New York Times columnist, Perri Klass, M.D, explains why it’s so important to continue teaching cursive writing to young children:

“As a pediatrician, I think this may be another case where we should be careful that the lure of the digital world doesn’t take away significant experiences that can have real impacts on children’s rapidly developing brains. Mastering handwriting, messy letters and all, is a way of making written language your own, in some profound ways.”

Klass quotes Dr. Virginia Berninger, professor of educational psychology at the University of Washington:

“This myth that handwriting is just a motor skill is just plain wrong. We use motor parts of our brain, motor planning, motor control, but what’s very critical is a region of our brain where the visual and language come together, the fusiform gyrus, where visual stimuli actually become letters and written words.”

“What we’re advocating is teaching children to be hybrid writers, manuscript first for reading—it transfers to better word recognition—then cursive for spelling and for composing. Then, starting in late elementary school, touch-typing.”

Source: The New York Times(Blog) 06/20/2016

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Cross-posted from TEDWomen curator Pat Mitchell’s blog on the Huffington Post.

When Hanna Rosin, the first speaker at the very first TEDWomen conference in 2010, delivered her talk she had titled “The End of Men,” she had only just begun the research for what became her bestselling 2012 book by the same name.

And as the editors at The Guardian pointed out in a recent editorial, even though women are rising to the top in the US (Hillary Clinton), UK (Theresa May or Andrea Leadsom) and the UN (Helen Clark), “women’s leadership in politics, as well as in business, is not yet normal. But it is becoming normal.” Indeed, if Hillary Clinton is elected president and puts her 50% female cabinet in place, American women will see true representation proportional to population for the first time ever in a White House cabinet.

But as The Guardian editors cautioned in that same editorial, we shouldn’t make the mistake of allowing the “representation to be taken not as a victory, but as the victory.” We still have a long way to go.

Indeed, when Rosin’s book came out in 2012, it received much praise, but also some reductive criticism that mostly revolved around its title. NPR’s Annalee Newitz wrote in her review of the book, “fundamentally, The End of Men isn’t about men at all; it’s about the rise of economically powerful women.”

As Rosin explained in both her TEDdWomen talk and in her book, the big story for women in the 21st century is that more education (for every two men who graduate from college, three women graduate), more leadership opportunities (women make up more than 50% of managers in the workplace) and more economic security (younger women are out-earning their male peers) mean that women can make choices in their lives with more freedom than ever before.

Since her TEDWomen presentation, Rosin has appeared on The Colbert Report, become the co-host of Slate‘s excellent DoubleX podcast in which Rosin and her cohosts, writers June Thomas and Norene Malone, “discuss things women want to talk about and men want to eavesdrop on,” and continued writing award-winning articles on a variety of topics, including the secret lives of teenagers and challenging modern parenting practices.

This summer, Rosin herself did something rather daring that may be the best example yet of the opportunities that economically powerful women have these days. After 20-plus years of writing for a living, she decided to make a leap and accepted a job offer in a field in which she had no previous experience. Rosin is now one of the hosts of NPR’s popular and award-winning Invisibilia podcast series. Having never been a radio journalist before, the move presented a number of challenges for Rosin. She wrote about them earlier this summer in Lena Dunham’s Lenny newsletter in a piece titled “Screw Mastery.”

While getting outside her comfort zone was hard, Rosin noted that the payoff of, as she put it, “dropping back to zero” and forcing yourself to learn new things, even in your 40s, made the successes that much sweeter. She wrote,

I learned a ton of new things about myself, in the way you can only do if you are f—king up daily. I learned that I am defensive but trainable. That I have capacity for patience but that my immediate default is speed, bluntness and ironic distance. That although I am used to working alone, I will happily collaborate. And that I really like working with women, even if they cry more during the day.”

The support system of having women in leadership positions mentoring her at Invisibilia has made all the difference for Rosin. She writes, “I got a lot of help. The people I work with taught me things the way you teach a kid to ride a bicycle — they were right on top of me, day after day. Still, nine months later I listen to the shows we produced and I can completely recognize them as my own.”

