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The Woodies have a blog. It’s a kind of collective. Not sure we’re about to start a revolution baby, but we might kindle a small debate or two and perhaps raise a smile. Anyway, rather than just blogging corporate Woodreed by fielding our top Woodie (as so many other companies seem to do in a thinly veiled attempt at impressing with their profundity), we wanted all our individual voices to be heard. An agency’s most valuable assets are its people after all. Everyone’s got something to say here and with us everyone’s ideas and opinions matter.

Each week someone different will be blogging. It's mostly about stuff that rocks our world as well as the flipside – the things that just don't cut it with us. We'll blog about inside and outside – inside this glorious industry where we work and outside in the real world.
It's a bit of an experiment, so go with us on this one.

Hope you enjoy.
Showing posts with label tone of voice. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tone of voice. Show all posts

Wednesday, 15 July 2015

From Tunbridge Wells with love

What is that one phrase that makes you think? What is that one phrase that makes you smile? What is that one phrase that makes you stop what you are doing and focus on the person who said it?

I love you.

Think back to the first time you heard that said to you. 
Think about where it was. 
Think about how it made you feel. 
Think about how many times you’ve heard it since.

Thought about it? Good. 

Like how your attention has been nicely diverted whilst reading this blog post? Well the Tunbridge Wells Borough Council has done the same with their road work’s messaging on the A21.

The message is “Someone loves you”.

Now this is supposed to make you drive carefully through the road works so you can return to your loved one/s. However, it completely distracts you from driving. It makes you think about something other than driving. It does the exact opposite of what it was meant to do.

The TWBC has clearly tried to use emotion to force safer driving. But if they had read a bit further into behavioural economics they would have seen that “emotions can act as triggers of other mental states (stored memories, new beliefs, new preferences, and the like)” (Cecchi, 2015). Stored memories is what I am really trying to drive home here (excuse the pun). If you are accessing stored memories you are not focusing on the job in hand. And that job is driving.

Happy to hear your thoughts on this too, so please leave a comment.

Tuesday, 4 February 2014

Release your inner voice

I ran a little workshop at Woodreed recently where we were having a bit of think about the importance of tone of voice by playing around with the copy of some ads.

We looked at the original copy and identified the tone of voice. We then debated the ‘anti-voice’ and rewrote the ads in the new voice.

We looked at a whole bunch, but I’ll share just the one for hair care brand Aussie. Here’s the original copy for its ‘Miracle Recharge Frizz Remedy’ where the tone of voice, so we thought, was ‘quirky, witty, exciting and optimistic…’


"Car parks locker rooms rooftops the moon.  Now there is nowhere you can't give your hair a quickie between-wash boost (Okay maybe not the moon).

Behold Aussie’s new miracle recharge collection

A gaggle of eight lightweight leave in conditioning sprays packed with luscious extracts of Aussie exotica.
Need a fix of defrizz? A spritz of shine dashing straight out from work?

A dash of miracle recharge on wet or dry hair and suddenly you're re-jzhoojzhed (technical term)

It's just the thing for girls who are always on the move even if the cupboard is stationary"

Here’s how it might sound in its anti-voice (Lacklustre, vanilla, dull, pessimistic).

"Like all the other shampoo companies, our staff in Sheerness have mixed a bunch of chemicals together to produce a spray shampoo to get rid of smelly grease and grime.

It’s like all other hair care products and comes off a production line in a bottle, which you can carry anywhere in your bag – if it’s big enough and you want the extra hassle of having to rummage through the phone, keys, tissues and lipsticks. 

We have eight different coloured bottles, which do the same thing and smell a bit like flowers.

Of course it will cost you more and probably take up more of your time as you’ll still have to wash your hair properly.

But if you are too lazy to wash your hair in the morning, you could give it a quick spray before you get to the office to fool people for a couple of hours"

Ok so it was just a bit of fun, but it really helped remind us that it’s not just what you say, it’s the way that you say it that makes all the difference to how you want your audience to feel.

After years of devoting my life’s work to putting the brand at the heart of internal as well as external comms, it still makes me raise at least one eyebrow, perhaps sometimes two (and that takes some doing I can tell you) at how many organisations are still forgetting the importance of using the right tone of voice inside to their people as well as to customers.  It’s well documented that emotional engagement is four times more powerful than rational in rallying the troops, but people still insist on dishing out the same old cold rational communication to their own people saving their deliciously on brand engaging voice as the exclusive preserve of their customers.

Keeping your corporate voice on track doesn’t have to leave you hoarse, but it does take a bit of effort up front. Woodreed often work with clients to help put their corporate voices through their paces, especially those who have multiple departments creating comms inside as well as outside their organisations.  The emphasis is on the practical application of tone of voice and sessions are run with copywriters on hand providing clients with a set of tools to enable them to deliver tone of voice inside and out with ease.


If you would like to know more or just generally shoot the breeze on all things tone of voice, please do get in touch cdahl@woodreed.com  

Friday, 11 February 2011

When to blog? What to blog about? What's on and what's off limits?

I was going to blog about something truly dire, something which appalled me so much that it plumbed the direst depths of direness. But then on reflection I decided that not blogging about it was far better, far better to deny such direness the oxygen of publicity. So what, pray, can have caused me such offence and such soul-searching?

A report on BrandChannel that the so-called Food Liberation Army (a group of activists against all things fast-food and corporate) had 'kidnapped' Ronald McDonald and were holding him hostage subject to receiving satisfactory answers from the fast-food giant. A bit naff you might think but not exactly offensive. Ah but it gets worse, because the whole concept is a viral film showing aforesaid RM with a bunch of hooded captors behind him in the style of a public execution video. Worse than dire.

So instead let me talk about brands. How for a brand to be successful it has to have a truth which matters and a tone of voice which resonates with a target audience.

What do you think is the most popular flavour of Kit Kat in Japan?

Yes, that's right what flavour of Kit Kat? Believe it or not, there have been over 80 flavours created to date including strawberry, green tea, golden peach, custard pudding, grilled corn, sweet potato, jacket baked potato with butter, earl grey tea, camembert cheese and, in a strange nod to my opening rant, caramel macchiato McFlurry.

The secret to the success of the Kit Kat brand in Japan is part marketing and part linguistic coincidence. Kit Kat is very similar to the phrase "kitto katsu", or good luck (Kit Kat literally means "You shall surely win!"). Because of this, Kit Kats have become a small good luck charm.

The other half of the Kit Kat success story has to do with marketing. Capitalising on the Japanese tendency to "Catch ‘em all" varieties of Kit Kats are quickly introduced and then pulled from the market to increase demand.

Oh and the answer to what's the top-selling variety of Kit Kat in Japan? Soy sauce!

Thursday, 16 September 2010

Fly the voice

Kulula-air.com is a low-cost carrier based in South Africa. They have a new livery which takes living the brand to a whole new stratosphere.

The entire aeroplane is covered with details about the plane, including arrows pointing to the more interesting parts.

"The big cheese" = the captain's window.
The aircraft's registration number = "Secret agent code."
"Loo (or mile-high initiation chamber)."
The black box, seats, stabilizer and rudder - I could go on.
What a perfect example of consistent application of brand tone of voice. What's your favourite?