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Jon of All Trades at the Denver Film Festival

November 18, 2015 by Jon Leave a Comment

Today the Jon of All Trades Podcast posted its 5th and final interview from this year’s Denver Film Festival.

The Jon of All Trades Podcast, a production of Deft Communications, conducted five interviews at this year's Denver Film Festival.

We were invited by the Festival’s PR team to be one of the official podcasts of this year’s fest, so we picked up our official press credentials two weeks ago, and began working to book interviews with an interesting slate of guests. The PR team at the Festival was incredibly savvy and hard-working, which was helpful in procuring us an incredible series of shows. Check out the 5 interviews we did below:

Ep. 79: Ian Cooke & Ian O’Dougherty

Ian Cooke and Ian O’Dougherty are cello prog pop musicians. We chat about their new album Antiquasauria, how to survive on the road when everyone gets sick, how the music business has changed, and the debut of their new music video “Epilogue.”

Ep. 80: David Beck & Olympia Stone

Subject and director of documentary Curious Worlds, we talk about David’s incredible, intricate art, Olympia’s long history with David, how the documentary came together, and a ton more. Two incredibly talented artists and an insightful, interesting chat.

Ep. 81: Joey Skaggs & Andrea Marini

Joey Skaggs and Andrea Marini are the subject and director of Art of the Prank – the Movie. We talk Joey’s amazing career and history of pranking the media, how this movie came together, and how to improve our cultural media literacy.

Ep. 82: Nathan Silver & Mike Ott

Nathan Silver and Mike Ott are collaborators on the Untitled Denver Project coming out in 2016, and the directors of Stinking Heaven and Lancaster, CA playing at the Denver Film Festival. We have an awesome chat about independent film, funding things through Kickstarter, the frustrations of festivals, and a lot more.

Ep. 83: Zoe Bell & Josh Waller

Josh Waller and Zoe Bell, director and star of the movie Camino, wrap up the week’s coverage. You might know Zoe from her work in Quentin Tarantino’s Death Proof, and you’ll see her this winter in the upcoming The Hateful Eight. We talk filming in the jungle, how Josh and Zoe came to know each other, and the weight (or not) of being described as a “badass.” Great way to finish out the week!

A huge thank you to the Denver Film Festival for the invitation and the opportunity. Be sure to check out these episodes – as well as the previous 78 we have posted – on iTunes, Stitcher, or the Jon of All Trades homepage.

Filed Under: Denver, Jon of All Trades Tagged With: #DFF38, Denver Film Festival, Jon of All Trades

Presentation Tip #4: Television Interviews

October 20, 2015 by Jon Leave a Comment

Deft Communications specializes in helping our clients prepare for all manner of presentations, whether it’s going on camera as a spokesperson, delivering a keynote speech to a large auditorium, or simply conducting a small team meeting. This blog series will periodically provide best practices for any type of presentation you do.

Deft Communications provides television interview tips in this blog post

I recently had the honor of serving as spokesman for Vital for Colorado during a series of Western Slope stakeholder meetings. Over the course of two days, I did three on-camera interviews for television (one live, two pre-recorded – which you can view here, here, and here), one radio interview, and one print interview that has yet to be released.

While our practice focuses mostly on getting our clients ready for their speaking engagements, we’re happy to serve as spokespeople ourselves when the need arises. However, keeping the goal of client service and prep at the forefront of our counsel, below are a few television interview tips I’m happy to share after doing three of them in Grand Junction earlier this month. Keep these in mind for the next time you’re presented with the opportunity to speak on behalf of your organization. And if you’d like additional help, you know where to find us.

  1. Prepare as much as possible

This seems like obvious advice, but it’s amazing how many people believe they can “wing it.” When the cameras are rolling, an interviewer is staring at you, and you’re suddenly drawing a blank on what your own name is, you’ll be glad you prepared.

In terms of how to get prepared, ask a few questions. Will this interview be pre-recorded or is it live? The difference here is huge. In a pre-recorded interview, you can start over. If you mess up, just start again. Reporters want a smooth presentation just as much as you do because watching someone trip over their words makes for bad television. So, if you stumble or make a mistake, simply start again. In a live interview, no such luxury, which will alter the way you prepare.

