Ghostwriting: The Art of Unpolluted Communication
Tom Popomaronis
Innovation Leader | GenAI Expert | HBR Contributor | 40 Under 40 | Host of TomTalks??
How much truth do we really exchange when we exchange pleasantries??
“Hey, Karen! It’s good to see you. How are you?”
“Hi Tom, It’s good to see you too. I’m good; how are you?”
Those of us whose job is relationship building, such as in a sales context, might have this exchange a dozen times a day. The conversation falls out of our mouths before we even have a chance to think about it. It’s not really communication, it’s habit. Is it a greeting? Yes. A social exchange? Absolutely. Does it convey any actual information? Maybe. But truth?
Very rarely.?
Being greeted in this way isn’t likely to frustrate you. Socially, we’ve come to expect it. But we also know what it feels like when we begin to suspect that an entire conversation is colored with superficiality. It can make us feel like we’ve wasted our time, or worse – like the person on the other end doesn’t trust us enough with the truth. Their truth.?
Communicating Truth
Communicating truth is tricky: it’s not quite the same as communicating information. Information is empirical, but truth is something different. So much of written content today is merely information. A lot of it is good writing. But great writing contains something else: the person’s truth. It embodies personality, lived experiences, and opinions on a topic. It’s the hard-earned “good stuff” that each one of us has to offer the other.
As a ghostwriter, how do you jump into the skin of another person and communicate their truth, as if they were the one at the keyboard? Besides having an innate sixth sense, it looks like the following:
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Entering the Author-Verse
Your job as a ghostwriter is to bypass the initial insincerity that comes about in most of our natural communication, to skip past the small talk. Re-arranging already known facts in a new way will only get you so far. The only way to represent real truth is to the universe of the author.
Good ghostwriting pierces the veil of insincerity to create a piece that establishes the reader’s trust. As human beings, we tolerate superficiality, but we don’t prefer it. Ghostwriting is not about communicating the author’s words: it’s about communicating the author’s truth. Sometimes these align, and sometimes they don’t. Communication is an art and a craft, and we’re all on the journey together towards doing it better.
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Tom Popomaronis?is Executive Vice President of Innovation at Massive Alliance, a global executive branding agency. Tom co-founded Massive's?Executive Leadership Branding ?program, which provides ghostwriting services to world-class executives looking to tell their stories.
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3 年Seems like this could be applied to life in general. Bypass social graces if you want to get anything done for real.
Co-founder @ ReadWrite Strategies | Creative Strategist | Where narratives meet branding & live happily ever after
3 年This is terrifically on-point. It puts me in mind of all kinds of effective communication. For example, really great comedy is great because it feels so true, and therefore resonates more deeply. Piercing the veil of insincerity is such a compelling way to put this!