The COVID-19 pandemic has substantially impacted businesses globally. Even as governments begin to ease lockdown restrictions and restart economies, the crisis will have a lasting effect. For organizations, their business, customers and employees will attempt to navigate this uncertain “new normal” while adjusting to new health and safety regulations.
Brian West, managing director of FleishmanHillard’s Crisis Communications practice, will explain how companies can prepare for business and organizational communications in the COVID-19 recovery phase.
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Post-COVID-19 Reboot Offers Ideal Chance to Reimagine Inclusion
May 20, 2020
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Isolated. Excluded. Inconvenienced. You probably have experienced one or more of these emotions due to COVID-19 and the rigid restrictions it has forced into our lives.
In recent weeks, nearly everyone has battled the ongoing challenges these conditions pose. But for one part of the population, it’s nothing new. That adds needed emphasis to today, Global Accessibility and Awareness Day. The day is dedicated to talking, thinking and learning about digital access and inclusion for people with different disabilities.
Many persons with disabilities (PWDs) – including 61 million in the United States and more than 1.3 billion worldwide – have battled against isolation, exclusion and inconvenience for a lifetime.
The onset of this virus only further complicated things:
Consider a deaf person who may rely on lip-reading to follow a conversation and facial expression to determine tone, two social cues lost to face masks.
Think about a person with mobility issues, particularly those with limited hand coordination. Just getting supplies can be a challenge. How then will they effectively disinfect themselves AND their supplies?
Thankfully, for the mask example, a solution is available: add a transparent strip around the mouth of the mask. It’s an innovation born of necessity. And a proof point that overcoming inclusion challenges can be done.
It also may be a silver lining to COVID-19. We’ve each caught a tiny glimpse into the isolation and inconvenience that so many in the disabled community live with every day. While certainly not apples-to-apples, this experience surely opened our eyes – and hopefully our minds – motivating us to move inclusion forward.
More than meets the eye
While I don’t think of myself as such, I fit the definition of a PWD due to a partial hearing loss and rheumatoid arthritis. Both are rarely obvious. Even so, I may need a little help on occasion from things like a wireless mouse or an external mic to limit my typing.
But whether our conditions are obvious or not, many PWDs struggle to find a comfortable place within society. PWDs are resourceful and resilient; we have to be because so many times we are left to provide our own solutions to issues with everything from housing to transportation to employment. And as society works to survive a pandemic, real assistance with those efforts may draw less attention. Consider the prevailing attitude as protests pop up all over the country: We need to focus on reopening economies and restoring jobs. True enough. But in tackling these priorities, it’s likely that everything else fades into the background.
That’s why inclusion warrants our attention more than ever.
Rewriting the requirements
Almost every challenge presents an opportunity, including COVID-19. There may be no greater opportunity than in the workplace.
One thing the global pandemic quickly proved is that millions of people can work remotely. And if they can, why can’t more PWDs? (Workplace accommodations are often cited by employers as a leading reason they don’t hire more PWDs.) According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, in 2019, 19.3% of PWDs were employed, while for persons without a disability, that number was 66.3%.
Thousands of companies are already rethinking how – and even IF – they will bring their employees back to the workplace. Every one of these plans is going to require a multitude of changes, special processes and things that will require some level of difficulty to achieve.
And yet, to keep everyone safe, it must be done. How then can we make sure that everyone is actually a part of those plans? It can’t be enough to put so much effort into reshaping society collectively and workplaces specifically while leaving this vital part of our population behind.
Let’s turn the frustration of having been cooped up at home for months into energy that transforms our world into one that everyone can be part of. Let’s not allow the need for social distancing to make us emotionally distant where inclusivity is concerned.
As our nation slowly returns to the workplace or chooses other work arrangements, if you’re a decision-maker, inject inclusion into those plans. Talk to your employees with disabilities or even partner with the disabled community in the planning process.
If the decisions aren’t yours, make your voice heard. Hold tight to what you experienced during the spring of our discontent. Ask how your company is including those for whom the battle against exclusion continues.
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Understanding Gen Z: Defining Moments for a Generation
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While news surrounding millennials and their choices continues to appear in headlines, the generation that follows — Generation Z — is also trending as its members grow older, begin entering the workforce and continue increasing their buying power. Now, as COVID-19 decisively alters this generation’s future, it’s more important than ever to understand the moments in recent history that have made Gen Z who it is today.