  1. Find out the questions in advance

Contrary to what the most paranoid part of our brains would have us believe – and no matter what Donald Trump says – the media generally isn’t out to get you. Confrontational journalism certainly has its place, but the vast majority of the time, members of the media are seeking to be effective conduits of knowledge to a curious public.

In service of those goals, help the reporter with facts. Send a press release or media kit in advance. When it comes time for your interview, show up early. Inquire about what they plan to ask you on camera. If they ask why, tell them you want to be as accurate as possible in representing your organization, so if there are specific facts that are noteworthy, you want to make sure you get them right. This will also help you anticipate any curveballs.

Deft Communications live in studio - television interview tips
Emily Fredrick and I talking live in studio about the crude oil export ban.

In my live interview in Grand Junction, I asked Emily beforehand what she was going to ask me about. Most of the questions were straightforward, but she had a question that I hadn’t really prepped for. Since I was early, and since I just plain asked her what she planned to talk about, I was able to formulate a response and practice it. Everything went well, and it was certainly better than being blindsided.

  1. Take a breath and be calm

Going into any engagement with the media, you’re bound to be nervous. Unless you’re a trained spokesperson, and you do this every day, you’re bound to be on pins and needles. I had never done live television before, and my adrenaline was pumping.

But I think about one of my good buddies who played football in high school. He told me he’d be so amped up before a game that he’d feel like he wanted to vomit, but that once he hit someone for the first time, he’d calm down. The same principle applies here. Once you answer the first question, assuming you’ve practiced your talking points, then you’re just in it. And before you know it, the whole thing’s over.

What a rush!

  1. Know your talking points

This might be the most important tip I can give you. In a pre-recorded interview, the reporter will likely ask you what feels like the same question in a bunch of different ways. It’s not up to you to come up with new and inventive ways of answering the same question, so just hit your points again and again. You know what’s important, and what you want to convey in this piece, so stick to it. It may feel repetitive, but in the five minutes or so they’re interviewing you, they’ll use maybe a sentence of yours. Make it count and make sure it’s the key point you want you to get across.

  1. Remember you’re the expert

Today’s newsrooms are understaffed, and many reporters will lean on what you provide them. You’re the expert in your field, so have confidence. Again, the overwhelming majority of reporters are not “out to get you.” Work with them, treat them with respect and professionalism, and you’ll optimize the opportunity. Provide background material beforehand and ask if they have any questions. Doing good prep work will ensure you, your client or organization, and the news organization get the most out of this engagement.

  1. Keep your feet and your head quiet

A practical tip before we end this post. Movements are amplified on camera, so try to keep your feet from moving too much, and keep your head relatively still. This feels unnatural for me as I have what one of my high school theater directors referred to as “happy feet,” but it’s key in not making physical movement a distraction during your piece. Getting on-camera practice with professional instructors can be helpful with this.

Like most things, doing television interviews can be a self-fulfilling prophecy. Visualize yourself doing well will usually lead you to practice, prepare, and work collaboratively with your interviewer resulting in a good piece. Fretting about it and failing to optimize your approach will produce less than stellar results.

So be confident, do good prep, remember these television interview tips and when all else fails, call a professional.

 

Filed Under: Presentation Tips Tagged With: Deft Communications, Denver PR, Jon Ekstrom, Media Relations, Presentation Tips, Presentation Tips Television Interviews, Vital for Colorado

Ending the Export Ban on Crude Oil

September 24, 2015 by Jon Leave a Comment

Last week we shared the press release from Vital for Colorado where more than 90 Colorado business leaders supported lifting the United States ban on crude oil exports.

The Denver Business Journal picked up the story last week, and you can find it here. Pertinent from the story is this little tidbit of information:

“A recent study by IHS Inc. (NYSE: IHS), the international information and consulting firm based in Douglas County, concluded that lifting the ban on crude oil exports ‘would actually lower U.S. gasoline prices an average of 8 cents per gallon by encouraging greater U.S. crude production.'”

That’s but one reason to support lifting the ban on crude oil exports. Need more? How about an Independence Institute Freedom Minute featuring yours truly?

Say it with me: Support of ending the export ban on crude oil is vital for the nation, Vital for Colorado.

