The multitasking myth
June 1st, 2010 / 6:00 pm
Don’t believe all that multitasking hype: studies have shown that the human mind is wired to pay attention to one thing at a time. What we can do well is rapidly shift between things, like clicking a remote control to change channels. If you’re interested in this area, read this article from The Huffington Post: People who are multitasking are often bad at it or this one from National Public Radio: Think you’re multitasking? Think again. This article from The Daily Mail says there are negative consequences and even has tips for multitasking “if you must:” Is multi-tasking bad for your brain? Experts reveal the hidden perils of juggling too many jobs. Of related interest is The benefits of distraction from New York magazine.
Categories: bulletin
comments(0)
Tags: mind, psychology
Below the radar: stories about subliminal
January 21st, 2010 / 3:00 pm
I’ve been doing a lot of reading lately about how tapping into the unconscious mind is the next big thing in marketing, thus the emerging term ‘neuromarketing.’ This reminded me about subliminal advertising, which going back to the 1950s has been a controversial and disputed means of persuasion (e.g. subliminal images are shown so briefly that the viewer does not consciously ’see’ them). Every now and then, I stumble upon an article about this area and here are two recent ones:
- Subliminal cues do work after all, says study: when subliminal advertising first came to the forefront during the ‘red scare’ 1950s era, people were afraid that the Soviet Union could use such surreptitious techniques to brainwash the public into supporting Communism. Later they were reassured when the results of a much-publicized study turned out to have been falsified. Now, however, with the benefit of MRI ‘brain scan’ technology, there is new evidence that “provided they were reinforced with simultaneous rewards, subliminal advertising could probably influence some of the choices we make.”
- Subliminal messages work best when negative: so finds a study conducted by University College London, whose Professor Lavie says that “We have shown that people can perceive the emotional value of subliminal messages and have demonstrated conclusively that people are much more attuned to negative words.” She added: “More controversially, highlighting a competitor’s negative qualities may work on a subliminal level much more effectively than shouting about your own selling points.”
Hopefully this will not give too much succor to those who advocate negative advertising in politics. ‘Effective’ or not in winning elections, I think ‘going negative’ makes our increasingly fragile democratic institutions a loser by increasing cynicism and discouraging citizen participation.
Categories: bulletin
comments(0)
Tags: persuasion, propaganda, psychology
Why we learn more from success than failure
January 16th, 2010 / 4:00 pm
According to this article in Science Daily, if you’ve ever felt doomed to repeat your mistakes, researchers at MIT’s Picower Institute for Learning and Memory may have explained why: brain cells may only learn from experience when we do something right and not when we fail. If so, then no wonder we need to work harder at learning from our mistakes and applying the resulting wisdom to continuous improvement.
Categories: bulletin
comments(0)
Tags: continuous improvement, lifelong learning, neuroscience
Public speaking techniques
January 16th, 2010 / 3:00 pm
Here’s a BBC News Magazine piece that contains some interesting background on what constitutes public speaking success, together with useful techniques for speech-making, such as:
- using three part lists
- creating contrasts
- drawing ‘word picture’ imagery
If you are into oratory, check out this piece about how Great communicators are great explainers.
Categories: bulletin
comments(0)
Tags: public speaking, speeches
25 moonshots for management
January 8th, 2010 / 2:00 pm
While it is probably better now than it ever has been during my 20 year career, the quality of management in the public relations industry can still sometimes be depressingly mediocre. I hope that PR executives dedicated to continuous improvement in their leadership offer will read this superb article listing ten compelling ‘management 2.0′ concepts plus this follow-on piece outlining fifteen more.
Categories: bulletin
comments(0)
Tags: management
How to avoid choking under pressure
January 7th, 2010 / 3:00 pm
Even though I love public speaking and have delivered hundreds of speeches and presentations over the years, I am not immune to ‘podium pressures’ and thus found this Scientific American article on how to avoid choking under pressure a relevant resource in preparing for the most effective platform presence.
Categories: bulletin
comments(0)
Tags: psychology, public speaking
The contradiction of charisma
December 28th, 2009 / 8:43 am
A new theory of charisma in this Boston Globe article: “[It] is the power of apparently effortless embodiment of contradictory qualities simultaneously: strength and vulnerability, innocence and experience, and singularity and typicality among them.”
Categories: bulletin
comments(0)
Tags: charisma, leadership, psychology
Which is more persuasive: time or money?
