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Marketing Ideas + Strategies In Action

Cheryl Wilkinson
Creative Writer

Science Confirms: Writing with Form Gets Results

Posted by Incite on 01/06/10

Science ConfirmsInterdisciplinary work between cognitive scientists and rhetorical theorists (people who study language) has recently shed light on the old maxim that the way you say or write something is just as important as what you’re saying.

What cognitive science has discovered:
Our brains operate along basic principles of rhythm, repetition, similarity, and difference (among others).

What rhetorical studies has discovered:
Rhetorical scholars point out that the very objects of their study – literary figures of speech – function along these same principles. For instance, figures of speech based on similarity and difference include rhyme, assonance, consonance, alliteration, and many more.

How these discoveries are related:
Since figures of speech align language to the way our brains operate, we can intuitively recognize the formal (or structural) patterns in the language of a message. This recognition subtly invites our participation, because our brains naturally detect and anticipate patterns and structures.

Just think of the last time you caught yourself singing along to Britney’s latest pop-atrocity. You despise the song, but your brain is simply delighted by its repetitive structure, strong rhymes, and consistent rhythm, and just can’t help but join in.

Philosopher and theorist Kenneth Burke explains that once you grasp the trend of the form in a message, it invites participation regardless of the subject matter. The result is a sort of “collaborative expectancy” between audience and message, inherently making the message more persuasive.

When applied to business communications, formal patterning can be used to:

  • create parallel structure across sentences in a sales piece
  • ensure message consistency across a company’s entire business communications
  • weave a powerful metaphor throughout your business proposal

Ultimately, science has reinforced a powerful principle to guide business communications:

Literary figures of speech improve the persuasiveness of a message because they align language with the ways that our brains operate.


Interesting piece and thanks for the entry. Also, when you say ““collaborative expectancy” between audience and message, inherently making the message more persuasive,” do you think it would also apply to the key behind the success of social media?

Knowing this, I wonder how you get others beat to the rhythm of your drum, so to speak? Consistency, strength, repetitiveness - perhaps just like your music example!

Cheers,

Michael
mikekroll.com
rollwiththekroll.com

Posted by Michael Kroll  on  01/09  at  07:59 PM



Thanks for the great comments Michael!

I certainly do think that social media owes much of its success to the fact that its very form is built on collaboration: not only are we all consumers of content, but we’re now also producers. The opportunity to have a say, to be heard, to be involved, to help create, shape, and build – those are powerful motivators for involvement. This sort of participation inspires ownership, (and ideally, responsibility), in turn inspiring further involvement…

Posted by Cheryl Wilkinson  on  01/13  at  11:09 AM



This is the same kind of thing that happens in language – albeit at a more subtle level. In language, meaning is produced in collaboration between mind and message. By this I mean the message itself carries a meaning, but our mind also creates a meaning as it reads or hears it because it’s detecting patterns and anticipating their fulfillment, or continuation.

Posted by Cheryl Wilkinson  on  01/13  at  11:10 AM



The more a message is patterned in certain ways, the more our brain will recognize and anticipate the structure of the message.The expectancy that results from anticipation signals our inescapable involvement in the production of meaning. Ultimately, meaning in language is produced in collaboration, and as with social media, the more we’re involved, the more we have invested in what’s being produced.
As for getting others to beat to rhythm of your drum… you’re on the right track!

Posted by Cheryl Wilkinson  on  01/13  at  11:14 AM



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