Words can shape perceptions, but facts are facts
Words can shape perceptions, but facts are factsI was persuaded to use the phrase “climate change” about a decade ago, when a presenter at a conference I was organizing said she preferred it to “global warming,” a term then still common. She argued, and I agreed, that...
Food has a language all its own
Food has a language all its own As a writer, when I think of communications I most often think of the written word. I might think, too, of photographs, videos, speeches and Twitter feeds. What I never think about is food. Yet there is a whole world of food...
Where’s the beef? In no danger from Biden’s climate plan
Where’s the beef? In no danger from Biden’s climate plan If you get your information from Fox News or other right wing sites, you might be stocking up on hamburger and steaks about now. You’re preparing for President Biden’s coming ban on beef. Of course, you’ll be...
Don’t suffocate inside your COVID bubble
Don’t suffocate inside your COVID bubble My husband and I recently gathered with friends for a socially distant dinner on their back porch. These occasions, routine in our pre-COVID lives, have become rare since March. And as we sat down for drinks before dinner, I...
Looking for truth in all the wrong places
Looking for truth in all the wrong places Labor Day once marked the beginning of the political season, eight weeks prior to Election Day in November. It was when vacations ended, the kids returned to school, business picked up and Americans started paying attention...
Get the best out of brainstorming
Get the best out of brainstorming One of the best things my partner and I do is brainstorm together. We put some music on, get coffee brewing and go to work. One of us stands at the whiteboard, the other takes notes on a computer and we start shooting out ideas....
Old lies, new lies and Facebook
As Facebook executives themselves admit, a disinformation campaign flourished on the social media platform ahead of the 2016 presidential campaign, with abundant lies from trolls both foreign and domestic Some of the lies were planted by Russians and other foreign...
Just Write!
Just Write! I am a writing procrastinator. Just ask my husband and business partner, who was one of my first newspaper editors. I used to rewrite a story’s lead over and over again before moving to the next paragraph. And if that second paragraph didn’t fit with the...
Always spell-check your spell checker
Always spell-check your spell checkerA few years back, I had the privilege of interviewing a veteran who had overcome a severe case of PTSD following his military service in Iraq.This father of five had suffered greatly, both as a driver of a Bradley fighting vehicle...
They had it right in doggie obedience school
We walk our dog Izzy each afternoon down near the beach not far from our house. We greet other dog walkers almost every day, but most of the time, we keep Izzy from bounding up to the other dog because you just don’t know how dogs will react to one another when they...
So…are you better off than you were?
Nearly 40 years ago, President Jimmy Carter and Republican presidential candidate Ronald Reagan would meet in their only televised debate prior to the 1980 election.It took place during the final week of the campaign while 52 American diplomats and private citizens...
When what looks to be up is really down
If you ever need a reminder of the power of perspective, make a journey to Magnetic Hill in New Brunswick.In case you’ve never heard of it, Magnetic Hill is a naturally occurring, outdoor optical illusion. The hill makes you believe you are going up when you are in...
Shark/seal overpopulation strategies test fishermen, environmentalists and beachgoers
By now, most of America knows that Cape Cod, the arm-shaped peninsula extending off eastern Massachusetts into the Atlantic Ocean, has a Gray Seal problem. Perhaps 50,000 of the slug-shaped animals, which can be over 8 feet long and weigh more than 500 pounds, summer...
Assert facts, don’t bury them
Say what you mean. It’s easy advice to give, but not so easy to follow. So often, we want to equivocate and hedge. Maybe we just feel more comfortable couching our assertions in phrases like “it might be said” or “it is believed.” Or we would rather remain vague by...
Watch your language when science gets political
A few years ago, we did some work with a Florida public institution that was raising millions of dollars to create a center that would be home to researchers and policy analysts studying the effects of the state’s population boom and climate change on Florida’s...
How employees treat customers affects your brand
From your office decor to your corporate logo to your customer service policies, everything adds or detracts value from your brand — the overall impression you leave in the marketplace. Target for decades has been looking to change its image from a low-end discounter...
Here’s what happens when real fact meets fake news
Like most big issues, the news about changing attitudes toward climate change has been overshadowed in the United States by coverage of the Mueller investigation, of accusations of Russian meddling in our elections and of the #MeToo movement. But that doesn’t mean...
What Do You Do When Your Past Catches Up With You?
We are in a time of changing norms, and leaders of all types should consider what that means for them and their careers. In recent years, revelations of unsavory past behavior have swept away the jobs and reputations of leaders in technology,...
Correct published errors promptly lest they become ‘fake news’”
A client complained recently that a news story in which she appeared had gotten her title wrong. It wasn’t a big deal, she said, and she wasn’t inclined to call the newspaper to request a correction because she didn’t want to upset the reporter. We encouraged her to...