Watch her 2010 TEDWomen talk.


TEDWomen 2016 continues a journey that began in Washington, D.C., in 2010, the first major TED conference to focus on the ideas, stories and global narrative of women and girls. The response was overwhelming! Our speakers, both women and men, have come from many different backgrounds and experiences to share ideas and stories in TEDTalks that have been viewed more than 60 million times on TED.com.

Our theme for TEDWomen 2016 is “It’s about time.” We will be exploring how time and attention shape our very lives. In theory, we’ve all got an equal amount of time — 24 precious hours in a day — and yet, our capacity to harness the most out of it is wildly different depending on our circumstances and state of mind. Together, we’ll plot how to push the tipping points even faster and move even slower when it comes to the things we most want to savor and care about.

If you’re interested in being present for these TEDTalks and many more on this year’s theme, there are still a few spaces left to attend TEDWomen 2016. (After the theater is completely sold out, we will also offer some discounted tickets for simulcast viewing.) We will announce our speaker lineup next week — find out more and register at TED.com.

This installment in my blog post series on how to scale-up your brand introduces two brand tools.  Use them in your process of developing or refining the strategic platform of your brand.  They will help you identify and clearly articulate your brand purpose, values, and attributes.brand tools

Let’s begin with some definitions:

  • brand purpose is your reason for being/what you stand for
  • key brand values are the principles that guide the brand’s actions/your unique way of doing things
  • defining brand attributes are the operating characteristics and personality traits that distinguish your brand

These three elements comprise your brand identity, which is one half of the strategic platform of your brand.  Your brand positioning is the other half of your strategic brand platform.  Together they form the building blocks that create a strong, differentiated, valuable brand.

Exercises like the ones I describe below are helpful in developing these brand building blocks because they cause participants to be more thoughtful about the brand they’re creating and why — and they help people be more articulate and specific as they describe their brand vision.

I recommend forming a team of 3-6 people to work through these exercises together.  Include key brand stakeholders — i.e., people who have a key stake in the success of your brand — such as the founders, executives, employees, investors, strategic partners, perhaps even a select customer or two.  Sometimes it’s helpful to include an objective facilitator to encourage open and active participation and/or an inspirational muse to contribute out-of-the box ideas.

The goal is to get everyone’s insights and input on the brand out on the table and to develop a clear shared vision for the strategic brand platform.  The process of doing the exercises together creates shared understanding and ensures that different perspectives are considered in the development of the platform.  One final note:  The exercises are simply tools to cultivate robust discussion.  If you find your group deviating from the exercise process but having a great discussion about the brand anyway, go with the flow — you’ll likely end up in the same place.   Likewise, don’t just go through the motion of the exercises without ensuring that they prompt productive conversation.

Brand Tools

Exercise #1:  The first exercise is called “THINK.  FEEL.  DO.”  It’s a Thematic Apperception “Test” (TAT) borrowed from the world of psychology.  It’s a projective exercise, meaning that it helps to reveal underlying motives, appeals, and concerns.  Most TATs use ambiguous pictures of people and ask participants to make up narratives about the images.

To help uncover a brand’s purpose and values, use stick figure pictures of a brand customer now and in the future.  Participants should make up narratives about the person’s thoughts, feelings, and actions before and after the brand launch (or before and after he becomes of aware of the brand and tries it) — i.e., what is he thinking, what is he feeling, and what is he doing.

think feel do brand tool

Even though developing your brand platform should be a fun and creative process and the use of stick figures in this exercise specifically may seem playful, encourage participants to think deeply as they create the narratives.  You really want to get at the change in the world they see the brand making and how the brand makes it.   For example, in the post-launch “Do” section, get beyond the basic outcome that customers will go buy the brand once it’s available.  Consider how the brand might change their lives — how they might relate to themselves, people, and/or their environments differently; or what decisions they might make differently; how they might spend their time or money differently.

