my travels who are really afraid of anyone who looks remotely like a competitor. I’m not knocking anybody who networks via groups which only allow one member per business sector. I know they work extremely well for thousands of businesses – and anything that gets the phone ringing can’t be sniffed at!

I have to say, though, they don’t work for me. Well, they might, in terms of bringing in new business – but I don’t enjoy them. I much prefer what I think of as ‘natural’ networking – walking into a room, whether it’s a networking event or not, and not having the first clue who I’m going to meet. Yes, in theory in that situation you could run across someone who does exactly the same job as you – but it’s highly unlikely. Even two people doing apparently the same job in the same industry will have different approaches, slightly different focuses – and so often, there’s scope for very productive collaboration.

I first ran across Richard Heathcote through a more open networking group. On the face of it, our activities could have looked very similar. We both work in sound; we both produce podcasts, for ourselves and others – but to be honest, that’s about it.

Whilst my focus, where audio is concerned, is on helping businesses to create professional-sounding, compelling content for download or cd distribution, Richard is primarily a voiceover artist. So while I attempt to teach businesspeople to present their own messages, Richard can speak for them.

He’s more than a mouth for hire, though. Some voiceover artistss need the backup of a professional studio to produce anything; but Richard has the technical skills and setup to allow him to be self-sufficient.

Not so long ago, he opened an online ‘audio shop’, providing a range of ‘off-the-shelf’ audio which people can download to use on their phone systems etc – perfect if you hate recording your own voicemail greeting and the like.  

 

He’s just helped me out with a little editing issue I was having – and he’ll be heard on at least one of my upcoming online courses. If either of us had taken a more restrictive approach to networking and the whole competition issue, we would probably have avoided each other like the plague – and missed out on the potential for some interesting and exciting collaborations.

Speaking of ‘interesting and exciting collaborations’: I have the challenge of interviewing my long-standing colleague and friend, Paul Smalley of Paper Mountain Solutions, on tomorrow’s radio show. Paul is heavily involved in the launch of a brand new business, designed to help brand new businesses. I can’t say any more until tomorrow. You can catch the show at 3PM, on 97.8 FM in the Basildon & East Thurrock area, or at gateway978.com.

If you don’t manage to listen, I’ll tell you more on Friday.

February 1, 2011

Talk to your market but not through a sock!

I’m always telling clients to: ‘Talk to your market, not at it’ – but it’s no good talking to your market, or anyone else for that matter, through a sock!

I recently ran across a podcast by a very substantial international law firm (no, I’d better not name them here – but get in touch and I’ll dish the dirt!). The subject-matter looked really interesting – lawyers and social media (well, it’s interesting to me as an ex-lawyer, now involved in business audio, which ties in very closely with social media). So I downloaded it.

It started really well – a good, strong piece of opening music, then… as soon as someone started talking, it went straight downhill – in fact, the ‘hill’ in this case was a perpendicular cliff-face!

Chris Tarrant, when he was doing the Capital FM breakfast show, used to say that anyone on a dodgy phone-line sounded as though they were ‘talking through a sock’.

This particular podcast, recorded over a trans-Atlantic phone-line, sounded as though it was being muffled by an entire sock drawer! As if that weren’t bad enough, it was full of echo, digital wobble and bad editing – all of which made it ultimately unlistenable.

It was a great idea, in theory. Unfortunately, the producers shot themselves in both feet. What a waste of an opportunity!

I’m putting together a new FAQ page for the website at the moment. One very common question is:
‘What’s the difference in quality if I make my own audio in-house – without outside help?’

Well, there’s one fairly extreme example for you. I’ll see if I can pull out a clip (which doesn’t identify the people involved) and upload it here, just to give you a taster of how truly awful this thing was! ‘OOPS!’ doesn’t even begin to describe it!

July 19, 2010

Ivan Lives Inside His Brand

First, an apology – because I should have done this last week!

At the end of my last post about June’s ‘Get PodSavvy’, I promised to give you some background to the interview with Ivan Newman of Living Inside The Brand. Ivan starts his series of the same name, on customer service, in this month’s show (which we’re currently putting together) and his segment is one of three from the programme which will be made available as an ‘enhanced podcast’ – audio illustrated with images.

We’d only met a couple of times when he approached me with the idea for the feature. The meeting that followed turned into a mad creative brain-storming session – around pictures, rather than sound. As a guide dog owner with shadow vision, I don’t often get the chance to let my very visual imagination off the leash – but Ivan let me do just that.

By the time we parted company, we had a whole set of images (which I won’t describe here, because you may well see some of them over the next few months) and a rough outline of six programmes setting out the core principles of excellent customer service.

As we worked up those rough ideas into a detailed plan, I realised very quickly that as far as Ivan is concerned, it’s definitely a case of ‘Do as I do – not as I say!’ – even when he’s the customer!  He practices what he preaches all the way – especially when it comes to looking after the small details, laying the right foundations and keeping the lines of communication open. We’re both keen to make sure the final product is the best it can possibly be – which is why, even though he’s away in the alps at the moment being terribly athletic, the emails and calls are still flying backwards and forwards.

I’m really looking forward to seeing all our efforts come together when I’m back in the studio on Thursday afternoon.

