Model the Masters
Want to improve your
communications? Find a mentor in your favorite publications and Websites
From the newsletter “Revving Up Readership,”
Publisher: Ann Wylie, ann@WylieComm.com or http://www.wyliecomm.com/home.shtml
I recently sent one of my
e-mail pals a plea for reading recommendations.
“Read The Confessions of Nat Turner by William Styron,”
he replied. “Read everything by William Styron. Then
write like him.”
Not bad advice. After all, as
communicators, we can learn a lot from the masters of our crafts – the William Styrons; the P.J. O’Rourkes; the folks who have earned Gold Quills, National
Magazine Awards and other honors.
Consider this your invitation
to model the masters, to learn new techniques by studying your favorite
communicators’ work. It’s the best way I know to improve your skills.
Here’s a six-step process to
get you started.
1. Browse the best.
If you’re going to model the
masters, you need to look at the masters – the best communications being
produced in any field. For me, “the best stuff” includes:
The leads, kickers and
classic feature structure of The Wall
Street Journal
* SHOWstudio.com’s
use of camera phones to cover trade shows and other events
* Men’s
Health’s tricks for packaging basic how-to information into compelling
articles and departments
* Warren Buffett’s
methods for bringing the driest financial formulas to life through humor,
anecdote and metaphor
* Southwest Airline’s ability to make
how-to-fasten-your-seatbelt information amusing enough to pay attention to
* Approaches used by other award-winning
writers, editors and webmasters
So ask yourself: “What
communications do I most admire?” Then add those to your regular reading and
review list.
2. Forage more widely.
The next step is to forage
more widely, or to make sure you’re looking at great pieces of communication –
not just the ones you need to gather information and conduct transactions in
your daily life.
One way I forage more widely
is to look at winners of major communication competitions. For instance, I
follow the winners of the National Magazine Awards – which explains why I
subscribe to
3. Read like a writer.
As you study the masters,
make sure you’re reading as a writer, not just as a reader. Readers read for
information and entertainment. Writers read for information and entertainment,
too. But they also read for something else: technique.
Another writer might
introduce you to a new way of crafting a headline, constructing a metaphor or
structuring a story.
As William Faulkner said: “Read,
read, read. Read everything – trash, classics, good and bad, and see how they
do it. Just like a carpenter who works as an apprentice and studies the master.
Read! You’ll absorb it.”
4. Clip it.
Next, start a clip file of
the pieces you admire most.
* Rip out articles that do a stellar job
of demonstrating the benefits to the reader.
* Save Websites that allow visitors to
experience a new process, service or product instead of just reading about it.
* Copy magazine articles that offer good
examples of “telling and selling” the story in the headlines, subheads,
callouts and captions.
One guideline to follow:
Whenever you hear yourself saying, “I wish I’d created that,” “that” goes into
the clip file.
5. Study it.
Now that you have a file
bulging with great communication samples, go through it again. This time, take
each piece apart and put it back together until you understand why you like it
and what the communicator did to make it that way.
6. Steal the techniques. (Not the words.)
Now it’s time to model the
masters, or pattern your pieces after the best talent in the field.
Note: We’re not talking about
plagiarism here. I once outlined this approach to a group of communicators in a
seminar. At the break, one of the participants pulled me aside and proudly
explained how she collected Wall Street
Journal headlines – then used them verbatim in her own financial
newsletter.
Yikes! That’s not modeling.
That’s plagiarizing.
The key to modeling the
masters is to steal the techniques, not the words. Modeling the masters means getting inspiration from the very best
communicators out there, then adapting their approaches – not adopting them,
but adapting them – to your own work.
Try it yourself. Feel free to
borrow and improve on other communicators’ methods. It’s a widely practiced
form of flattery. Take whatever you can, and keep T.S.
Eliot’s advice close to heart.
“Amateurs plagiarize,” he said. “Real writers steal.”
© Wylie Communications Inc.,
2004
“Revving Up Readership” is a whenever-Ann-sends-it
newsletter for clients, colleagues and other friends who want to reach more
readers or produce better publications and Websites. To get on or off the
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