Four years ago, millions of Americans learned a new term: “polar vortex.”
The term had been around for a while. First described in the middle of the 19th century, it was named by scientists who were studying the upper atmosphere around the North and South poles in 1952. But most of us, at least in the Eastern one-third of the United States,...
Nothing is just for laughs
Barbara was born in southwest Nova Scotia, and we spend a few weeks each summer in the 150-year-old family home that was built astride the tidal Abrams River for a family of fishermen/farmers who worked the cold North Atlantic a few miles south. To get there, we...
Timing is as important to successful messaging as the message itself
Whether you love him or hate him, know that Donald Trump is president because he has an instinctive feel for what messages are likely to move people at a given time. He was an early adherent to the “birther” movement that tried to convince Americans that Barack Obama...
What’s in a word? Ask your pooch
I've had dogs most of my life, and not much that they do surprises me anymore. So a Washington Post story about dogs' ability to understand spoken language as well as intonation didn't surprise me. Because I have been taking Izzy, a six-year-old duck-tolling retriever...
What gets lost in translation
We bought a sports action camera from Campark Electronic Co. of China. It got good reviews online, and we thought it would be perfect for what we wanted to do with it: time-lapse photography at a construction site of a new business venture I'm engaged in. It arrived...
New Mass. energy law represents a personal victory, too
Massachusetts' enactment of a new energy law to replace obsolete coal and nuclear power plants with hydropower and offshore wind represents a political victory for environmental groups and consumers. It was also a victory for Unger LeBlanc Inc., which worked alongside...
Educational levels, along with political, economic power, rising among Latinos
Virginia Sen. Tim Kaine won raucous approval from the 4,766 delegates to the 2016 Democratic National Convention when he took a rhetorical detour form his script to address the 747 Latino delgates in Philadelphia. Kaine, who learned Spanish during a year teaching...
Speak so your audience will hear
Whether you are selling furniture or promoting an idea, the most cleverly crafted message will get you nowhere if it's wrong for your audience. We can never take for granted that we know the culture, language and mind set of the people we want to inform or...
What’s in a name? You be the judge
Beauty treatment for the forlorn? You bet. We found this hair salon/beauty parlor in Yarmouth, Nova Scotia, and debated whether the name of the place was an act of genius or lunacy. I couldn't help but think that if I owned the place, I would beg employees not...
Lessons from our first social media president
From the beginning of his candidacy for president in 2007, Barack Obama and his political team have demonstrated a digital savvy that gave them a big edge at targeting voters with custom messages that helped him win two terms in the White House. Dr. Pamela Rutledge,...
Remaking America and how we talk to one another
One reason the 2016 presidential campaign is so charged is the result of tensions from a changing America. It's not without precedent, of course. Waves of immigration in every century radically remade the nation, but there were strains in those earlier remakings then,...
From “We Try Harder” to “Nothing Runs Like a Deere”
I went to the grocery store to pick up one or two healthy ingredients for the vegetarian chili Barb was preparing for supper. I also came home with a chocolate bar that had been beckoning from the shelves next to the supermarket tabloids along the check-out aisle....
Here’s what can happen when you offend the right people
A piece in the Israeli newspaper Haaretz shows the power of social media to help and to harm. Headlined "NYT Editor Criticizes Trump, Spends Next 8 Hours Retweeting anti-Semitic Abuse," the story recounts what happened to New York Times deputy bureau chief Jonathan...
We are where we live, work and play
Much of what we believe has little to do with what we read, watch and discuss or even upon which set of facts we stake our opinions. Our world views are shaped by other things, including whether or not we lived in a big city or a small town, have watched sports on...
Social media makes you a public figure…so be careful
I have a friend with a history of using her social media accounts as an online diary. When she shares her physical ailments, displeasure with her employer or anger over the actions of an acquaintance with the entire social media cosmos, I always cringe because I worry...
What to do when bad news finds you
None of us minds being the subject of a news story that makes us look good. It's great for our personal reputation and for our business or organization. Stories that have the potential to make us look bad are different, and answering tough questions at those times...
Infographics are cool
We love to read. Long-form journalism, novels, non-fiction tomes and, as one wag once said, “5,000-word stories on roofing shingles in the New Yorker.” We will read almost anything. But when it comes to conveying a load of complex information in a way that will make a...
Simple truths, strategic communications
You might have found yourself wincing when one of the presidential debates you were following on television or your laptop turned into a shouting match, but I'll bet that you didn’t turn it off in favor of binge-watching “Seinfeld” re-runs. It’s why most people tap...
Contact Us
Contact Us
Bob Unger 508-542-1252
bob@ungerleblanc.com
Barbara LeBlanc 603-486-8760
barbara@ungerleblanc.com