Look for similarities and differences among the narratives; discuss the appeal of the similarities and the reasons for the differences.  Extract from the discussion key themes that form the brand purpose.

Tips:

  • As a warm–up or to get unstuck, you could ask participants to do a version for their favorite brand.
  • To push the thinking, consider asking the group identify a brand that it wants to emulate and have everyone write narratives about it — then discuss how the themes relate to your brand.

Exercise #2:  The second exercise, IS/IS NOT, uses an adjective checklist to identify the values and attributes that define the way the brand behaves and distinguish the brand.

Participants are given a list of 50-75 descriptive adjectives and asked to circle up to 5 adjectives that describe what it IS and cross out up to 5 adjectives that it IS NOT.  You can also give them the option of writing in their own words, but they should do so only if they believe an important factor is not represented by any of the words on the page and they should use single-word, descriptive adjectives.

IS IS NOT brand tool

The effectiveness of this exercise depends on the list of adjectives given to participants.  Below is an example of a list I used for a new brand of healthful snacks.  Usually I select words that:

  • are different from ones that describe primary competitors and the category in general
  • would parse out nuanced but important ideas — e.g., comfortable, down-to-earth, earthy, and laid-back are similar terms but each connotes a slightly different feel
  • are drivers that might speak to customers’ unmet and unfelt needs
  • I have previously heard stakeholders use to describe the brand

I avoid words like “authentic” and “cool” for reasons that this post explains.  I also don’t include “fun” or “passionate” unless the degree to or nature with which the brand would embrace these ideas is particularly distinguishing.

As with Exercise #1, look for similarities and differences among people’s choices; discuss the relevance of the similarities and the subtleties for the differences.  Extract from the discussion key descriptors that make up the brand values and attributes.

Tip: 

  • If you conduct this exercise before the brand exists in any form, ask participants to select words based on what they think the brand SHOULD/SHOULD NOT be.

Coming up next in the “Scale Up Your Brand” series is another brand tools.  If you want to mbe notified when I publish the post, consider subscribing to my feed.

previous posts:

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Creative Credits:
Ad Agency: TBWA Paris
Production: Moonwalk/ Knucklehead
Director: Ben Gregor
Executive Creative Director: Faustin Claverie, Benjamin Marchal
Copywriter: Nicolas Roncerel
Art Director: Jérémy Armand
Producer: Mathilde Nanot-Lachkar
Producer: Gaspard Chevance
DoP: Stuart Graham


Robert_Muggah_CTA

The TED community has been very busy over the past few weeks. Below, some newsy highlights.

Crime forecasting in Rio. Before the 2016 Olympic Games, worries ran high that crime in Rio might affect the mega-event; one reported attack at the Games (which actually might not have happened) grabbed headlines around the world during the Games. But the longer-running news story is the way crime affects Rio’s locals every single day. How can residents stay safe? Together with Via Science and Mosaico Internet, Robert Muggah’s Igarapé Institute just launched CrimeRadar, a publicly available crime-prediction platform. CrimeRadar uses advanced machine learning to forecast future crime risk and track historical crime tends. The launch is focused on Rio de Janeiro, with plans to take the platform global. (Watch Robert’s TED Talk)

future_crimeradar_overview

CrimeRadar, developed by Robert Muggah’s Igarapé Institute along with Via Science and Mosaico Internet, uses machine learning to forecast crime in Rio de Janeiro. The software runs on both mobile phones and desktops. Above, an example of the desktop version. Photo: courtesy of Robert Muggah

World of microbes. We’ve all heard some of the implications that microbes have for our health –from pandemic-level bad to the life-changing magic they perform in our guts– but Ed Yong is determined to show us how they influence everything in the world around us. Released August 9, his debut book I Contain Multitudes takes a “microbe’s-eye view of the world” to reveal their role in everything from deep oceans to forests, squid to worms. (Watch Ed’s TED Talk)

