Mar 15 2009

How to edit a job description: H.R. text from Iron Mountain

Human resources-ese is a particularly painful dialect of English. A good example (LinkedIn account required) was just posted by human resources at Iron Mountain, a Boston-based records management company that I’m a big fan of.

Their posting for “Director, Marketing Communications & Programs for Iron Mountain North America” shows just how ingrained human resources-ese is: wordy, repetitive, with Dilbertesqe vocab. So for fun I’ve rewritten it in clear English. (Interesting however is how my version sounds less official—that’s how stuck we are with human resources-ese.)

Original Iron Mountatin paragraphs indented:

The Director, Marketing Communications & Programs for Iron Mountain North America is able to translate business goals and market insights into effective, efficient and integrated marketing communications strategy and programs that deliver measurable impact on revenue. This is a new position that will be expected to improve strong demand generation activities through marketing mix, lead management, analytics and resource management.

The Director, Marketing Communications & Programs, a new position, will run Iron Mountain North America’s integrated marketing communications programs.

Directing a team of 5 or more direct reports, you will team with marketing management, product marketing, sales (inside and outside); sales operations, vendors and others to positively change prospect’s perceptions and behaviors. You will create and manage a plan for multiple service lines and two key vertical to positively impact revenue, awareness and sales enablement. This individual will establish and/or incorporate processes that ensure campaigns and deliverables are managed appropriately, with responses and leads processed in accordance with requirements. You will also be accountable for measure and communicate program results and analyses to key constituents.

With a team of five direct reports, he or she will work with marketing management, inside and outside sales representatives, vendors, and others to measurably influence prospective customers to buy Iron Mountain products and services. This includes creating and executing marketing plans and reporting on their success.

This is a pivotal role in the success of Iron Mountain North America and will be fundamental to our success in transforming our company into a value-added information services business. It requires the presentation of value propositions and key messaging/communication points to target constituencies in ways that drive awareness/recognition, enhance quality and brand perception, ensure resonance, and increase conversion rates to action, thus shortening/easing the marketing and sales cycles.

(None of this needs to be included, really. In effect it states: “We are not currently a value-added information services business. We don’t currently communicate well to target constituencies, and our marketing and sales cycles are too long and difficult to manage.”)

Altogether Iron Mountain H.R. says what needs to be said but does so without elegance. Pet peeve or not, all corporate communications should be persuasive and legally sound, and writers of corporate communications do that by making their writing brief, direct, and clear: in short, easily readable.


Jan 16 2009

Star Wars retold (by someone who hasn't seen it)


Star Wars: Retold (by someone who hasn’t seen it) from Joe Nicolosi on Vimeo.


Jan 7 2009

American Gallery of Juror Art

Linked to by David Pescovitz of BoingBoing, doodles made by bored jurors.

David Salvia composite


Jul 2 2008

Heaven and hell

Both videos via BoingBoing:

Crazy Dogs


Jul 5 2006

Wipe rogue countries off the map

Problem: North Korea is test-firing long-range missiles that could reach the United States. The U.S. wants North Korea to stop firing missiles.

North Korea, however, has not attacked a nation and has not broken any treaties. There are no grounds for a military response. Thus, North Korea still develops its weapons and threatens its neighbors and the United States.

Solution: North Korea’s Taepodong-II missile has a range of 9,000 miles. That’s far. To make things worse, as of today, North Korea is here:

North Korea on a map

A bad location. Abutting South Korea. In the same cul-de-sac as Japan. A short trip to the U.S.

But need North Korea be in such a bad location?

Believe it or not, the answer is no. North Korea’s location—and threatening proximity to other countries—need not be . . .

North Korea on a map

. . . because North Korea, like other countries, can be made to move.

For example, look:
Cloverleaf world map Bunting

That’s in the 1600′s. There was a larger buffer between America and East Asia in those days. Many dragons’ worth of buffer.

Pretty safe.

Earlier than that, in this detailed Arab map of Asia, North Korea was very, very buffered . . .

Arabic portolana Asia Jomard

See?

So forget sabre-rattling and diplomacy. The real solution is to move the country again. North Korea: no neighbors—no threat.

NewKorea


Feb 16 2006

What if Google expanded into music or war?

GoogleHum

Overview: Allows anyone with a microphone to hum, sing, whistle, or
play a melody and promptly view a list of songs, complete for the
history of the world, that use that melody.

Features:
- Supports audio input from multiple voices, any instrument, and most
music software, such as Apple’s GarageBand.

- Focuses as much on rhythm as pitch, creating acceptable results for
off-key searches.

- “I’m feeling lucky” replaced with “It’s driving me nuts” button.

Drawbacks:
- Can be used to prove that every #1 song since 1964 was based on the
Beatles’ “I Want to Hold Your Hand,” except for Billy Ocean’s “Get
Outta My Dreams, Get Into My Car,” which was lifted whole-cloth from
Mongolian throat-singing.

- Jinglists union concerned that Google will use search data to create
world’s catchiest tune.

GoogleWar

Overview: First engine to incorporate both search and destroy functionality.

Features:
- Finds, targets, and bombs enemies. Essentially an integration of
Google Earth, Google Sets, and Google Ride Finder.

- Using the popular MAD (Mass Analytics and Division) plugin, can
identify hostile targets within a friendly population. Perfect for
separating extremists from moderates. (Works in Firefox and IE6+ only)

- “I’m feeling lucky” replaced with “Do you feel lucky, well, do you?” button.

- Downloadable sourcecode allows for easy GoogleWar mash-ups with
CraigsList apartment listings.

Drawbacks:

- Bug in beta disables back button.


Dec 18 2005

Housing similar vocab in the same part of your brain, and why, evolutionarily and literarilly, that's fun

“It just goes to show, you don’t have to be literate to write a book.”

Funny how the idle thinking thought while folding laundry can create a sentence that implodes.

Granted it was after reading this post from Boing Boing:

“I FU*KED ALEC BALDWIN IN HIS A*S” (sic) author at it again”