Having a Point of
View
By Nilofer Merchant on Jan 23, 2013 04:47 pm
“Your writing is better than my writing, but your headlines …
they suck.”
That nugget of rather direct insight was delivered over a lunch
conversation by a best-selling (and incredibly talented) author. At first, I
thought what he was talking about was the media-related, buzz-generating kind
of thing where the goal was to get someone to click on an article. I thought
he was saying to figure out how to be more popular, to get more web traffic,
to build the author platform. And I wanted to gag because I could picture the
headlines of Inc Magazine (online) where every post starts with a digit as in
“9 Ways to Rule the World”.
But, on deeper reflection and a year of practice, I realize what
he was trying to tell me is this: have a point of view. Meaning, nnow what it
is that you, the
writer, are aiming for the audience to believe, or do.
And I only really
got it in the big way when I read this piece in the NYT
by Wendy Button, last weekend, entitled Please Take Away My Right To A Gun.
The other day, the president, and the vice president announced
their plans to curb gun violence in the wake of the shooting in Newtown,
Conn. I agree with all of their measures. But I believe they should be bolder
and stop walking on eggshells about what to do with people like me, the
“mentally ill”.
The headline put the mental illness issue on the table,
front-and-center, through story and facts but ultimately a remarkably clear
point of view that the reader knows, even before he or she dives
in. Having a headline with a point of view means the headline isn’t just
capturing a nugget of the full idea, but rather, it is the very spine of the
idea — providing a certain strength and backbone to every word selected and
crafted to share the idea.
And, of course, having a point of view isn’t limited to writing.
Leadership, too, must have a point of view. This can shape
entire organizations, whether it is about enabling unbelievable design (Apple), or educate the change agents (Singularity University) to enable your
people to contribute their all (Valve), to enable happiness through great
service (Zappos), or to allow anyone to contribute
and share ideas that matter (TED). To have a point of view is to know why
you’re there, to be able to signal your purpose and organizing principle so
clearly that the “reader knows”, even before he or she dives into the
details. It attracts talent, it creates allies, and it focuses the work.
When you have point of view about what matters to you and why,
your chances of “changing the world” rise exponentially. Great entrepreneurs
often affirm their point of view, repeatedly. Caterina
Fake (of Etsy,
Flickr, Findery fame) believes that technology can connect humans to be more
social with one another. Ev Williams (of Twitter,
etc fame) believes in power of simplicity of tools that enable deeper
understanding. Reid Hoffman
(of Linked In fame) believes anyone, quite possibly everyone can be the
entrepreneur of their own life but they need a network to achieve success.
For me, and my work, the belief is that the future is not created, the future is co-created.
Hence, my intense desire for deep inclusion, to effect a better economic
future. This is a truth: when you know yours, it magnetically attracts
resources to you: you find your tribe, get the opportunities presented to you
and so on.
In writing, having a headline means you eliminate everything
that is extraneous to that headline. In policy, it means you understand the
tradeoffs between different ideas so you keep leaning in the direction you
wish. In leadership, it means knowing why you care, and allowing people to
work with you based on that purpose. In life, it is to know what ideas you are fighting for.
My friend over lunch, he was asking me to be more clear in my
point of view so that the clarity of my ideas would shine through. I pass
that onto you with that same wish for your work.
(p.s. I’m double posting this over at LinkedIn since I’m also writing for them
lately. Feel free to comment where ever you wish).
The post Having a Point of View appeared first on Nilofer Merchant.
|
More to read:
|
Thursday, January 24, 2013
Having a point of view- thanks Nilofer
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment