8 Syllables or you’re out
By Clark S. Judge, managing director.
“Recovering a company’s reputation” leads the case list on our landing page. The case is of U.S. Sugar. With activist incitement, the media had branded the company a “slave labor” employer and an environmental polluter. All wildly false, but no one was listening to the company’s protests.
Remember this: When trust in you is zero, you have eight syllables to recover it.
Not eight chapters. Not eight sentences. Not eight words. Eight syllables.
Four is better.
For U.S. Sugar, it was four: “Open Harvest”.
For Verizon (another landing page case), it was eight: “Old wires, old rules; new wires, new rules.”
For Poland (yet another landing page case), it was seven: “National Security”.
Because in different ways each statement was self-verifying, non-listeners started listening. After all:
Would a “slave laborer” declare an “Open Harvest”?
Visualizing the new (non) wires of mobile v. the clunky old black cords of landline telephones, made the need to revisit regulations instantly compelling.
Did it really make sense uncritically to credit grotesque mischaracterizations about a frontline NATO ally and homeland of Saint/Pope John Paul II without a second look?
Eight syllables. Tops.