Breaking the silence. “We have in this country this dynamic where we really don’t like to talk about our problems. We don’t like to talk about our history. And because of that, we really haven’t understood what it’s meant to do the things we’ve done historically,” Bryan Stevenson said at TED2012. A desire to change that dynamic is behind his passionate and tireless work to create the first national memorial to victims of lynching. Designed by fellow TED speaker Michael Murphy of MASS Design Group, the memorial was officially announced on August 16. The memorial will be accompanied by a museum at Equal Justice Initiative’s headquarters in Montgomery, Alabama, and both plan to open in 2017. (Watch Bryan’s TED Talk)

A global warning. Close to 3.3 billion people tuned in to watch the Opening Ceremony of the 2016 Olympic Games, but along with the usual celebration and dazzle, viewers were warned about the dangers of climate change. Many performances in the multi-hour spectacle highlighted the crucial role forests have in absorbing greenhouse gases — along with a video describing how rising CO2 levels lead to climate change.  TED speaker, forester and sustainability activist Tasso Azevedo served as a consultant during development of the film, joining the elite club of TED speakers who’ve also appeared in Olympics opening ceremonies. (Watch Tasso’s TED Talk)

VR tech for paraplegics. Miguel Nicolelis is one of twenty scientists who published a paper in Scientific Reports detailing a new brain training approach that can induce partial neurological recovery in paraplegic patients. The sample size is small, eight patients, but all of them report being able to use their legs and feel sensation after sessions using an artificial exoskeleton, VR technology, and a brain-machine interface. Originally hoping to use the technique to help the patients regain a sense of control in their lives, the researchers stumbled upon its potential as a recovery tool. (Watch Miguel’s TED Talk)

Design for shared spaces. On August 2, Joe Gebbia announced the official launch of Samara, Airbnb’s own internal design studio, but the startup’s newest branch had already been hard at work designing a prototype home for the Japanese exhibition House Vision. The result, Yoshino Cedar House, houses a community center on its ground floor and accommodations beneath a gabled roof, exploring “how architectural features can engender a deeper relationship between hosts and guests.” But the idea doesn’t end there. Once the exhibition is over, the house will be moved to the rural town of Yoshino and become a bookable Airbnb rental. It will be maintained by the Yoshino community and proceeds will be used to benefit the area, which has been struggling since younger residents moved away. If Yoshino Cedar House is successful, the model may be used to rejuvenate rural communities elsewhere. However, Samara won’t just be involved in architecture; the design studio will work on service design and software engineering projects as well. (Watch Joe Gebbia’s TED Talk)

Women in the World of Wakanda. TED speaker and writer Roxane Gay and poet Yona Harvey, both first time comic writers, will pen a spinoff of Ta-Nehisi Coates’ popular Marvel Comic series Black Panther. The comic will also be set in the fictional African country of Wakanda and will follow Ayo and Aneka, two lovers and former members of the Dora Milaje, the Black Panther’s female security force. In an industry historically dominated by white male voices and characters, “the opportunity to write black women and queer black women into the Marvel universe, there’s no saying no to that,” Gay told The New York Times. (Watch Roxane’s TED Talk)

Advance prep. Jennifer Granholm, the former two-term Governor of Michigan, has been appointed to Hillary Clinton’s White House transition team. Both candidates are allotted offices in Washington and other resources to prepare for their potential administrations. (Watch Jennifer’s TED Talk)

Have a news item to share? Write us at [email protected] and you may see it included in this weekly round-up.

CNN reporter Kelly Wallace wrote this about the power of the ping:

“Our smartphones are affecting our brains without us even being aware of it. When we hear the ping of an incoming text, social media update or email, our brains get a hit of dopamine, a chemical that leads to an increase in arousal, energizing the reward circuitry in our brains. And that expectation of a reward — Who’s texting me? Who tagged me on social media? — leads to a higher burst of dopamine than the reward itself.”

