Ishmael's Corner ~ Storytelling Techniques For Business Communications

What the Heck Is a “Word Visual?”

I’ve explored how non-designers in the communications business can get the visual storytelling religion.

While the vast majority of PR folks struggle to bring a visual dimension to communications, there’s a design technique that plays to our strength.

What I call “word visuals” come in three flavors:

Clever Words That Stand on Their Own

One of the best examples of this technique comes from Douglas Wray who broke down the essence of social media platforms with the help of a donut.

Again, a third grader could design this visual. The power comes from the cleverness in the words.

The imperfection of the handwriting actually adds to the visual appeal. Check out what happens if we take the same content, but package it with typography:

Using type results in a less interesting visual. There’s a certain beauty to the rawness of handwriting.

Even a few words can create a powerful visual. BusinessInsider wrote a feature on Ben Silbermann, Pinterest CEO, that included the Venn diagram below

Just three words with two overlapping circles and voila — a touch of levity has been added. I get a lot of mileage out the Venn diagram.

Speech Cloud with a Celebrity

I noted earlier that I deploy this technique on a regular basis.

When a VentureBeat story bitched bitched about PR professionals accompanying executives in press interviews, I served up the Soup Nazi from Seinfeld:

As a second example, a post lamenting the lack of budget information in RFPs riffed off of Jay Leno and his diction during his monologues when he hosted the Tonight Show.

Replace the Words in an Existing Visual

Literally anything with writing on it becomes a candidate for this technique:

In a post that examined anecdotes in business storytelling, we found a photo of a person holding a sign at a football game and took the liberty of changing the sign to cheer on the Anecdotes (GIF toggles between the two):

I mentioned this technique can even be applied to a soda can. Playing off New Coke, we inserted Twitter predicting that a new version of the social tool would come to the market. Then gain, I suppose Mr. Musk will say in this (or not).

Again, these types of visuals depend on words to do the heavy lifting.

Equally important, you can create them with minimal design expertise, though mimicking a typeface on a soda does require someone at the controls of Photoshop.

Word visuals at their best can trigger that “what the heck!” moment from the reader.

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