30 Ways To Power Your World With Words

by / ⠀Startup Advice / July 6, 2011
words change the world

Words change the world.

They inspire, unite, direct, empower, and prompt action.

They also discourage, divide, anger, misguide, confuse, and mislead.

Empires, governments, businesses, relationships, and careers rise and fall because of words.

Moreover, study President Obama’s inaugural speech, John Lennon’s Imagine, Shakespeare’s King Lear, The Oprah Winfrey Show’s 25 years of broadcast, Forrest Gump’s sweet assessment of life and Pliny The Younger’s love letters to Calpurnia and you will realize the power of words.

Likewise, in faith and belief, billions and generations of people have centered their lives on words within Judaism’s Tanakh, Christianity’s Bible, Islam’s Qur’an, the Hindu Sruti, Buddhism’s Theravada, and more recently, Scientology’s Dianetics.

Words change the world.

As young CEOs and aspiring entrepreneurs, think very carefully about the words filling the borders of your emails, documents, instant messages, and social media profiles.

So, never, ever, underestimate the professional and personal impact of the words you write and send into the ether. Businesses rise and plunge with written communications evidenced every day in the world’s courts of law. So, this includes cases against entrepreneurs, CEOs, leaders, and colleagues for abuse, defamation, breach of contract, incompetence, misdirection, unfair dismissal, harassment, and unlawful business engagement.

As email is the dominant communication tool for entrepreneurs today, here are thirty suggestions to protect and power your enterprise with words that inspire, drive business, loyalty, and return on written investment.

First 10

  1. Approach every email with the motivation of selling, optimizing, or approving an idea, product, service, direction, or recommendation. As an entrepreneur with major time, revenue, and organizational demands, the opportunity cost is high when communication is not borne from this motivation
  2. Before writing, assess if your objective is more efficiently achieved with a meeting, call, office, or workstation visit
  3. Your parents, grandparents, guardians, and teachers taught you manners. Please use them
  4. Address the email recipient by her or his name. This also applies to cold sales prospects that you do not have a direct relationship with. She or he is not known to colleagues as a ‘Sir/Madam’ or ‘Whom It May Concern’. Research their name and designation and you are more likely to receive a response and better still, a positive one
  5. ‘Hi’, ‘Good morning’, and the like are acceptable ways of starting an email. A less traditional approach is the way forward and if the recipient is based in another country such as Thailand, use a warm ‘Sawasdee Krub’ and thankful ‘Khob Khun Krub’. Case study, glocal HSBC
  6. If you don’t have a direct relationship with the recipient, state how you are connected or where you acquired their email address, for example through a mutual contact, database, LinkedIn or web-research
  7. Be honest, write with integrity, recommend responsibly, and sell your proposition factually
  8. Keep sentences and paragraphs short and to-the-point
  9. Avoid unnecessary upper cases, exclamation marks, repeated use of symbols, emoticons, and chat abbreviations
  10. Minimize corporate jargon, acronyms, and big words
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Next 10

  1. Always use the spelling and grammar check tools
  2. Clearly explain instructions, use simple words, and delete words that may be open to misinterpretation
  3. Reply logically, sequentially, and thoroughly
  4. Numbering and bullet-pointing are effective
  5. Remove all negative emotions. If a subject matter is contentious, write or respond professionally with facts, void of emotion
  6. Eliminate hyperboles, do not exaggerate, and refrain from over-promising
  7. Delete repetition
  8. Replace negative expressions such as ‘don’t forget’ with engaging words such as ‘please remember’
  9. Replace ‘ASAP’ with an exact date or time you require the work completed
  10. Avoid being the girl or boy who famously sends ‘URGENT’ emails. The financial and relationship impact of disrupting workflows is high. Your ‘URGENT’ currency loses value each time you spend it

