Ethics and Aesthetics

Shortly after I was laid off in November of last year, I was invited to join the Alliance for Policy Research. It’s a startup think tank with a slate of world-class experts on public health, mathematical modeling, urban planning, and of course disasters and emergency management. Part of it being a startup is that we need to nail down and articulate fundamental principles, like our rates, code of conduct, and quality standards. As Quality Assurance Manager, I’ve been meeting with two of my colleagues the past couple of weeks to get our quality standards laid out.

A fair number of us at APR are ex-RAND, which has really well-articulated quality standards. All of us have at least an inchoate instinct that research should be done right, with good methods and facts and findings that come from facts and not the desires of the sponsor. We want to find and contribute to truth and knowledge in the world and make it better – hit the “healthier, wealthier, happier” goals that are our tagline. But the challenge is articulating that clearly, concretely, and concisely as a set of standards.

Part of what inspired this post is that we were workshopping and one of the things that we had come up with is we want our research to be credible. But then one revisits dictionary definitions of things to make sure that they are precisely and accurately what one means. And what we found for credible was:

  • able to be believed or trusted
  • possessing the quality of being trustworthy

The secondary definition gave us pause. Because yes, we want to produce research that people can believe, trust, and rely on. And we want to be considered trustworthy. But we want those things to be based on observable and actionable things – on our utility, not just the impression we give.

Though I pointed out, and this is some of why I’m posting, that we do also need to give the impression. It’s important, because it’s how we convince people to pay us to do the research where we can prove it. We need the aesthetics in order to get the chance to prove our underlying ethics. But for people who deal in facts and policy and want to save the world the need for deliberate focus on the aesthetics feels antithetical.

So we’re taking this weekend to think about how we want to break down the idea of credibility into principles and keywords that we feel are more accurate, precise, and representative. I’m also taking the weekend to write things up as a demonstration of how now that we’re writing in a less constrained environment we also need to think about how we incorporate aesthetics into our external quality standards vs our internal code of conduct vs how we talk about these processes and how transparent we want to be. It’s fun!

In the meantime if you work for an organization that needs data or policy analysis done by a group of world-class analysts you should hire us.

Branding

I know a couple of people right now who’re moving into either online presence for existing entities or starting a business from scratch. So this is mostly advice geared towards small, creative businesses.

Spelling Matters

Typos are a thing that can happen to anyone, and I know my spelling consistently trips up on double consonants and basically goes completely to uncapitalized shit in private chats. But spelling is part of communicating clearly to an audience, and I think at this point all browsers have a built-in spellcheck.

Tone Matters

Look, the people who say you can’t tell tone over text are lying. Like, maybe they can’t? But all of us do a lot of communicating in text these days, so interpreting tone from text is a skill we’ve picked up. So choosing a tone for communicating on social media and website content is important – do you want to be silly? dry and informative? You’ll obviously want to adapt based on what it is you’re communicating, but deciding on a style and being deliberate about it can make you a more coherent and engaging brand.

Engage on social media

tumblr_inline_n1fcqdixa51s3zet1It’s where the people are!

Seriously, you want to control a Facebook page, your Google page if you’re going to be publicly listed as a business, and probably also a Twitter. If you don’t feel like social media is really your thing, you can stop there, and only post updates that you think people will definitely want to know. But if you’re producing any kind of audiovisual content, you probably also want a Youtube, Instagram, and Snapchat. If being on social media is going to be a fun part of branding for you, maybe also a Tumblr. There are services, like Buffer and Hootsuite, that let you push to multiple platforms from one place, but that can get kind of complicated. Hashtags on Twitter are part of the body of text and a huge part of joining ongoing conversations; tags on Tumblr are a separate field and commonly a platform for metacommentary. Pushing from a central platform is a great way to streamline getting news out, but not a good way to engage more deeply with a community and join in on things.

Don’t be everything to everyone

People are interested in what you have to offer because it’s unique: diluting that for more ‘mainstream’ appeal just makes you less interesting. The essence of branding is just an extension of being who you already are as either an individual or a group, only more so and in public.