A discussion in a meeting I once had reminded me of the value of guarding your words.
For example…
Make an unsubstantiated claim in an online marketing piece and a sensitive spam-filter may flag your content with a warning.
Relationally speaking – fire off an email or text message to a colleague, friend, or co-worker and you put a relationship in jeopardy (I can vouch for this…stick with me).
Words matter. They can heal, help, compel, sell, promote, and persuade.
Words also wound. They can cut, berate, hurt, and castigate.
Not too many years ago I made a costly mistake with words. I let my frustration and anger get the best of me. Through an eloquently worded, yet sharp-edged e-mail, I took a colleague to task. Following a cursory edit, I hit *Enter* and the rest is history – and not the kind of history that bears repeating.
I admitted in the aforementioned meeting that I would handle the circumstance differently, given the opportunity. I’d pick up the phone instead of applying my writing skill.
There are times when spoken words – where emotion and body language can be observed – gain you more mileage than written words. Even though I’m a professional word-smith, I must occasionally rely on verbalizing my message – especially when a relational misunderstanding is in the balance.
No doubt – words are powerful and they matter. But words must be used effectively and contextually if we want positive outcomes.
My experience prompts the value of weighing…choosing…crafting our words – especially written ones.
Consider three factors in your dental marketing content and written communications:
*Weigh your intentions*
[The simplicity factor] Whether it’s an e-mail or a memo, a tweet, Facebook or blog post, a marketing brochure or a case study, a web page or a press release – weigh the intentionality of your words. Ask yourself – what *promise* am I making that – if my words flow effectively from it – will deliver something of benefit to the reader? Emphasis on benefit(s)!
*Choose your tone/language*
[The emotion-factor] is revealed by the tone you establish early in the communication. Circumstances, as do products and services, require a point-of-view (POV). Choose a tone that fits. The image or picture you want your reader to have throughout is the result of choosing a tone or language. Some products/services require an intellectual tone…others are best pictured with a more gregarious tone. Whichever you choose be certain your tone is *conversational* (i.e. write like you talk).
*Craft your desired outcome*
[The persuasion-factor] clarifies your intentions and tone. What you’re communicating is going somewhere. Where? That’s your persuasive duty. Persuading someone to listen and understand your POV and ultimately follow your words is the essence of the craft of writing. Those who craft compelling messages achieve desirable outcomes. You will have persuaded them to act positively, negatively, or…neutrally.
Combine each [factor] in your dental marketing content and you will communicate more thoughtfully. And thoughtful communication doesn’t provoke…it more likely will persuade.