Final 10

  1. At key project junctures, explicitly state the business consequence if a task is not fulfilled
  2. Only send and Cc relevant recipients who require your email to fulfill their tasks. Do not Cc or Bcc irrelevant recipients, as this reflects sender insecurity, ignites office politics, and impacts team productivity
  3. If your company is a partnership or greater, weight towards using the royal ‘We’ rather than individual ‘I’ in your external communications
  4. Intuitively ‘sense’ and ‘pick up’ on your sender’s writing style and tactfully align. For example, the CEO of a Fortune 1000 company may respond with a punchy 1-line question regarding your business. Answer concisely.
  5. When attaching documents, compress the files and organize them with an end note referencing all attachments and links, so there is no disruption to the flow of your email
  6. Start and end your written communications positively
  7. Know exactly when to cease email communications, step in and take discussions offline
  8. After an offline conversation, send a ‘Per our discussion’ agreement summary
  9. Read business journals, media announcements, and advertising copy. Communications professionals are gifted at synthesizing information. Additionally, presenting a simple, singular, and strong argument for a product or service. This is a skill all CEOs must acquire. Key to this, I recommend all entrepreneurs purchase and lobby for an e-book of ‘How to do better creative work’ by Steve Harrison. He is one of the world’s most awarded and acclaimed creative and writing geniuses
  10. Stamp your awesome personality within the communication. You’re signing off with your name. Own it!
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Words can and will shape the future of your company and the world’s perception of it.

However, with 1.9 billion email users exchanging over 294 billion messages globally every day, something more important than your words? The environment.

So, care, challenge, and catalyze change within every institution, client, colleague, or partner who prints or requests you to print any email or documents exchanged. Educate them about digital alternatives to storing, presenting, viewing, sharing, editing, signing, and transmitting documents. You are brilliant, but none of your words or your sender’s words are as important as the shared survival of our world’s ecosystems.

Within the thirty years between 1960 and 1990, scientists estimated that one-fifth of the world’s tropical rainforests were destroyed, significantly fueled by global demand for paper products. Deforestation kills ecosystems. With the Bali and Javan tigers extinct in the past decades, only 300 Sumatran tigers are alive, 275 Sumatran Rhinoceros, 790 mountain gorillas, 550 Ethiopian wolves, 131 kakapo, and 384 California Condors. Conservationists are frontline, fighting tooth, claw, blood, sweat, and tears for their survival. Either join this fight or don’t contribute to this problem. There is no other respectable alternative. Today, the National Geographic Society warns that the world’s rainforests could completely vanish in a hundred years at the current rate of deforestation.

Emails and Sustainability

With almost 300 billion email messages advancing human knowledge, accelerating business, tightening relationships, and conversationally crossing the world every day, understand the definitive power of your words. However, take a humbler position of its value when weighed against the serious global issues of deforestation, wildlife extinction, and our planet’s very survival and sustainability.

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While past and older generations may or may not be apologetic or accepting of these facts and forecasts, the greater weight of the future does not belong to them. It belongs to you.

So, think forward, write well, print never, recycle always, and start today.

Wempy Dyocta Koto is the CEO of Wardour And Oxford, a global business development agency working with entrepreneurs all around the world to grow their businesses nationally and internationally. Having traveled to some of the world’s tropical rainforests, he has eye-witnessed the devastating impact of deforestation, fueled by the demand for paper and natural resources. He is a conservationist, fighting for the implementation of socially responsible and sustainable ways of working, and encourages all individuals, entrepreneurs, and companies to neutralize their carbon footprints every day at Climate Unchange with projects verified and certified by independent organizations accredited by the United Nations. Please join Wardour And Oxford’s mission to protect the world’s resources for future generations. Follow @wempydyoctakoto, @wardouroxford, @climateunchange

About The Author

Matt Wilson

Matt Wilson is Co-Founder of Under30Experiences, a travel company for young people ages 21-35. He is the original Co-founder of Under30CEO (Acquired 2016). Matt is the Host of the Live Different Podcast and has 50+ Five Star iTunes Ratings on Health, Fitness, Business and Travel. He brings a unique, uncensored approach to his interviews and writing. His work is published on Under30CEO.com, Forbes, Inc. Magazine, Huffington Post, Reuters, and many others. Matt hosts yoga and fitness retreats in his free time and buys all his food from an organic farm in the jungle of Costa Rica where he lives. He is a shareholder of the Green Bay Packers.

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