1. 9/11
While most of Gen Z (born ~1995-2005) was not old enough to remember the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks — or even born when they occurred — researchers have argued 9/11 should be considered the defining event that caused this group to experience a different world than other generations.
Growing up in the shadow of a major turning point in modern U.S. history meant Gen Z’s upbringing was drastically different compared to millennials. In the aftermath of 9/11, Gen Z’s parents became cautious about the threat of terrorism, seen most visibly in the adoption of increased security measures for travel that are now the norm.
According to FleishmanHillard Fishburn’s Project Z study, as Gen Z shapes the future of the workforce it is notable that only 11% strive to be their own boss despite an increase of entrepreneurial content online, with the majority preferring traditional career paths.
Marketers should understand that although Gen Z is young, its members are extremely pragmatic and prefer to update “the system” rather than overhaul it completely.
2. Polarizing Politics
Gen Z has also been acknowledged for voicing political opinions with friends more than any previous generation. While open to political discussion both in the classroom and the workplace, Gen Z’s members are hyper-aware of partisan efforts to shift their political opinions. And as distrust in the media increases, Gen Z is also wary of political messaging from individuals or brands that appears insincere.
Further, this generation views social justice not as “activism,” but as a basic human right because its U.S. members grew up in a country with a black president and the legalization of same-sex marriage. Brands should be mindful of messaging that frames these initiatives as radical.
Being accepting of Gen Z’s political preferences will prove most effective when trying to reach this group. This can be seen in the recent success of nonpartisan campaigns encouraging an increase in young voter turnout ahead of the 2020 U.S. election.
This is no longer the case. Recent college graduates have been forced to navigate canceled job offers or now-virtual internships, while high school and college students face a completely different learning experience.
A March 2020 Pew Research survey found that “half of older Gen Zers (around 18 to 23) reported that they or someone in their household had lost a job or taken a cut in pay because of the outbreak, significantly higher than the shares of Millennials (40%), Gen Xers (36%) and Baby Boomers (25%) who said the same.”
Today, Gen Z holds $200 billion of direct buying power and $1 trillion of indirect buying power through their parents. When it comes to spending, its members value brands that are affordable (57%) and trustworthy (55%).
In a post-pandemic world, marketers should prioritize building trust with Gen Z as its members determine which brands to remain loyal to and which products are most meaningful to them. Because the experiences Gen Z lives for are no longer available in the format its members were once familiar with, brands will have to adopt evolving strategies to successfully connect with them during this shift, and now more than ever, transparency will be crucial.
As marketers, it is imperative that we understand the social context and values that drive consumer choice to authentically connect with various groups. That said, broadly analyzing a generation is only the beginning, and we’re committed to using this information to inform tailored audience insights that allow us to communicate with consumers in a way that is emotionally and institutionally impactful.
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On The Record with Brandi Broxson: Long-Lead Publications in the Time of COVID-19
May 19, 2020
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‘On the Record’ is a new series where we sit down with our colleagues and friends who are often at the receiving end of our pitch emails – journalists. We will be tackling hot topics, learning and growing from their perspective and thoughtful advice.
For the second ‘On The Record’ post, Katrina Stern explores how long-lead publications are being impacted by COVID-19. Specifically, how are the digital and print departments collaborating on content, and what are the biggest concerns and standouts from media mailers to video briefings. Their candid Q&A session took place at a safe distance (video chat), as at the time it was conducted, New York City was still on a shelter-in-place order.
KS: First off, how are you doing?
BB: It is just a crazy time. I was reading something today saying that we are “in a permanent state of today.” Couldn’t be more the truth right now.
KS: Agree! Tell me more about the current climate of long-lead publications right now.
BB: So we have been working from home now for the last few months and as you can imagine, producing a magazine is so collaborative. Since we’re working from all over the country right now, it has definitely been a challenge. But it’s really cool to see how our team has come together and, in some ways, we have been able to streamline our day-to-day work flow which has been awesome.
Our April issue was the first one that came out since social distancing, and it was kind of wild because the issue was all about cleaning. It’s a topic that’s really true to the Real Simple brand but was even more of a win, given the current scenario we are in. We saw a real boost in our newsstands sales because people were out shopping and wanted something comforting to read.
And then our May issue which most recently came out was themed around the idea of “getting it done” issue. It was all about little projects you might have put off that you can finally check off your list. That, also, felt in-line with the times and what people are thinking about.
At a long-lead publication like Real Simple, our goal is to provide valuable service to our readers, whether it’s relaxation, inspiration to get something done around the house or cleaning – we want to be solution-oriented.
On our team it has been great to see that sense of unity.
KS: Thinking about something you have shared with me before, are you still having those online and print meetings virtually? And how is that going? Are people on the print side doing more online right now?
BB: Yeah, for sure. We get this great newsletter from our executive editor on the digital side and it’s a breakdown of what everyone is working on. Also, it shares what is going on in the news so we stay “up with the times.”
But something I have seen that is neat is how we’ve come together to produce more video. At the beginning print and digital editors were sent these video kits that had a tripod and ring light. So actually, I am using one of those ring lights right now, so already going to good use. We got these kits so that we have the ability to do videos from home and we are doing them based on our beat. I’ve done a couple videos with it, so far, that you may have seen. One of my franchises is New Uses for Old Things and with how popular toilet paper and paper towels have become during all of this, I came up with ways you could repurpose them into stamps or even a bird feeder.
I think it has been very comforting for readers and viewers at home to get a look at our life and what we are doing, while still giving them something entertaining to read/watch.
The continued collaboration between print and digital has been inspiring to see.
KS: What are the biggest concerns you are facing and how are you handling it?
BB: So I think the questions we are asking ourselves as editors are probably the same questions a lot of people in the world are asking themselves right now. How will things change over the next few months?
We are starting to look at content for our fall and holiday issues. What will Thanksgiving look like this year? Usually there is a mad dash around the holidays with travel – how will that be different?
Editors at long-lead publications are used to looking into their crystal ball and trying to anticipate what readers might need three or four months in advance. And I think that is even true right now because there are so many unknowns. Thinking about: how will the virus change things? How will people be thinking about money and their career?
So that is our biggest concern: how will we anticipate the needs of our readers in a time of uncertainty?
KS: Has anything changed in how you have developed content?
BB: We are really lucky at Meredith, we get these reader surveys that help us to understand the reader and how they go through the magazine, and what stands out to them. What we have heard from our readers is that they come to our magazine to relax and recharge, often reading the magazine if they have an hour at the end of the day to get their mind at ease.
What we’ll continue to do is make sure there aren’t a lot of pain points in the book that might stress readers out during an already worrisome time.
In our June issue we have a big feature on chicken recipes that take you around the world, which I think is so smart since we are all looking to escape our day-to-day at home – traveling through food is interesting. We, also, have a career story coming up and how to make a career pivot – which a lot of people are thinking about. But it is focused on how to do this without going back to school since loans are such a burden.
We’re taking the current climate and inputting it into our content.
KS: This all applies. You kind of touched on this, but what topics are you honing in on more right now?
BB: We’re definitely thinking about personal finance and how we can empower readers. We have some very helpful stories coming up in the next few months. For instance, one is how emotions affect your purchasing habits and money rules you can break right now. Really empowering.
As you know, our September issue is money-themed and there has never been a better time for it to come out to help our readers in this difficult time. Readers are rethinking their finances and ways to save.
KS: Now moving away from content, and talking about the once again popular – media mailers. How are you receiving media mailers?
BB: It is so interesting, my office address has always been in my signature and your home address is something that is a little more personal. It is not something I am putting in my signature for everyone to use.
At the beginning of all this, I was getting a lot of requests for someone to send me wine like every day! And I’m thinking, “you know exactly what I am going through right now, you know what I need.” In the beginning and ever since my inbox has felt like a community. A place for virtual hugs where people are checking in on each other which was nice.
But now I need to be a bit more mindful of what I accept since I don’t have a product closet, like I do at my office. I live in a very tiny apartment with my fiancé, who is often the one bringing the boxes up from the lobby, wondering “what is this?”
But media mailers are super important for my column. I try to make sure they know “don’t send me surprise stuff” – I am not sure I will be able to store it.
KS: So you are saying, no beta fish? Got it! Any media mailers that stick out?
BB: There is this crafting brand and the idea behind their business is that there is an expert video and they craft along with you. They sent me a punch needle kit, similar to embroidery, and it is so genius since I needed something like that to fill my time. And I have the time to do it! Very smart of them.
I received a fun mailer from a food brand. It was a whole Cinco de Mayo kit for a dinner. We cooked along with the food founder. It started with a cocktail, loosening everyone up to get to know people on the briefing. Then we made these chicken tacos, super easy. That one stands out since it was helping me with something I would have to do anyways. A brand saying you can “cook along with us” and here are all the materials. When I got done, I can enjoy the dinner with my fiancé – so nice.
KS: It definitely is interesting to hear. That makes me also think of video briefings, what are your preferences?
BB: Recently I’ve attended a lot of financial video conferences open to the public on investing and budgeting. I thought it was great to see what the public was thinking about the topics, as well as how those in the space are discussing it. I, also, appreciated the briefing since there were multiple ways to submit a question. You could’ve sent in questions beforehand, through the chat, and vocally. Since finance is really personal and private to people, I respected that flexibility.
As for launches, any kind that is engaging in some way where I am not just sitting and watching a presentation – always is a plus. But also, like a number of editors, keeping in mind that we have even more limited time than before is important. Sometimes we are unable to attend and need to default to a product sheet.
KS: This was great, thank you for taking the time to chat!
BB: You know I love to share the knowledge. Chat soon!
Brandi Broxson is senior editor at Real Simple Magazine where she oversees the brand’s service, products, career, and money content. Connect with her here.
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Turning to Esports to Keep Our Sports Dreams Alive
May 15, 2020
By Brett Cummings
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What to know as communicators looking to expand into esports
As sports fans, we’re yearning for the days when we were inundated with live sports around the world and around the clock. Despite the infiltration of replacement content coming at us – sports documentaries, classic game replays and at-home athlete content – the void remains.
But for all the challenges COVID-19 brought to the sports community, it’s also created a huge and unique opportunity for esports. FleishmanHillard Sports has been working across esports for years with publishers, event organizers and first-mover brands that saw the potential of esports early on. Recognizing the pandemic as a potential accelerant to the category, we conducted an esports deep-dive analysis to assess the evolution and key drivers in traditional and social media conversation with the help of our TRUE Global Intelligence practice.
Unsurprisingly, our research found that esports conversation nearly doubled from February to March 2020. The most prominent topics driving the conversation centered on watching pro-athletes compete, betting on esports, enjoying live commentary around competitions and overall support for beloved streamers. The ability of esports to more seamlessly transition to virtual community engagement and online tournament play has translated into enormous audience reach, captivating audiences who are able to unlock immediate access. As adoption and engagement rates continue to grow, it’s clear that this period will undoubtedly be remembered as a catalyst for the category that helped it reach mainstream relevance.
So, how can we as communicators help brands climb aboard the rocket ship?
For enterprising brands, there are many ways to show up – but the risks are also heightened. The esports community has high standards and will be quick to call out companies that appear to be taking from, versus contributing to, it. As in traditional sports marketing, brands must keep authenticity and reciprocal value firmly top of mind. Here are some other keys for consideration:
Expand esports storytelling to non-endemic audiences to grow your base
As consumers continue looking for new ways to socialize and connect, many are moving into gaming for the first time. Be a part of a solution that helps them do so, providing entertainment and social connection now, and on a global scale.
Meet fan demand by mirroring traditional live sports experiences
Fans are craving the competition and pageantry that live sports provide. Create esports experiences that offer these same elements and be rewarded with positive conversation. Can your brand play a role in providing popular sports commentators, half-time shows or pre- and post-event content that brings authenticity and drives greater engagement?
Lean into talent to drive conversation
Our analysis found pro-athlete and pro-gamer involvement in esports competitions dominates the conversation. Fans are hungry to know what their favorite athletes are doing in quarantine and esports is an excellent opportunity to blur the lines between esports and traditional sports. Deliver this to them, but use caution when enlisting pro-athletes or celebs for the first time and make sure their connection to the game is real.
