Thomas Whitehead |
Let’s play a quick game. Feel free to grab a pen and paper,
open a word doc or just use your head, but take a few minutes and write down or
try to recall the biggest news stories of 2013. Yes, 2013, not 2014. Go ahead;
I will give you some time. And no cheating!
So, how do you think you did? Did you even come up with 10?
Are you sure everything you wrote down was from 2013?
If you want to compare your list to one such list, try this
one: http://tinyurl.com/mkyu3xe.
I will admit, when I looked at this list, I forgot most of
these events happened just a year – or a little more than a year – ago. Some of
them seemed longer than just a year and others seem like yesterday.
This exercise reminded me of a valuable element for
communications today: past events are going to mean different things to
different audiences now more than ever before.
When I was looking at this list of top news events, I was
amazed at the ones that I forgot about completely or ones that didn’t even
interest me at the time that they were occurring. Yet, others, I was enthralled
with when they were happening.
The biggest takeaway from this for communication
professionals is to be very careful when referencing historical events as
examples for your messaging. It is critical to make sure that the example is
relevant or something that the audience can identify with easily.
This is also true when you consider demographics including
age, sex and religion. Different events might have more resonating effects on
some people more than others.
As news and information continues to come to us at a
lightning-fast pace, it is important to keep up with the significant events of
the recent past to determine how people shape messages that they receive by
marketers.
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