Clarity FAIL: When You Assume Your Own Context
January 10, 2013 7 Comments
{Note: I am now blogging at my brand-spanking-new site, SteveWoodruff.com. Just click here to subscribe to the new feed. Bonus – you can also sign up at the same time for my astonishingly brief yet brilliant e-newsletter, Clarity Blend (see sample), and when you sign up, you’ll get a free download of my helpful new e-book, Make Yourself Clear: Six Steps to De-fogging Your Direction and Your Message.}
We all know a bunch of stuff. And when we formulate our ideas and words, and spill them forth into the world – we’re often surprised at the misunderstandings that occur.
I worked on the content that went into this blog post (about introversion/extroversion) for hours. Thought I had it nailed. Turned out that there were several revisions still awaiting me once I hit Publish, as people weren’t “seeing” what seemed clear to me.
“Seemed clear to me” = Assuming my own context.
If you’ve been mulling over an idea for any length of time, particularly in an area where you have some domain expertise, you have probably developed your thoughts up to the third or fourth level (without even recognizing it). But your readers? Most of them are coming in at the ground floor. They don’t have the surrounding knowledge, the metadata, that you and I simply assume.
Because we’ve become used to occupying our own minds, our own context. We’ve got the whole blueprint in our heads, and others are just glancing at one room.
One of my most valued resources is a group of smart people whom I invite to critique my ideas and writings. And when they do, sometimes I’m amazed….how did you come to that conclusion??….until I look with fresh eyes, and OOPS! – they’re seeing the words from a very different angle. Sure enough, I was stuck in my own context.
As for that blog post where I had to keep revising terms and graphics? It finally led to a follow-up blog post, where (I think) the presentation is finally pretty much clear and intuitive. Our ideas improve when they are “battle-tested” through different sets of eyes!
I always look forward to input from folks like Greg Hartle, Tom Martin, Lisa Petrilli, Jay Baer, Michele Price, Justin McCullough, Trisha Torrey, Chris Brogan, and many others – they sharpen and improve my thinking.
Do you have an unofficial (or even official!) “Board of Smarties” who can help you be clearer? It’s a great way to employ a network – and, who knows? – maybe their ideas will vastly improve yours!
Steve,
You’re naturally a high-level guy – glad I could help pull you down! *chuckles*
In all seriousness though, you had a great concept and it was fun to help. When you work alone or mostly alone (not in an office with other peers), the “smartie board” is a must!
Steve one of the things I love about you is your willingness to ask. Imagine a world were more people would just ASK.
Thanks for the reminder to have a golden circle of brains to tap or as you called us a “Board of Smarties.”
Slowly learning to ask – but always finding the benefits. It takes a long time to break down this native Yankee independence!
Thanks for the compliment, Steve – as part of your “board of smarties” (hmmm… actually makes me think of that little wrapped up line of candies we used to get in our Halloween bounty).
Agree wholeheartedly that sometimes when we’ve already graduated far beyond our audiences, it’s our audiences who remind us that they are still trying to process the basics. A valuable lesson for us all.
Have some Smarties right here at my desk! http://twitpic.com/bu9u6s
Pingback: How I Edit
Pingback: Starting in the middle of the story (Repetition is key) | Kelly Lorenz's Deep Thoughts