Using Cartoons to Optimize Communication

Surely you can’t be serious

 
Business Cartoons: Leadership, Data, and Digital Transformation

A cartoon like this will engage your employees’ thought process. A ballerina, a cheetah, and an anchor are not normally, perhaps never, seen all together on one stage. Your employees’ brains will recognize the unique nature of this scene and ask: “Why is this?”

Their intellect will then automatically and involuntarily, kick into high gear and go to work trying to make sense of what they are seeing.

In this case, the cartoon’s caption line helps them resolve the puzzle—"our new digital transformation leadership team.” The “ballerina, cheetah and anchor cartoon” illustrates the need for agile, fast and stable business leadership in a digitally transformed business world.

Why does the brain need to resolve visual puzzles? I am not a neurologist, but my best guess is that, If our field of vision includes something that is out of place or unexcepted, then, the brain recognizes that either there is an opportunity (to eat) or a danger (to be eaten). Automatically solving visual puzzles is probably linked to some successful survival gene evolution.

With a cartoon, you can use this genetic trait to help your employees understand the concept you are trying to communicate.

An Alternative Approach

Of course, you could present a text slide or a written blog with the words “Digital Leadership needs to be agile, fast and stable.” (yawn). But, I bet that this cartoon would be much more effective and efficient. We will test my hypothesis later in this article.

The unexpected nature of a cartoon has grabbed your employees’ attention and resolving the puzzle has engaged their minds. What’s next?

How about getting some electrical activity going? Let’s start sparking some memories.

Cartoons Spark Memory

The sparking memory benefit is partially a result of a cartoon’s attention-grabbing and thought-engaging attributes. The rest of this memory benefit results from the visual nature of cartoons.

First, you have broken your employees free from their social media meditation by presenting something unique, and so you grabbed their attention. They are now clear and present with you and your transformation cartoon and the concept it represents.

Next, you have leveraged their primordial genes to solve a puzzle.

Finally, you have added an image-link to which their brain can attach and work its memory-storing magic.

This one-two-three punch combination is very efficient and effective at getting the brain’s electrical and chemical juices flowing to lay down new memory tracks — their brains’ will command.

Remember This…

Again, I am not a neurologist, but I have watched enough NOVA episodes to think that I am not far off the mark. And anyway, even neurologists do not fully understand how memory works.

But wait, there is more…

These Memories Will Help to Recall, Retell and Reapply

When the presenter steps away from the podium or the employee finishes reading the blog is when the real purpose of communications begins. Successful transformation communication sets the stage to change employee actions, attitudes, and behaviors.

To change, employees must first remember. And, a cartoon will help them:

  • Recall the idea

  • Retell the story

  • Reapply the transformation concept

The benefits of including cartoons in your communications mix are that employees will be able to apply the transformation principles in their daily work.

  • What will they talk about in the coffee room?

  • How will they act in their next team meeting?

  • How will they make decisions for their projects?

  • How will they deliver the next customer experience

And, compounding changes in daily actions is what ultimately drives a business transformation. Simple as that.

So now, let's test my cartoon hypothesis.

Try It For Yourself: A Digital Transformation Communications Experiment

We know that taking risks and trying experiments are fundamental for any successful transformation. So let’s walk the talk. Here is a risk-free experiment you can complete in less than 10 seconds. (and if only they were all this simple…)

Which of the following two slides is better at getting your attention, engaging your thinking and sparking your memory so you can recall, retell and reapply?

FastAgileStable.jpg

Digital Leadership must be agile, fast, and stable.

Your conclusion?

My conclusion-and I may be “a bit” biased, but I hope you agree that the “ballerina, cheetah and anchor on stage” wins hands down. No contest.

The oh-so-ordinary line of text that says “agile, fast and stable” (Yawn again) loses—and adding a stock photo of some sharp looking business people does not change the outcome of our little experiment.

Plus, the cartoon will help you tell a story about leadership – you could explore and discuss the meaning of these three leadership attributes and what they mean for your organization. How would these three characters interact and make decisions? Plain text and stock photos do not contribute to great storytelling.

Let’s wrap up.

 

Summary: A Cartoon Can Help During And After The Communication

In this article, I have presented the benefits of using cartoons to improve digital transformation communications.

First, a cartoon can help during the communications

  • Grabbing attention

  • Engaging thinking

  • Sparking memory

Next, a cartoon can help inform attitudes, behaviors, and actions envisioned in the transformation by giving employees a tool to:

  • Recall

  • Retell

  • Reapply

As a final bonus, a cartoon may even prompt an employee’s smile. And smiles can be very powerful.

Not bad for kids’ stuff, eh?

 

Surely, you should give cartoons a try

My sincere apologies to all the Shirley’s out there. I am sure that most of you have heard this movie line way too many times.