The human-centered approach is all about creating a more positive and forward-thinking communication that leans on being proactive, future-oriented, and focusing on the person (employee, customer, anyone) on the receiving end of the service or messages. Throughout, illuminating considerations of pervasive problems are followed by nuts-and-bolts practices to address them: a breakdown of the broken goal, perspective, and mindset of the traditional of sales and marketing “funnel” communication, for example, builds to a presentation of “The Bow Tie Funnel” model, derived from the teaching of Jacco van der Kooij.
Human Centered Communication is filled to bursting with new methods to bring more intentional and personal human communications into this world of Innocent, Consequential, and Intentional digital pollution. Among their practical guidance are strategies to improve video communications, the next best thing to in person communication, for a more human experience: solicit honest feedback, take production quality seriously, align your message, your subtext, and your self with the person you’re addressing. “Turning up your emotions and expressions is not inauthentic,” the authors note, in a revealing discussion of acting, authenticity, and what it takes to get a message across. Also key: guidance for restoring trust to various stakeholders. Human-Centered Communication is a smartly targeted, up-to-date resource that will resonate with a multitude of readers.
Takeaway: An invaluable resource examining how to recenter human communications in a virtual world.
Great for fans of: Erica Dhawan's Digital Body Language, Karyn Gordon's The Three Chairs.
Production grades
Cover: B
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A