Don’t alienate the core community, stay true to your purpose
While the opportunity for expansion to new audiences is ripe, make sure that your storytelling is grounded in how your brand is supporting gamers right now. Gamers expect seamless gameplay and a competitive experience, and disruptions to what can be considered the basics can overshadow larger initiatives.
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The direct health impact of COVID-19 is flashed in front of us every day in the staggering numbers of infections, hospitalizations and deaths recorded around the globe. But the indirect impact of the pandemic due to the massive disruption in the healthcare delivery system – the cancelled surgeries, delayed appointments and undiagnosed illness – will only be fully revealed over time. Sadly, it’s likely to tell another tragic story.
Results from a new study of primary care doctors in the U.S. released by the Primary Care Collaborative (PCC) shows that 60% believe that some of their patients will experience avoidable illness, and 38% believe there will be non-COVID-19 related deaths among their patients after the pandemic ends due to diverted or avoided care.
As health systems quickly pivoted to COVID-19 triage, doctors’ offices closed and elective, non-emergency procedures were postponed – the whole system turned its attention to the critical issue at hand. But what happens when the acute phase of the virus response recedes? Will patients quickly come back?
The PCC study shows that many clinicians fear that patients’ trust in the healthcare system is eroding. A quarter of respondents say that they anticipate the pandemic will result in “a broken sense of trust between the public and the medical world.” Are these doctors right? Will people feel it’s just too risky to visit hospitals and clinics – the “ground zero” of the COVID-19 crisis?
A FleishmanHillard TRUE Global Intelligence study of 600 U.S. consumers fielded May 3-4 backs up the concerns of physicians showing that a majority of consumers would not feel safe getting any type of medical treatment in the next 3 to 6 months. It showed that 76% do not feel safe having elective surgery at an outpatient facility; 73% don’t feel safe visiting their dentist; and 66% say the same about visiting their primary physician. Notably, women and those over 60 feel the least safe in accessing care.
It’s clearly going to take a lot of reassurance to convince us that the very places we used to view as places to get well are safe enough to set foot in again.
How will we know when it is safe to get care? Who will we trust to tell us? What signs and signals will we be looking for to reassure us that necessary precautions for our safety have been put in place? The results of the TRUE Global Intelligence study give us some helpful clues:
Consumers want simple ways to be assured that it is safe to return to healthcare settings. Of those surveyed, 80% say they “do not feel that there are clear signs or signals that tell patients that it is now completely safe to go to a hospital or any other medical facility unless it is an emergency.”
They want to hear information about the safety of electively returning to healthcare facilities directly from their physicians (60%), top infectious disease experts (48%) and local CDC officials (43%).
And they want tangible signals and signs that every precaution is being taken to make a medical visit safe. Sixty percent want confirmation that hospital/outpatient staff is being routinely tested for COVID-19. They want to hear directly from a physician that social distancing and disinfection procedures are in place at outpatient facilities (54%).
After months of lockdowns and constant messaging about the risks of going anywhere outside our homes, it’s no wonder we’re apprehensive about seeking care. How healthcare facilities communicate that they are “open for business” again will be critical to helping people overcome their fears and get back to care. Our health depends on it.
On the Record with Elizabeth Yuko, PhD: The Press Industry in the Time of COVID-19
May 13, 2020
By Caitlin Teahan
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‘On the Record’ is a new series where we sit down with our colleagues and friends who are often at the receiving end of our pitch emails – journalists. We will be tackling hot topics, learning and growing from their perspective and thoughtful advice.
For the first ‘On the Record’ post, Caitlin Teahan explores the impact COVID-19 is having on freelance journalism with seasoned freelancer and notable bioethicist, Elizabeth Yuko, PhD. Their candid Q&A session took place at a safe distance (video chat), at the time it was conducted, New York City was still on a strict quarantine lockdown.
CT: How do you think COVID-19 has impacted freelance journalists for better and for worse?
EY: First, for worse. I have lost my main sources of income – specifically my three main clients. For two of them, I still contribute but it is no longer a daily guaranteed income. That has completely changed everything because now, everything I am doing is based on pitches, and it has never been harder to have a pitch accepted or even acknowledged by editors. I have editors say they think a pitch is great and will assign it and then hear nothing for two months. Even a rejection at this point is nice!
CT: That rejection comment speaks to me as a PR person!
