Tag Archives: life

Pitching The Guardian

Turns out I’m a big, fat liar.

Last time out, when I was writing about pitching The Drum, I said something like, “This is the first pitch I’ve sent in years.”

But then I remembered it wasn’t. See, a biggish thing happened to me last year. And I wanted to write about that biggish thing on here.

Thing is, when you’re writing about biggish things it’s easy to become foggy and mawkish. Plus: it’s still a bit raw.

A pitch on the other hand … I have no problem with posting a pitch about biggish things that have happened to me.

So here you go.

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To: Andrew Gregory @TheGuardian; Barbara Speed @The Guardian

From: Pitching the World

Date: Apr 29, 2024

Subject: Post mini-stroke support is lacking – and alarming

Hi Barbara and Andrew,

First, huge apologies for the double-pitch. I didn’t know where this might be best suited – Opinion or Health. (It’s no excuse, really, but I’ve been out of the freelance journalism game for a while.)

Second, I feel like I have a decent feature brewing. 

Rageh Omaar had a suspected (by some) mini-stroke at the end of last week while hosting News at Ten and carried on. The week before that, I had a mini-stroke while playing tennis and also carried on. For about five games. Then I had to stop and go to the hospital in an ambulance with blue, flashing lights.

The incident was scary. I couldn’t speak properly. Plus: numb tongue, numb right side of my face, a numb right arm and numb right leg that wouldn’t really function. In hospital they tell you that you’ve had a mini-stroke – that bit is scary, too – and put you through all sorts of machines and do all manner of tests before popping you on statins, BP-lowering medication and anti-platelet medication before sending you home. 

But if the mini-stroke is scary, the landscape you face when you come out is scarier. I’m a reasonably fit, reasonably active, reasonably happy and reasonably middle-aged (48) writer. Yet I came out of the hospital worried. Worried that pushing too hard at work caused the stroke and that I might need to work at half the pace or – worse – give up work altogether. Worried that I’d have to move out of my flat. Worried that my life would unravel (again). 

Most of all, I was (and am) worried that I might have another stroke. I’ve seen some stats suggesting that almost one in three TIA survivors will go on to have a major stroke within a year. Some studies say that 11% of those who experience a TIA will have a bigger stroke within a week

The figures are hazy – and change from paper to paper and study to study. Yet the underlying reality is that TIAs are a warning and often signal a bigger stroke is on the way. So why is the after care so poor? Why are you sent from hospital with a follow-up appointment in six weeks’, a bag of drugs, and not much else? Why, with stroke being such a major cause of death and disability in the UK, are we not doing more to support those who have experienced a TIA – particularly in the first week or two?

And it doesn’t have to be massive help. Maybe some information on getting back to work, what you should and shouldn’t be eating, how often to exercise, how to deal with these blobs of depression and suicidal ideation. A number to call. A GP to chat with. That kind of thing. 

I’m really blathering, aren’t I? Sorry about that – it’s been a tricky couple of weeks. Anyway, anything in this, do you think?

Thanks for reading, cheerio for now,

Pitching the World

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Updates on what happened with that pitch – and what happened to me after April – when I have the stomach for it.

April, earlier

What’s this? An actual pitch? To the actual Drum?

Turns out that being a best-selling author isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. After becoming a best-selling author, things went a bit wrong. Well, actually, things went a lot wrong. Life, eh? Look at it: going a lot wrong and that.

Anyway, that’s perhaps for another time. (You know, what’s been going on for the last seven years and how things went a bit – A LOT – wrong.) 

In the meantime, I actually wrote an actual pitch. My first one in years.

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To: Gordon Young @ The Drum

From: Pitching the World

Subject: I’m elevating this robust pitch, Gordon, with impactful writing solutions

Hi Gordon,

Sorry to email you out of the blue like this but I think I have something that might fit for The Drum. 

What if marketing-speak isn’t as bad as we think it all is?

So, in the advertising and marketing world we all can’t bear marketing speak, right? We’re sick of it. I know, as a jobbing copywriter, that I am. But as one of only a handful of copywriters in the UK who run their own experiments into the effectiveness of language* I didn’t want to just say it. I wanted to prove it. 

The idea? Take two pieces of text, both saying the same thing, but have one crammed with marketing-speak (‘unleash’, ‘innovative solutions’, ‘robust’ … you get the picture, I’m sure) and the other in well written plain-speak. My hypotheses? Plain-speak would trounce the marketing-speak. I ran them both through readability calculators and tested them out on an LLM (‘Is this writing clear?’ ‘Is this writing memorable?’ ‘Is this writing likely to be acted upon?’) and the plain-speak version shone brightly. Readability calculators loved it. LLMs loved it. And both hated the marketing-speak version. So far, so predictable.

Next, I tested out on the public – specifically through Prolific. I thought I’d have my suspicions confirmed – that there would be howls of protest, that participants in the study would loathe the marketing-speak version, that the overexposure and overuse of these words would have caused some sort of semantic bleaching and readers would find marketing-speak lazy, cliched, tired, foggily obscuring the message and a whole heap of other bad things.

But that didn’t happen. In fact, people preferred marketing-speak over plain-speak. So I ran my smallish pilot again. Same results. I cartoonified the language further, stretching it to ridiculous proportions – “Unleash more sales solutions” – and still the same thing. Overwhelmingly there was a feeling that marketing-speak sounded more ‘dynamic’ and ‘smarter’ and ‘more sophisticated and professional.’ 

Anything in this, Gordon? As copywriters, marketers and ad people we assume that the public are as tired as we are of the seemingly trite sentiments of marketing speak. But what if the truth is different from that? What if we – collectively – have to get out of our bubbles a bit more? (I’m saying this as someone who loves Japanese selvedge denim and Picasso t-shirts as much as the next person.) To actually, you know, go out and test out some of this stuff rather than making assumptions. There’s maybe even room to explore if a conversational tone of voice is all it’s cracked up to be. I’ve read studies and papers showing that, actually, there are some circumstances where a corporate TOV fits much better …

This is my first pitch in years. I know, I know: IT’S WAY TOO LONG. Sorry about that. If it’s not a good fit I have other places in mind but The Drum felt like a good home for it. I’ve got plenty of clipping from my time writing features for broadsheets and magazines and hundreds of columns and reviews if you’d like to see any published work. 

Many thanks indeed,

PTW

*You know what, I don’t know if this is true – but I do know that it feels true.

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A drum, earlier

Gordon, who’s the editor of The Drum, got back to me within an hour or two. “Wow,” he opened, “sounds sensational.” And went on to tell me that he passed my pitch on to John, The Drum’s Opinion editor. 

So, that’s a thing that happened. I sent a pitch and got a reply to a pitch. Who knows where that might go. 

And who knows where I might go. Nowhere, hopefully. I’ve missed this place like the dickens. But I also know that I have certain … proclivities. 

Thanks for reading.