The three points Kristina offers for consideration are:
1. Refund policy: Will you get your money back if things change after you register?
2. Vaccination/testing requirements
3. A CTA to register, because Confab's still gotta sell tickets
* * *
Here are 6 reasons I like her email as a model.
1. The subject line delivers on the promise.
"A personal note from Kristina" reads like it actually is from Kristina. She told me she wrote it at her kitchen table. You can tell.
So often we get emails from execs that claim to be "personal" but don't read that way.
š I call these kind of messages Hot Dog Messaging: Extruded through so many Messaging Machines that you can't tell what it was originally made of. (Snouts? Intestines? Who knows?)
2. Does not ignore our collective reality. Look at this empathic, human, exhausted language:
"I'm REAL SICK OF COVID." (SAMES!)
"I can't not talk about it."
"No matter how we try to spin it..."
Maybe you can relate to this: You look at the sales/marketing communications teed up and a tiny bit of ourselves feels the disconnect between what's going on in the world and what our marketing messaging says...?
Haven't we all been inside Kristina's Midwestern winter boots when she says, "I looked at everything ready to go out. And... ick."
I'm paraphrasing. But that's the vibe.
3. Even serious messages don't have to feel like they're written by a minister delivering a graveside eulogy.
I love Kristina's playful image of the "Omicron-sized elephant in the room."
4. No candy-coating. The best way to talk about Hard Things Policies is to be direct. Straight-talk clarity.
"If you can't make it you will get a refund."
"Proof of vax or negative test. No exceptions."
"We will comply with government health guidelines."
Simply stated. There you go. It is what it is.
5. Your own point of view. Conversations about vaccines and gatherings are difficult. But Confab wraps the requirements for attending the event as "for your consideration."
You have a choice. Confab's organizers have made theirs. Ball's in your court.
6. Clear Call to Action. This email is, of course, a sales and marketing message with a clear CTA of "register now because..."
The CTA works only because it comes after the other stuff.
Context is everything. How differently would the messageĀ have played if Kristina had simply said, "Prices are going up! Can't wait to see you in May!"
Your CTA should come after all your reader's unasked questions have been answered.
I'm bolding that because it's important. ^^
* * *
Kristina is a good friend. I've attended and spoken at
Confabāan event for content strategistsā3 times in the past 10 years. I'm not speaking this year, but if that's your industry, these are your people!
But none of that really matters. The point is: It's a great example of messaging and leadershipāand trying to light the way forward through an Omi-murky stressful time.
* * *
Bit of trivia for you: Kristina was the one responsible for titling my book,
Everybody Writes. In 2010, I was still writing the still-untitled book. I'd been angsty and panicky for weeks, because the book was pre-listed on Amazon already with this awful title:
The
Elements of Marketing Writing.
Eww. I know. Sad.
Anyway, Kristina called me early one February morning. She was crossing a parking lot, on the way into her dentist. I could barely hear her over the aggressive Minnesota wind. (Maybe the wind had an idea for my book title too? Can you ask it? Clearly I was grasping.)
Then!
I heard her loud and clear somewhere in my soul when she shouted into the phone...
"OK I GOT IT FOR YOU! IT'S EVERYBODY WRITES!"
BOOM. There it is.
I mention this for two reasons: (1) A reminder that every book needs a midwife or two. And (2) should this bit of trivia ever comes up as a Jeopardy clue or during an evening of bar trivia... you'll nail it.
Ā
* * *
MACHINE MINUTES OF FAME: AI + WRITING
Should we all be depositing poop emojis in our drawers at the notion that artificially intelligent robots are coming to take away all of our jobs?
Or should we high-five?
I think it's the latter.
We'll never see a day when AI writes this newsletter start to finish. But will there be a day when AI will help me write the first draft?
Probably? Maybe?
AI can/will increasingly help with some parts of marketing and writing. And not with others. Which?
That's exactly what Assaf Baciu, Paul Roetzer, and I talked about in this far-reaching, fun conversation about writing, marketing, about what's possible now, what's coming, and why Paul's book isn't on my rainbow bookshelf.
(It turns out it was. But it's fun to watch me sweat.)
Can robots delight in Zoom conversations like this...? (No they cannot!)
Ā