EY: Exactly! Also, so many people have lost their staff jobs and now have become freelancers. So now, am I not only competing with the pool of normal full-time freelancers, there is an extra group of people with whom I compete. Almost all publications have slashed their freelance budgets and are saying they only assign stories to staff writers … but are laying them off. I am at a loss as to where things are coming from. In terms of coverage itself it is weird, because some publications only want COVID content, other places say they want other topics but when you pitch anything else, their feedback is that the content isn’t relevant right now, which is obvious, because it isn’t related to COVID. Basically, it is a no-win situation. But it isn’t just about having less work to do. Publications I have written for, for a while now, have cut their rates. So even if you do get a yes, some are only able to offer half the usual rate – which at any other time, is a no. But right now, it may be the only thing I am doing this week so, OK. I am concerned about that because it sets a dangerous precedent moving forward and I am worried we are never going to make it back to pre-COVID rates. No one is in a position now to take major salary cuts.
Now, good things. For me personally, and very specifically me, it has been a good time to be a bioethicist. I have had a PhD since 2012 and there have been a lot of advancements in science and medicine, but nothing on a global scale that affects everyone, like this, so there hasn’t been that much interest in my work until now. All of sudden, everything we do is raising these moral questions, and everyone says, “Great! Let’s ask her!” My recent work with one particular outlet is something I am most proud of because it has been very ethics focused which is so bizarre to me (as it is not on brand for the outlet). They are on an ethics kick at the moment and it is based on what people are clicking on. That is what they want to read right now. If you had told me three months ago, I would be writing one ethics article after another for them, I would have told you that you are incorrect. In that way it has been good. On the other hand, again very specific to me, there are other publications where I normally would have been asked to write the article but am now being interviewed (as the expert). Which is fine – it is my same thoughts as if I were writing and my time – but I am not getting paid for it.
CT: That seems like a doubled-edged sword?
EY: Yes! Everything I am doing is in the hopes of getting more work in the future. Right now, live speaking isn’t a thing and paid lecturing during COVID is limited. It is something I do during ‘normal times’ so there is always the idea that this could lead to a lecture that could help pay my rent. Everything is weird right now.
CT:Besides layoffs, how do you think COVID-19 has impacted staff journalists for better and for worse?
EY: I think they have to write a lot more of their own content because their budgets have been cut. It is stretching them even thinner than they were previously. They have their normal responsibilities including the same amount of content to produce but with significantly less money to do it. I also think because everyone is working remotely, it is not like your boss is seeing you work from 6 a.m. to 11 p.m. every day. They may assume, but it is different when they see it, you are all in the office starving and it is nine o’clock. Stuff like that. So, I know they are stretched and so much of it comes down to advertisers who are pulling advertising money. It is all connected. The editors are now under pressure to produce ‘the clickiest’ stories possible, which is always the case, but right now with everything, it is more the case. Every section has been pivoting to COVID, so there is that. As someone who has worked as a health journalist for years, it is interesting that everyone else is thrown into that mix in certain capacities. In some ways it’s good and in some ways it is not great. You have had a lot of reporting for example, on new research that has an extremely small sample size or things that are preliminary findings that lack tests. Things have been disseminated that people are taking now as absolute truths, but the testing could be wrong.
CT:That can be a very dangerous game – misinformation. This could impact the quality of reporting, right? People who aren’t health journalists for example, don’t necessarily know they should look for strict methodology requirements, etc. because they have to overcompensate and keep pumping out content.
EY: Yes, it is! But it isn’t their fault either. They are under pressure, strict time constraints.
CT:This could be the tenth article today they have written, right?
EY: Totally. I absolutely don’t blame them. When I was a health editor in a previous on-staff role, I had no staff writers. I wrote the content and anything I didn’t write I assigned to freelancers – with a very small budget – and the freelancers I worked with received an extensive document from me that was essentially a training. It would share things like: if you see a study make sure it has these three things or if it involves a doctor, make sure it is this type of doctor versus this type. Not everyone has that type of background or training, which can perpetuate things. But alternatively, this gives other journalists work debunking the bad reporting! So, it is a weird, weird cycle.
