WriterandCo.com

What’s in it for us?

  • June 22, 2011 9:24 am

Say you’re the head of a well-known national organisation.

Actually, your company is world famous. It’s been around for centuries.

And depending on how you look at it, those in charge over that time have either been some of the finest minds of their generation, or utter buffoons.

Still it’s different now you’re there. You can’t do anything about the past. And today, you’re happy to be in the chair.

Brand heroism, people’s hero

  • April 12, 2011 7:39 am

Not everyone approved of Horatio Nelson.

For the nobility, he was useful in giving the French fleet a bellyful of hot iron, but the fellow was a damned philanderer.

Living brazenly with a former whore in a home garishly hung with portraits of him and his deeds, while keeping a wife silent with filthy lucre.

How to win a lottery

  • September 20, 2010 12:19 pm

1) Happen to grow up in a time of comparative austerity in a drab, grey country still recovering from 6 years of conflict, but about to experience cataclysmic social and cultural change.

The right words?

  • August 13, 2010 9:00 am

On Wednesday 19 March, 2003, at the Fort Blair Mayne Camp in the Kuwaiti desert, Colonel Tim Collins stood before 800 men of the 1st Battalion of the Royal Irish Regiment.

A sandstorm had just settled and a battle lay ahead.

Men wiped sand from their faces and waited.

As Collins began to speak, Sarah Oliver, a reporter with the Mail on Sunday, began to write.

Fanny old game

  • August 9, 2010 8:09 am

“Football’s just a business nowadays”.

Been said in the pub for the last 30-40 years.

Of course it bloody isn’t.

Form versus function

  • August 4, 2010 11:34 am

At the beginning of a recent TV show about design, Stephen Fry said: “We’re humans, not machines… Our first response to anything is emotional, not intellectual or functional.”

So design must be “as pleasurable and emotionally rich as possible.”

Form before function, then?

Margaret Thatcher famously described unassuming and largely taciturn Labour Prime Minister Clem Attlee, whose post-war government created the NHS and the welfare state, as ”all substance and no show”.

Or function over form.

Beware

  • August 4, 2010 11:32 am

Words aren’t always what they seem.

Stake a claim

  • August 4, 2010 11:29 am

What is the real, tangible benefit your product or service can offer, that your competitor cannot, which connects with the life of the consumer?

Some well known products have claimed as their own a USP other companies could have boasted had they got there first.

Take M&Ms.

Shooting arrows

  • August 4, 2010 11:26 am

Richard Brinsley Sheridan was a playwright.

He was also an MP, owner of the Theatre Royal Drury Lane, noted public speaker and poet.

He wrote the most beautiful thing a man ever said to a woman.

More of the same

  • August 4, 2010 11:23 am

The real fact of the matter is that nobody reads ads. People read what interests them, and sometimes it’s an ad.” Howard Luck Gossage.

Interesting man, Gossage.

Dubbed the ‘Socrates of San Francisco’, he was an advertising writer in the fifties and sixties apparently working in an industry he hated.