| |
|
|
Creative Conjuring for Your Writing Team
by Enzo F. Cesario
Business Skills Articles

Published on this site: August 20th, 2010 - See
more articles from this month

Let us suppose for a moment that you have made the decision to
hire a permanent, in-house writing team as opposed to seeking out
writers on a more per-contract basis. The advantages of this
decision are numerous, of course - for one, you get to grow a
team with a focus on your business so they grow more and more
aware of it as time goes on, benefiting from long-term exposure
to what you have them writing about.
However, now that you've got them, what's the best way to
maximize their creativity? Having a dedicated writing staff is a
fine thing, to be sure - but in order to get the most out of the
investment, you need them to produce solid, creative and reliable
content. It doesn't matter if they produce entire reams of
articles if the material produced isn't worth reading.
This is something broadly known as a meta-concern. Meta means "alongside" or even "outside." A meta-concern is a matter
that isn't immediately related to your primary purpose, but can
have significant implications all the same. Time spent helping
your writers be creative is time you aren't spending on direct
branding efforts. However, it can pay off in solid support and
respect for your brand in the long term. To that end, have a look
at a handful of techniques that have been demonstrated to help
spur productivity and creativity in your writers.
- Let them Own the Project
Group brainstorming is creative asphyxiation. Yes, it will result
in a quick sampling of several different ideas, but none of them
will be particularly well developed. Creativity is an odd little
thing. When it's highly personal, as in a project one or two
people own to work on specifically, more effort gets invested
into it out of a sense of pride and desire. When control (and
therefore responsibility) of the matter is spread around,
however, there's a sense of disconnect.
The latter comes as a result of two phenomena. First, there's
the lack of privacy it causes. Some of the ideas creative types
put forward are very personal, representing the best of their own
minds. Exposing their best to others is intensely difficult at
times, so a group setting can hinder them out of modesty or
shame. Second is the shared laziness of a group. In short, when
the work is spread around to many people, no one person pulls
quite as hard on their share. The work will get done anyway,
after all, so what's the point of putting forth more effort?
Instead of forcing intellectual exhibitionism through group
sessions, share your particulars with small teams or, even
better, with individuals if possible. Give them the parameters,
ask them for their input and let them put their effort into the
task. Let them own the project, and you will be more likely to
get their best work.
- Work Individually, Edit Collectively
Very few writers can edit or revise their own work. The best ones
can, but there are few who couldn't benefit from a bit of
critical advice from another source. When the article or project
is done, hand it off to an editor not directly involved with it.
Let them help refine what the team has put down. The creative
portion being complete, this technical portion allows for more
dispassionate, cooperative analysis that can really make a
project shine.
- Bring in New Blood
There are two ways to go about making sure your team stays fresh
creatively, both along the lines of "new blood."
The first is exposure to new ideas. Your writing team is
hopefully very widely read. People who study and read in more
diverse circles are more likely to come up with the clever and
creative ideas you most need from them. Part of this will come
from reading their coworkers' projects in the editing process,
but make sure they're spending part of their time reading
materials and articles of many sorts, be they literary or
factual.
The next is exposure to new people. Sometimes a writing team
needs an outright boost from a new party. Even if you've hired
your permanent, on-staff writing team, consider hiring the
occasional project out to freelancers of a certain level of
experience. This can have the effect of taking the workload off
your standard workers, exposing them to new ideas or serving as
an impromptu job interview.
- Listen to Them
Writers are a notoriously picky lot. Yes, there is a benefit in
making them stick to the grind and show some initiative, but
there's also a great value to catering to some of their needs.
Make sure to listen when a writer mentions a concern they have.
Your input might make all the difference between an acceptable
article and an outstanding one.
If you're going to go to the trouble of having a writing team
on-staff, you have to make the effort to bring them into the
staff proper. The rest of the team might not understand why some
people are being paid to just tap keys, and you need to foster
the relationship between them so that the crew knows these
writers are giving them good press. Connect; listen, network and
you'll have the team you need.

Enzo F. Cesario is an online branding specialist
and co-founder of Brandsplat, a digital content
agency. Brandsplat creates blogs, articles, videos
and social media in the "voice" of our client's
brand. It makes sites more findable and brands more
recognizable. For the free Brandcasting Report go to
http://www.BrandSplat.com/ or visit our blog at
http://www.iBrandCasting.com/.


|
|