Personally, I have been getting nonstop phone calls from family and friends about who to believe, trust. Because everything now is so weird and unbelievable, even far-fetched things seem remotely plausible. I don’t blame them for wanting to cling to something, but staying on top of that sort of thing is a lot of work.
CT: With so many press no longer on staff at publications, do you feel there will be an influx of freelancers? Will that impact your business?
EY: 100%. Even without layoffs, the budget cuts alone (to freelance budgets) have made everything more competitive.
CT: So really, it’s multiplied by two. You have experienced freelance budget cuts and there are more people in the freelance pool. It is a true scarcity.
EY: Yes! Yes.
CT:How has the pandemic changed what you write? Are you considering beats that you hadn’t beforehand?
EY: Usually when you pitch you have to sell yourself and your idea: why now, why I am the person to write and why people care about this. You still have to do all of that, but you also have to account for how COVID fits into this. Even if the story has nothing to do with the pandemic, you have to justify the idea and someone spending money on it by saying how it fits into our current situation. Travel is the most obvious example of that. I was finally getting more travel-related work and that all just … you know. But now general publications that have travel sections have pivoted. A notable news outlet was very public about switching their travel section to a home section. I submitted travel articles to a national consumer magazine long before the pandemic and now they are just not running them. I have several travel articles in limbo that were commission and submitted before the pandemic that just never ran. You don’t get paid until it runs! So, it isn’t like I am just losing work now, but I am not being paid for work I did in some cases months ago. One publication did pay me for an article they decided to hold, for which I am very grateful, but that is only one out of many.
When it comes to beats, I have dabbled in writing about architecture and design but really in the historical context. I had written a few things over the past maybe four years. I think the topic is very interesting but have absolutely no training in that area. It isn’t something I do regularly but because the aspect of design that I focus on is at the intersection of health, whether it is public health and an environment or design within homes, that tiny area that I do know, is all people care about. For example, I wrote an article about how infectious diseases have shaped the modern American bathroom.
CT: THIS IS SO COOL. Please write a book!
EY: Thank you! People are really interested in learning about this. I did two NPR interviews about it, one with the Australian Broadcasting Company. For some reason it has just totally blown up! I am working on a similar story now. For me, it has been an area that was a teeny tiny part of my overall beat to a much more prominent part of it. But all of a sudden now, I am getting TONS of pitches from interior design brands. So many. But I am really only writing about historical context, so I don’t really have any use for it.
CT: You don’t want to know about the latest in rugs, is what you are saying?
EY: Yes, exactly. It is historical. I try to say it in a nice way. Yes, I am writing about bathtubs but, from a hundred years ago, so … there are some brands that are relevant then and now. One of my favorite PR people works with that brand and we talk about their history, etc. but because they happened to be an industry leader then and are still around. So for me, it is this design space. I think because I do not have any formal training on this subject the way I approach it is different. I am working on the history of the home office in America right now. There is no history on this, so I have had to take it apart piece by piece. It is definitely different.
CT: Please make this book. I will read this book.
EY: It is good! But maybe I need more background. And here is the PR perspective – I am not ‘unpitchable’ but because I am not doing anything new, it is difficult. Unless you have an architectural historian, which no one is, it is tough.
CT: As quarantine starts to lift and we begin to come together, what do you predict will change in terms of your work?
EY: I don’t think it will. Because I have been working from home or remotely for a year now or while traveling, this is how I have been used to working. In that sense, it isn’t that different. One thing that will be harder after this is over – it has been so much easier to get interviews with people because everyone is at home all of the time. A lot of people are bored. That does not hold true when I am interviewing public health experts – they are NOT bored. Other people tell me to call them any time, they can talk for hours. That is not the norm! I have been able to get stuff done faster because sources have been responding to email more than usual and are more agreeable to interviews. It is just faster. They don’t need to check with a person to check their schedule. People have been more accessible, in a good way. Also, depending on who I am interviewing, it is probably pretty beneficial to them to get exposure right now. It is another kind of win-win situation.
CT: Thank you for taking the time! Always good to chat.
EY: Thank you!
For information about Dr. Elizabeth Yuko’s bioethics work or journalism, head to elizabethyuko.com.
