Check Please! Make Sure Left-Brainers Have a Seat at the Communications Table

Ron Loch
February 24th, 2011

B.C. by Johnny Hart was one of my favorite comic strips growing up and one “Show Me Rock” entry stuck with me through the years:  “Show me a man that sets his sights high … and I’ll show you a man that knocks the antlers off a deer.” 

I’m thinking about that strip because I fear speed-to-market pressures and poor internal communications may be causing well-meaning companies to rush to market with aspirational claims when accuracy is what customers and investors demand.  

Just visit the comment section under a new product release posted to greentechmedia.com and you’ll see marketing claims challenged by engineers who are happy to show their math.  Reading the responses to a recent release claiming extraordinary energy conversion efficiency made me flashback to the college chemistry class when I realized I was meant to be a communicator.  These readers are doing what the communications team should have done: checked the math.

Too often, R&D or operations are seen only as a partner at the beginning of the march to market; expected to conduct a “data dump” to get the communications team up to speed and then get out of the way so the right brainers can do their creative work. 

The problem is that companies can operate as one big telephone game.   “We’re evaluating the potential to reduce customers’ carbon footprint by as much as 50 percent” can eventually become “Cut your carbon footprint in half!”  The release goes out, the blog commenters do the math and your credibility is called into question.  

I’ve been fortunate to have served on some truly remarkable marketing management teams for clients and in each case these included a representative from R&D, usually a Technical Service & Development manager.  Yes, they could be creative kill-joys by clouding brilliant messaging with niggling facts, but together we all learned how to find common ground that was both compelling and credible.   

That’s a recipe for success I believe more companies need to pursue.  By breaking down silos and creating cross-functional teams communications gets stronger and less time is spent walking back messaging and repairing credibility. 

So here’s a shout out to the left brain analytical types; you may not be good at creative communications, but we can’t do it well without you.

(Contributor Ron Loch is a senior vice president at Gibbs & Soell Public Relations. He leads the firm’s Greentech & Sustainability Practice, collaborating with G&S colleagues specializing in advanced manufacturing and energy, agribusiness and food, consumer lifestyle and building solutions, professional services, and technology and general science.)

Greentech: Engine vs. Bandwagon Jumper

Ron Loch
May 19th, 2010

Michael Kanellos at Greentech Media wrote a great perspective earlier this month, “Why There is No Google of Green,” where he provides eight reasons why the greentech revolution is different than the Internet. 

While he’s spot-on about the reasons why there’s a difference, the fact he felt compelled to write the piece has me concerned.  

He writes that not a week goes by that someone doesn’t ask the question, “Where is the Google of green?”  Couple that with statements by corporate executives and venture capitalists that greentech will be “larger than the Internet” – and greentech has the hallmarks of a bandwagon.  

The greentech and renewable energy space is decades old, and it’s certainly seen its share of advancements and setbacks.  In fact, few people realize that in the early 1900s electric cars outnumbered gasoline automobiles.

What’s currently fueling the excitement among market watchers are recent developments, including the approval of the first U.S. large scale, offshore wind farm, the proposed Senate climate and energy bill, and a worldwide recognition that we must control carbon emissions.

That’s great because it attracts more investment. But, on the flip-side, you inevitably have an influx of service providers looking to exploit early stage enthusiasm to maximize short-term income.   

As new technologies approach commercialization, they often get a second look by the supply chain which can lead to a “too-good-to-be-true” narrative.

Companies in the greentech space need partners – whether lawyers, business consultants or communications agencies – that can navigate them through the challenges that inevitably follow launch to ensure they prosper and succeed.

After all, every bandwagon will have its share of jumpers, but they do nothing to move the float forward.  For that, you need an engine.  

That’s the thinking behind the recent announcement from Gibbs & Soell about our new greentech and sustainability practice. It’s an engine powered by a depth of client experience with clean technologies and sustainable practices.

Check us out, and contact me at rloch@gibbs-soell.com or (847) 519-9150 to learn more about our work.

(Guest contributor Ron Loch is a senior vice president at Gibbs & Soell Public Relations. He leads the firm’s Greentech & Sustainability Practice, collaborating with G&S colleagues specializing in advanced manufacturing and energy, agribusiness and food, consumer lifestyle and building solutions, professional services, and technology and general science.)