One of the great contradictions (or is it a causation?) in our
industry is that it seems that the copy people swear is least likely to be read
is the copy that's most likely to be picked-over. No one reads anymore they say, but still copy is tweaked, scrutinized,
monkeyed with, and re-written at the last minute.
Now I'll admit, I believe in copy. I believe that words make a
difference. I believe it because I've seen it. I believe it because I've seen it one-thousand times over my many years. And I believe it because it's what I do. I write words, or try to, that
are memorable and motivating.
I also believe that good thinkers are good writers and if you can find
one, you should cherish them. Cherish them to the point where you might
actually listen to them as often as one time in ten.
Readers in this space know that I revere certain writers for their
craft. A.J. Liebling. Joseph Mitchell. George MacDonald Fraser. Stacy
Schiff. Jill Lepore. Dava Sobel.
But above all, in a Pantheon all his own (if that's not a mixed
metaphor) sits Robert Caro.
Through the years in advertising, I've had the great good fortune
to learn from, or just observe, some of the best in the business. Marshall and Harold Karp when I
was at Marschalk. Ed Butler when I was at Ally. Steve Hayden and Chris Wall
during my first stint at Ogilvy. And Steve Simpson and David Fowler during my second go-round.
The writer I've learned most from, however, is Robert Caro. And
what I've learned I've boiled down to three things. The three things that good
thinking and good writing can bring to an agency and their clients.
1. Good
writers know how to concentrate. We know how to keep turning pages. We
know how to uncover important information, feelings, and details others may
miss.
2. Good writers understand that the world is complex and know it needs to be made simple. So we know how to discover how things work. Then we explain them to people.
3. Last, good writers have learned that time equals truth. It takes time to find something unique. It usually doesn't happen between the 10AM briefing and the 4PM 'full-team tissue session.'
It
takes these three things to make something good. The first 23-hours of your writing
might sound like everyone else’s. The trick is persevering until you write
something for the brands you work on that nobody else could. That no other
brand can say. Something that is true, genuine and ownable. That shit don’t
come easy.
Last
night, I came upon an ad in my social feed that really pissed me off. It didn’t
piss me off because it sucked. It pissed me off that the writer of the ad (if
there was one) and the company behind it were so lazy, so lacking in care and
how they present themselves to readers.
The season's carefree mood? I thought this season was all about mass shootings. |
Or what about this line I heard just now in a Cadillac commercial: "The 2019 Cadillacs are made for summer. And made to move."
Oh.
If your
job is to create something, create something with meaning. Resist cliches.
Resist the nonsensical. Resist dumb.
Part of
our jobs in life, in advertising, as humans, as parents is to find a way to
have personal integrity. It's our duty to try.
Unlike cops, or neuro-surgeons, or chemists who might find a way to actually materially improve the world, all we have is our integrity. That and an ethic that says we have to try our hardest and do our best.That’s really what this is all about.
Unlike cops, or neuro-surgeons, or chemists who might find a way to actually materially improve the world, all we have is our integrity. That and an ethic that says we have to try our hardest and do our best.That’s really what this is all about.
It may
be Sisyphean, but I’m going to keep pushing the writing rock up the hill. And I’ll
be damned if I care how many times it rolls back on me.
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