Good Business Writing Wins Wars, Transforms Companies, and Eliminates Meetings
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Good Business Writing Wins Wars, Transforms Companies, and Eliminates Meetings

I like to write (that is why I blog).

So, I was tickled to learn that one of the first things that Churchill did when taking office was to take time to enforce his rules for clear writing: use shorter words and keep memos to one page. He said it was “slouthful not to compress your thoughts.”*

This made for efficient written communication for the war effort. Good writing can help win wars.

Churchill’s efforts reminded me of Amazon’s approach to starting meetings with a six-page memo.** According to leaders at Amazon, good writing can transform your company.

Another writing culture I’ve admired is 37signals***. They practice asynchronous written communication. That is, someone writes a thoughtful document. Then, others take their time to write thoughtful responses to that. They claim that they can make many important decisions with this process. This shows that good writing can eliminate many meetings.

Why does it work?

Paul Graham says it best. Good writing is a sign of good thinking. If you create a business culture of good writing, you are creating a culture of good thinking. One of his essays says that writing about something shows you whether you really understand it. Writing about something forces you to think more deeply about it.

Amazon executives mention that the memos are and should be hard to write. This confirms Graham’s point that writing about something shows how little you might know about the topic. Writing forces you to think deeply about the issue.

When others at Amazon read the well-thought-out document, the conversations and decisions are better.

I worked for a CEO who encouraged us to write out our ideas in “full sentences.” In other words, PowerPoint bullet points let you get away with unclear thinking. Ideas expressed in complete sentences help minimize misunderstanding. 37signals calls this “long form” with the expectation that you think through the topic.

Writing more sounds good. Is it easy to implement?

Not in my experience.

At Opex Analytics, I was always disappointed that I couldn’t create a stronger writing culture. After we were acquired, I had less influence.

However, I tried to influence people by doing it. I spent a lot of time writing out my thoughts in full sentences. It helped my thinking. Once written, it was easy to share, even months later. I’d like to think that this effort had some influence and benefit.

If you like the idea of writing more, try it.

But I do have to give you a few warnings.

Don’t expect big changes or much feedback, at least initially. Most organizations and people are not set up to have strong writing cultures. Also, remember, you also need to practice too. The lack of feedback could also be that your document isn’t as well-written as you think.

And, even if you are an introvert and love the idea of writing, talking about ideas will probably always be more important.

If you write a document, you should expect that you’ll need to talk about it in a meeting.

At Amazon, after reading the six-page memo, the others in the room don’t write a response; they talk about it.

Churchill created an effective writing organization. However, he spent much of his days and into the wee hours of the night talking to many people. Good discussions and debates also win wars.

(Here is a link to the article on Mike Talks AI.)

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* This quote is from the book, The Splendid and the Vile. Here is a post from that book.

**Here is a Forbes article on the process and a Bezo’s letter to shareholders discussing it. There are lots of other good sources for this.

***Jason Fried, the co-founder and CEO of 37signals, has written a few books, many blog posts, and done interviews. I think he gives good business advice. Here is one sample of his advice on internal communication, but many other sources are out there.

Brilliant post Mike! Having written a few blogs myself, I do agree that writing in long form forces us to consider the topics we write about in depth while PPT can let us get away by glossing over stuff.

回复
Aster Santana

Founder/CEO at Mip Wise - Decision Scientist - Building intelligent solutions to drive optimized results.

2 年

Another great topic, Michael Watson! After reading the book Storytelling with Data, by Cole Nussbaumer Knaflic, I started to see writing as a design process. As such, I now see myself spending more time trying to be concise than writing new sentences. In fact, the following became one of my favorite quotes: "Perfection is achieved, not when there is nothing more to add, but when there is nothing left to take away." Antoine de Saint-Exupéry, Airman's Odyssey

Anthony Gatti

Product @ Gravitee | Control, Secure & Govern your Event Streams with the Gravitee Kafka Gateway

2 年

Couldn't agree more! It is an incredible panacea for getting everybody on the same page, and also a very hard cultural fight. The book Working Backwards that came out relatively recently goes through the details of how it works at Amazon and I found it incredibly illuminating. Thanks for sharing!

Ganesh Ramakrishna

Building Lyric with an amazing team and A+ customers

2 年

Great communication skills are a superpower - but in today's day and age, writing is only one way to create an audience and win them over. Here are other alternatives: 1. Podcasting - Tim Ferris 2. Tweeting - Ryan Petersen 3. YouTube - Mark Rober 4. TikTok - Excel Girl 5. Writing (of course) - Paul Graham, Mike Watson Keep the blogs coming!

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