July 1, 2010

John Is ‘Fresh From The Pod’

Following on from my post last week about the first episode of our new regular podcast, this week I thought I’d tell you about the segment which actually crops up first in the programme – ‘Fresh From The Pod’.

This is my chance to introduce a recent client and let you hear some snippets from their programme. This month, the feature is all about Essex-based Network Marketer, John Parker.

I’ve got to know John reasonably well over the last year or so, since we met on the 4Networking circuit. His background is interesting – born in Yorkshire, emigrated to Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) as a toddler, returning to the UK as a young man.

When his 30-year career in the City came to an end, he had to think again. Growing up in Southern Africa had made him resilient and self-sufficient, so he took a leap – into a second career, as part of the Forever Living Network – which meant a leap from the corporate world, into self-employment.

I interviewed him at his home – which is always fun! Phil, our producer in London, has described turning someone’s living-room into a studio as being ‘like building a fort when you’re a kid’ – and he’s not wrong! John’s room had a big advantage – lots of carpet, cushions and curtains to deaden the sound. Although he still had to close the window, remove the phone, stop the clock and switch off the fridge! We then set up the equipment, with the mic stands perched on a footstool – and went for it. John did the interview in one hit, which was great for me – it doesn’t always happen that way!

The finished product is an audio FAQ section for his website, covering everything from how he got into network marketing, through what stops other people considering it as an option, to what they can expect if they make contact with him. It even deals with the elephant in the room – the distinction between pyramid selling and what John does. I didn’t realise before, but there is a big difference. One of the great aspects of my job is that I so often learn something new from the people I interview.

You can listen to or download this episode of ‘Get PodSavvy’ from our site, where you can also listen to or download John’s interview in full. If you’d rather listen to each question and answer individually, you can do that via John’s website.

Next week, I’ll tell you the story behind our ‘Technically Speaking’ slot, with David Hardstaff – ‘from a couple of old anoraks, through a mattress cover – and beyond!’

April 13, 2010

More From The Upcoming Book – Buzzing With Ideas:

In May 2006, you were lucky to find a business person who knew what a podcast was, but I found one – and look where it got me!

Extract from ‘On Sound Foundations’
Chapter 6 – ‘Lost For Words’:

“I was put in touch with Steve Westall by mutual friend and obsessive networker, Debbie Neville. Steve was a Director of Businesswise (now Pansophix), training and information specialists.

“From the first moment we met, in a hotel reception in Chelmsford, we realised we were destined never to have enough time to finish a conversation – there would always be more to say! It was one of those meetings that leave you excited and exhausted, buzzing with ideas but too knackered to do anything with them until you’ve had time to recover. Every conversation since has been exactly the same!

“After an hour or so of ideas flying around the room like jet-propelled bees, Steve suddenly looked at me across the table and said, ‘Have you ever considered doing a legal podcast?’ ‘What?’ I laughed. ‘As opposed to an illegal one?’ ‘No!’ he grinned back. ‘I mean a podcast on legal issues, for business. Do you know what a podcast is?’ Fortunately, of course, I did. But who would actually listen to a programme about law, I wondered. I had enough trouble trying to get people sitting in front of me to listen!

“Steve was definite though. ‘I’d listen,’ he said, ‘and I can think of plenty of other people who would.’ ‘Well,’ I said, the bees in my head firing up their turbo-boosters, ‘I’ll try anything once.’”

March 9, 2010

“Born Survivors”?

“On Sound Foundations” – Uncorrected Extract: “Part One – From Casual Links To Permanent Connections: “Chapter 1 – How Did I Get Here?

“That was the question I kept asking myself through the Spring of 2009.  I was busy preparing my presentation for the launch of my new company, Savvy Business.  I knew the story backwards, of course, so that was no problem.  The only thing I couldn’t decide was – where did it start? 

 “Well, officially, it was in July 2008 when we launched the first version of savvybc.com; but, really, it was when I first had the idea in April 2007 – although, no, actually it was when I made my very first legal podcast in August ’06 … or was it 2005, when I first found out what a podcast was …?

 “I finally decided to pick up the story in 2006, although in fact its roots go back much, much further – all the way back to a pushchair in 1969 – and beyond.”

 I wrestled with a similar issue when it came to the starting point for the book.  In the end, I went way beyond that pushchair, to 1939, when Mum became an evacuee and Dad a POW. 

 Why?  Because my parents perfectly illustrate one of the main themes which runs through the book, my speaking engagements and life in general – the choice between being a survivor or a victim.  Yes, I did say ‘choice’.  We talk about someone being a “born survivor” don’t we, but are they?  Are survivors, or victims come to that, born or made?  Wearing my ex-noncommittal-lawyer’s hat, maybe I should say I don’t know – it’s probably a bit of both; but actually, my own experience has shown me we often have more choice in the matter than we know and sometimes become ‘victims’ simply because we don’t know all our options.  I used to see myself as a victim – someone to whom life happened; someone stuck in the backseat on her own journey, while other people drove.  These days, I do my best to happen to life – and I’m definitely behind the wheel!  The change was my choice and one I’m so glad I made.  It led directly to that “EUREKA!” moment  at 5.00am on 6th November ’09, to the book and everything which looks set to follow.

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