Day two of the Europcom event saw discussion, argument and some more tips for comms people. And a few polarising views.
by Dan Slee
There’s a jar of food you can buy in Britain that serves as a lovely piece of understatement. It’s called marmite and you either love it or hate it.
It’s a yeast extact you spread on toast in the morning and divides opinion.
As day two of the Europcom event staged by the EU for communicators there was a taste of marmite from closing plenary speaker Simon Anholt.
Simon's biography states that he is a professor and an independent policy advisor to government.
Europe is a community, not a corporation, he said. Okay.
Public service is not business, added. Can see that.
Instead of thinking ‘what can we say to them’ think ‘what are we going to do together?’ No, for me it’s both.
Some civil servants talk about the public as though they were the enemy. Can see that too at times.
But Government is not management? Not really, it is. See how you manage when you don’t pay your taxes or drive the wrong side of a motorway.
Branding is fascism. Really?
Leadership is not customer service. Did anyone say that it was?
State organisations spending money on comms was also wrong, he told the audience of comms people. It should be left to the Press to communicate with the people, by and large. Not the state.
There are just the three flaws in Simon’s argument. For that to happen the Press needs to be fair and balanced, well-staffed and plentiful. Get one of those, many would say, and you are doing well.
There’s also an elephant in the room to the argument, too. It’s called the internet. In particular, it’s called the social web where people are holding conversations and discussions about a whole stack of things. The EU included. They’re, in the words of the Cluetrain Manifesto, not waiting. But they would like us to be involved in the discussion.
Simon thinks the internet is a bar full of drunks. That’s plain hooey. If you want it to be it is. If you want to connect with people you can and I’m just not buying the idea that council magazines is a sleepwalking step towards tyranny.
Interestingly, Simon doesn’t seem to be on Twitter and didn’t stay for questions. A cunning ploy.
But the good thing about the marmiteness of the approach was that it made me think of what good comms should look like. It should be human. It should be timely and relevant, useful and in a platform where people want it.
So, thank you for the reminder, Simon. Challenge is always good.
As an experience, covering Europcom as a social reporter with Darren Caveney was excellent. There are some brilliant people in Brussels.
Here’s some other things that I learned:
Dan Slee is co-creator of comms2point0.