December 19th, 2009 / 11:00 am
This article in the Inside Influence Report produced by Dr. Robert Cialdini’s organization outlines the results of a new persuasion study which should especially interest PR people (as their product is professional time to which the market assigns a monetary value):
- “A survey of the recent issues of four popular, high circulation magazines (New Yorker, Cosmopolitan, Money and Rolling Stone) revealed that out of a total of some 300 advertisements almost half employed a reference to time or money in their message. But does mentioning time or money influence peoples’ evaluation of the product or service concerned? And if they do which is more persuasive – time or money?”
- “These [study] results…suggest that irrespective of the amount of money an individual might spend on a product…making references to time can influence people’s perception of a product’s attributes. Therefore it would seem to sense to initially include references to time rather than money when influencing others to consider your offers and proposals.”
Categories: bulletin
comments(0)
Tags: cialdini, money, persuasion, psychology, time
The surprising ways that metaphors shape your world
December 11th, 2009 / 3:00 pm
This article from the The Boston Globe says that:
- “Drawing on philosophy and linguistics, cognitive scientists have begun to see the basic metaphors that we use all the time not just as turns of phrase, but as keys to the structure of thought.”
- “By taking these everyday metaphors as literally as possible, psychologists are upending traditional ideas of how we learn, reason, and make sense of the world around us. The result has been a torrent of research testing the links between metaphors and their physical roots.”
- “To the extent that metaphors reveal how we think, they also suggest ways that physical manipulation might be used to shape our thought.”
- “While psychologists have thus far been primarily interested in using such manipulations simply to tease out an observable effect, there’s no reason that they couldn’t be put to other uses as well, by marketers, architects, teachers, parents, and litigators, among others.”
Indeed; these days, there’s a lot of thinking being done in the area of ‘conversation communication’ and ‘digital storytelling.’ Where the two meet allows persuasion marketers to tap into PR applications for metaphors, which are said to be the keys to unlocking the power of the unconscious mind, the place where most decision-making takes place.
Categories: bulletin
comments(0)
Tags: communication, language, metaphors, PR, psychology
Speak first to avoid persistent myths
December 3rd, 2009 / 12:15 pm
This Washington Post article contains conclusions that PR professionals, journalists and an informed public need to know about what they consume from the media. For example:
- “The research also highlights the disturbing reality that once an idea has been implanted in people’s minds, it can be difficult to dislodge.”
- “Denials inherently require repeating the bad information, which may be one reason they can paradoxically reinforce it. Indeed, repetition seems to be a key culprit. Things that are repeated often become more accessible in memory, and one of the brain’s subconscious rules of thumb is that easily recalled things are true.”
- “Many easily remembered things, in fact, such as one’s birthday or a pet’s name, are indeed true. But someone trying to manipulate public opinion can take advantage of this aspect of brain functioning. In politics and elsewhere, this means that whoever makes the first assertion about something has a large advantage over everyone who denies it later.”
- “Furthermore, a new experiment by Kimberlee Weaver at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and others shows that hearing the same thing over and over again from one source can have the same effect as hearing that thing from many different people — the brain gets tricked into thinking it has heard a piece of information from multiple, independent sources, even when it has not.”
Categories: bulletin
comments(0)
Tags: crisis communications, media, messages, myths, psychology, repetition
subscribe
fresh posts
- Crisis communications in 2012
(2/9/2012) - How to optimize social media for PR
(1/2/2012) - America’s new PR offensive in Asia-Pacific
(1/2/2012) - How Asian MNCs are using social media globally
(11/3/2011) - Social responsibility > Social marketing > Social media
(11/2/2011) - Korea’s obsession with its national brand
(10/27/2011)
categories
- Asia
- Burson-Marsteller
- careers
- China
- crisis communications
- CSR
- culture
- digital
- friends
- guest post
- infographics
- measurement
- media relations
- national brand
- news
- persuasion
- PR industry
- psychology
- publicity
- radio
- speaking platforms
- talent
- technology
- thinking
tags
-
apology communications
asia
asia-pacific
australia
b-m
canada
careers
china
cialdini
continuous improvement
crisis communications
culture
digital
digital storytelling
edelman
hill & knowlton
image
india
infographic
japan
journalism
korea
language
leadership
lindstrom
management
marketing
measurement
media
media relations
media training
metaphors
persuasion
PR
propaganda
psychology
publicity
public relations
public speaking
singapore
social media
social networks
thinking
training
zaltman
stream
Crisis communications in 2012 >
Canadian Prime Minister Harper on FT cover >
The Malaysia PR Awards judges' binder has arrived on my desk >
Meeting in sunny Cape Town with Robyn de Villiers, founder and chair of Arcay B-M >
How to optimize social media for PR >
America’s new PR offensive in Asia-Pacific >
South Africa's BusinessDay newspaper this morning: broad and thin, strong content >
Over Sydney at the weekend returning home from my last business mission of 2011 >