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Reimagining the Future of Work Requires Leadership and Chutzpah
May 11, 2020
By Ryan Brack
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We’re now months into a fundamentally changed economy and society where the nature, quality and structure of work has had to rapidly change with facts on the ground. But in truth, COVID-19 is simply accelerating the evolution of work, which was well underway already. What would have taken years to digitally transform industry, writ large, has been accomplished in a matter of months. Factors like automation and artificial intelligence, employee-employer trust, mobility, purpose and reskilling-upskilling have moved from serious considerations to drivers of change.
While too many variables remain to accurately predict the future of work, we can search for clues about what’s next from previous paradigm shifts and trends that were already in motion.
PHOENIX RISING
The success of open markets, and capitalism itself, relies on the idea of creative destruction – where one new idea, product or service replaces the old one. The catalyst for said newness occurs organically in free societies but is supercharged when a major event injects widespread variability into the mix. The more disruptive the event, the more difficult it is for the status quo to remain intact and the wider the opening for new entrants. What follows in these scenarios is a blossoming of solutions.
The 2008 recession birthed many of the direct-to-consumer services you know and love today. World War II catalyzed Silicon Valley’s already growing tech dominance and led to significant advances in computation and telecommunication technologies. The Flu Pandemic of 1918 provided major leaps in medical technologies and innovations in transportation.
Necessity is the mother of invention and COVID-19 has certainly presented massive volatility in need of navigation. We don’t yet know which companies will successfully steer themselves through a fundamental rethink of products and services to meet the challenges of this reality, but we do know the movement is afoot and so is an emerging workforce powering those innovations. In this environment, clients should balance the need for a consistent workforce experience against their appetite for experimentation with emerging solutions.
WORKING, 9 TO 5?
Remote working, pre-COVID, was acceptable but not a deeply established practice with only 7% of US workers having a flexible workplace benefit. Now, 74% of CFOs expect that at least 5% of their workforce will stay in permanent WFH status versus returning to the workplace. A recent study from FleishmanHillard’s TRUE Global Intelligence revealed that 61% of those who would normally need to be at their place of business to do their job are now working from home.
Entry-level, back- and mid-office positions with little critical need for physical interaction fall into this category – and are most likely to integrate automation in the near future. Further analysis of what functions can be performed onsite or offsite reveal two additional categories of jobs of the future. Some jobs, especially those in services industries, will continue requiring sensible physical contact and are at minimal risk of major disruption. Are you eager to visit a tele-salon or get a haircut via robot, after all?
The third category of jobs will require intermittent physical interaction and are especially critical to those in leadership positions and in industries that require serendipity, discovery and continual collaboration in the workplace. A crude parallel exists in how businesses approached cloud migration, which now blend on-premise, off-site and hybrid solutions to find the right mix of physical and virtual.
In all of the above cases, a decreased dependence on the physical workplace increases the demand on programs and tools that build culture and strengthen internal communications. Our experts are ready to assist clients who understand the importance of frequent and meaningful communication, especially important to younger generations within the workforce.
TRANSITIONING FROM REMOTE WORK TO TELEPRESENCE
While necessary and certainly up to the task, the collaboration solutions we’re currently using are only one part of recreating the workplace. They will continue to evolve and further redefine the future of work as competition to be the platform of choice intensifies and deepens. 5G, augmented and virtual reality, the Internet of Things and quantum computing have the potential to pull our 2D WFH experience into something richer and fulfilling.
The convergence of these powerful, paradigm-shifting technologies will be leveraged by a visionary (who’s possibly said, “You’re on mute” one too many times) to approximate what it’s like to share a physical space with someone. This could be picking up on nonverbal and environmental cues, being available for quick engagement versus connecting in rigid on-camera meetings, overhear a conversation that inspires or collaborate on the fly with seamless synchronization. These telepresence solutions will be delivered though emerging technologies like digital proxies, avatars, mirrored setups, and yes, even holograms.
You may guffaw at the idea and think that 2020 is not the future we were promised when these solutions should’ve already been in place. You’re right. But technology capacity, computation, bandwidth, complexity and even user sophistication aren’t the limiting factors anymore. Instead it is our failure of imagination, leadership and chutzpah that will prevent us from delivering the future of work we deserve in new, creative, inclusive and sustainable ways.
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“Learn the rules like a pro, so you can break them like an artist” — Creativity in a Time of Crisis
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