Wallace interviewed Dr. David Greenfield, a psychiatrist and founder of the Center for Internet and Technology Addiction, which provides workshops on the abuse of technology. He explains why people would put their own lives and the lives of others in jeopardy–all because they feel this “compulsion” to immediately respond to a ping:

“The parts of the brain that say, ‘OK, how important is this text? Is this text worth dying for? Is this text worth killing somebody else for?’ The answer, of course, logically, would be ‘no,’ but if you have less access to that part of your brain when you’re in this state, which seems to be the case, then you’re not really using your judgment.”

Jennifer Smith knows only too well the heartbreak of losing a beloved parent. Her mother was killed by a distracted driver back in 2008. She founded StopDistractions.org to offer support to victims and their families and increase awareness of this growing problem. She recognizes the challenge of getting people to change their behavior:

“Because of the addictive nature of all of these things, people lack the self-control. I don’t know what the answer is, because our brain is craving this. Our brain is wanting this more than anything else, and it just disregards everything we know.”

“It’s like we need a mass education campaign, but I don’t even think that’s enough to beat out this reward system we’re getting in our brain when we’re like, ‘Ooh, something’s going on. I want to see what it is.’”

But taking your eye off the road for even a second can have lasting consequences. Matt Boeve was widowed in 2014.

His wife died because of a distracted driver. It’s well worth thinking about what he had to say:

“People respect that drinking and driving is dangerous. Now, we just have to know that phones are (dangerous) too. and take responsibility for our actions, just like we take responsibility for buckling in our kids and not getting behind the wheel impaired.”

CNN, 8/9/16

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That’s the finding from a University of British Columbia study recently published in the journal Social Science & Medicine.

The researchers further noted: “Considering that classroom teachers can take on many roles for elementary school students, including mentor, role model, and parental roles, it is possible that spending most of the school day in interaction with a stressed and burned out teacher is taxing for students and can affect their physiological stress profile.”

Back in 2012, Maurice Elias, Professor of Psychology at Rutgers University, wrote for Edutopia about the warning signs of teacher burnout and what can contribute to it: “Teacher burnout is most often an organizational problem and it is insidious because it can remove dedicated teachers from education, sometimes even before they physically leave their jobs. Its solution most often is in creating a positive, supportive school culture and climate where teachers are treated as professionals and given the opportunity to collaborate, problem solve, and get needed, reasonable supports in timely ways.”

“The students need their teachers to stay engaged and fight for them. When the conditions of teaching are bad, the conditions of learning tend to be worse, and children suffer in lasting ways. That’s why the collateral damage of burned-out teachers is burned-up students.”

Time, 6/27/16

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By Bob Jones, Chairman and CEO, Old National Bancorp and Alice Korngold, Co-Editor, Giving Thoughts, and author of A Better World, Inc.: How Companies Profit by Solving Global Problems…Where Governments Cannot Old National Bank launched its foundation a decade ago with the goal of strengthening communities and positively impacting lives throughout its footprint. Ten years, […]

Here’s the next post in my blog series on how to scale up your brand.  You’ll learn an exercise to identify your core customer target.Core Customer Target

I’m writing this series because I recognize there are lots of start-ups, but much fewer scale-ups — and companies often don’t make the leap between the two because of their brand.  It’s either vague and unfocused, disconnected from the business, or practically non-existent.   The series has already covered How To Conduct A Brand Diagnostic, which helps you evaluate the current strength of your brand through three lenses and identify opportunities to build it and grow.  Assess Your Brand Power outlined five critical dimensions of brand power so you can determine which direction you need to take your brand.  And Set Your Brand Purpose, Values, and Attributes introduced two Brand Tools to help you develop the first building blocks of your strategic brand platform.

Today I introduce you an exercise that will help you identify your core customer target.  Your target is part of your brand positioning.  According to Jack Trout and Al Ries, the fathers of positioning, a brand should own a “position” in a prospective customer’s mind — one that reflects a company’s own strengths and weaknesses as well as those of its competitors.  Essential to creating a brand positioning is specifying who those prospective customers are.

