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The Monday Morning Memo

Information Like Bullets

June 4, 2012

| Download
https://podcasts.captivate.fm/media/1f454bca-8a6a-4822-8634-987fa2662b4b/MMM120604-InfoLikeBullets.mp3


1.
Today’s reader is riddled with information hitting us from every side.

2. Traditional and online media assault our senses to the point of sensory shutdown.
3. Consequently, today’s reader is strongly attracted to numbered lists.
4. A numbered list promises a starting point, a conclusion, and milestones along the way.
5. A numbered list contains the fewest possible words.
6. A numbered list feels memorable, portable and doable.
7. A reader who would have glanced at your headline and then moved on will often give your message a second look when they see a numbered list.

Information organized into paragraphs feels casual and intimate. But that same information in a numbered list feels authoritative and useful.

8. Information in paragraphs feels casual and intimate.
9. Information in a numbered list feels authoritative and useful.

SUMMARY: When you need to present a big idea, develop a numbered list. Your information will be easier to follow, appear more credible and trigger a clearly measurable response.

Trust me on this. I’ve been experimenting with numbered lists for more than 25 years.

A few weeks ago I presented Pendulum to a few hundred executives from big corporations. A few hours before taking the stage, I chose 4 slides that contained information in paragraph form and altered them to unveil that same information as a numbered list. In each of the 4 instances a numbered list appeared, hundreds of iPhones were lifted to capture a snapshot of it. Most of the audience didn’t even bother to read it first. These men and women reached for their cameras the moment they saw the information was sequential.

Numbered lists feel authoritative and useful.

Have you learned anything you can use?

Come to Wizard Academy.
We’ve only just gotten started.

Roy H. Williams 

The image at the top of the page is The Listener by James Christensen, the artist I consider to be the Norman Rockwell of our generation. 

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Random Quote:

“I don’t often write dark thoughts, and when I do, I rarely share them. But I woke up very early today and wrote a few things down. When Pennie woke up, she mentioned that it was Yom Kippur, a day of repentance. And then it made more sense.

This is what I wrote before the sun came up:

Autumn is coming little-by-little to the hill country of Texas, and with it comes that end-of-the-year introspection that causes us to forecast what might lie head. We joke about our anxiousness for 2020 to finally end, but we all know that it won’t end on December 31st.

Some people believe there is a secret society of wealthy and powerful people who are pulling the strings of all the world governments. Other people believe that everything is progressing according to the perfect will of God.

But I don’t believe either of those things. I believe God sees a future that wasn’t his plan. I believe “made in his image” means that we were given free will, the ability to look God in the face and say, “No.”

I believe things are screwed up because we are in charge.

I am aware that these thoughts are comical to people who have outgrown God, who place him somewhere between the Tooth Fairy and the Easter Bunny, and I know these thoughts are comical to Christians who believe the sovereignty of God makes it impossible for you and me to be in charge of this planet.

I understand all of that.

What I don’t understand is why we continue making bad choices. Have we fallen so deeply into the habit of blaming “those others” that we no longer feel accountable when yesterday’s proud pronouncements become today’s tragic reality?

It seems like things are spinning around us.

Or is it we who are spinning as we circle the drain with ever-increasing speed?

Either way, amazement is imminent.

Prepare yourself accordingly.”

- Roy H. Williams, Sept. 28, 2020

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