I recommend more established, resourced organizations identify their core customer target by undertaking a needs-based segmentation research which involves using quantitative survey data and multivariate analysis to cluster customers into needs-based segments of different value by combining their attitudes and usage occasions.  (Learn more about needs-based segmentation here and in my book, What Great Brands Do.)

Start-ups and scale-ups can usually use a less data-based, more creative and simpler approach. You probably already have a sense of your core customers’ demographics (e.g., adults aged18-54) and category behaviors (what they currently buy, where they shop, what products/brands they use).  You might even know you want to target customers of a certain economic value (e.g., customers who spend $500+ in our category, companies that have more than 100 employees, etc.)

Your brand platform should describe your core customers with more distinguishing, meaningful characteristics — values, attitudes, needs, goals.  Sometimes it is difficult to get at these descriptors without some stimuli; other times, you might be struggling to achieve consensus about your target among different stakeholders.  One exercise to help you arrive at a clear, common understanding of your target is to create a Customer Collage.

Core Customer Target Exercise

In the Customer Collage exercise, your brand team members (see the previous post in this series to learn how to assemble your team) use a collection of magazines and each person is asked to:

  • cut out at least 6 images that portray your core customer target
  • be sure the images don’t just represent the target’s demographics — they should relate to their attitudes, lifestyles, values, drivers
  • use glue or tape to assemble their images into a collage
  • give their collage a “title” that captures the essence of the target

Then ask each person to present their collage to the team, explaining why they chose the images and title.  Once everyone in the group has shared, you should have a rich list of words and ideas.  Analyze, synthesize, and prioritize them to create a succinct description or short set of bullet points that describe your target.

example of customer collage

example of customer collage

A few tips for a successful exercise:

  • Select the magazines carefully — try to get titles relevant but not necessarily in your category (e.g., if you’re working on a healthy food brand, select fitness/exercise magazines or titles having to do with gardening or homemaking.)
  • Get multiple copies of the same magazines if you have a large group, so that multiple people can use the same images if they desire.
  • Ask people to talk about what images they deliberately did not include in their collage or images they were looking for but couldn’t find, and why — their explanations of these can be as illuminating as their descriptions of their collages

I have a couple more tools/exercises to help you Scale-Up Your Brand.  Look for the next installment in this blog series soon.

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Dr. Sally Cram, a consumer adviser for the American Dental Association (ADA), was responding to a recent Associated Press story headlined Medical benefits of dental floss unproven. In an interview with CNN, Dr. Cram referred to the ADA’s Mouth Healthy website, which makes the following points:

“Although recent news reports have questioned the benefits of cleaning between your teeth, using an interdental cleaner (like) floss is an essential part of taking care of your teeth and gums.”

“Also referred to as periodontal disease, gum disease is caused by plaque, the sticky film of bacteria that is constantly forming on our teeth.”

“When you eat or drink foods containing sugars, the bacteria in plague produce acids that attack tooth enamel. The stickiness of the plague keeps these acids in contact with your teeth and over time the enamel can break down. This is when cavities can form.”

“Flossing may also help prevent gum disease and cavities.”

And what’s good for your oral health is believed to benefit your overall well-being. As Dr. Cram explained:

“A prevailing opinion among the public for many years is that a tooth is just a tooth. Now we are understanding that when you have inflammation and disease in your mouth, the mouth is connected to your whole body, and inflammation can spread to the rest of the body.”

“If you have a history (of heart disease) in your family, you need to be a little more careful to make sure you are brushing (at least twice a day), flossing (once a day) and having regular checkups.”

Still thinking about whether you need to floss every day?

Dr. Mathew Messina, an Ohio dentist who is also an adviser to the ADA, had this recommendation for flossing skeptics: Brush first, then floss to see that brushing can’t get to all the food particles trapped between the teeth.

CNN, 8/3/16

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