Filed Under: Clients in the News Tagged With: Deft Communications, ending the export ban on crude oil, Freedom Minute, In the News, Independence Institute, Vital for Colorado

Birthdays, Taylor Swift, and more…

September 22, 2015 by Jon Leave a Comment

Each year on my birthday I make a Mix CD to commemorate the occasion. Today on the Jon of All Trades blog, I share that mix with the world, and offer perspective on the year past.

taylor_swift_640

The majority of this year’s essay focuses on how the song “Blank Space” by Taylor Swift hit me like a freight train and how I’ve misjudged Taylor Swift so hideously these last several years. From the essay:

“I sat agog. This was Taylor Swift? This song that’s clearly a clever play on her public perception and turns the narrative on its head, but has just a hint of exhausted sadness at its core – this was Taylor Swift? This song that’s got a driving, head-nodding beat, but likely functions as a smokescreen obfuscating deep bruises and real pain – this was Taylor Swift? This gorgeous, delicate, powerful voice that contains equal parts innocence and world-weary cynicism – this was Taylor Swift?

“Shit, I’ve been missing out.”

To read the entire thing, and to see the music I’ve been most keen on this year, head on over to Jon of All Trades and check it out. Link to full article.

Filed Under: Culture, Jon of All Trades Tagged With: Birthday Mix, Birthdays, Blank Space, Jon of All Trades, Taylor Swift

Colorado Business Leaders Unite to End the Oil Export Ban

September 16, 2015 by Jon 3 Comments

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Colorado Business Leaders Unite to End the Oil Export Ban


More than 90 entities tell Colorado’s Delegation to support legislation that lifts the ban

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: DENVER (September 16, 2015) – Vital for Colorado, the Colorado Petroleum Council and more than 90 economic development groups, businesses and elected officials from across the state encourage the Colorado congressional delegation to support lifting the ban on oil exports.

“Lifting these 1970s-era restrictions could create new U.S. jobs, put downward pressure on fuel costs, and strengthen the energy security of America and its allies,” said Tracee Bentley, Executive Director of the Colorado Petroleum Council, a division of the American Petroleum Institute. “Colorado alone could gain nearly 5,000 jobs. This is a clear win-win for U.S. workers and U.S. allies seeking an alternative to energy from countries like Iran and Russia. It’s no wonder so many Colorado leaders support lifting this outdated ban.”

While the ban remains a federal issue, Colorado is particularly well positioned as an energy provider. With its vast oil supply, particularly in the Denver-Julesburg Basin, Colorado could be a prominent contributor to the country’s oil exports if the ban was lifted.

“Colorado is blessed with abundant oil and natural gas resources, which have served as key drivers of our economy,” said Robert Golden, President and CEO of the South Metro Denver Chamber, and Treasurer of Vital for Colorado. “And study after non-partisan study has illustrated the incredible benefits that would be realized if we lifted the ban on oil exports. From lower national gasoline prices to thousands of new, high-paying Colorado jobs, it’s high time for the outdated ban to go.”

Organizations from across the state have expressed their support for overturning this policy including the Colorado Association of Commerce and Industry (CACI), the Hispanic Chamber of Commerce of Metro Denver, the Northern Colorado Legislative Alliance (which includes the Loveland, Fort Collins and Greeley Chambers as well as Upstate Colorado), the Grand Junction Economic Partnership, the Greater Pueblo Chamber of Commerce, more than two dozen elected officials, and dozens more.

The letter submitted to Colorado’s federal leaders highlights some of the benefits that would result from lifting the crude oil export ban. The economic gains, according to study conducted by Englewood-based IHS, entitled US Crude Oil Export Decision: Assessing the Impact of the Export Ban and Free Trade on the U.S. Economy, include:

  • $746 billion in additional economic investment and an average increase in domestic production of 1.2 million barrels per day
  • $265 billion in overall savings for consumers, translating into as much as $391 in annual household savings
  • Average increase in annual GDP of $73 billion
  • Reduction of net petroleum imports between one and two million barrels per day
  • Government revenue of $1.3 trillion between 2016 and 2030

Entities that have signed on in support of ending the United States ban on crude oil exports:

Aurora Chamber of Commerce

American Council of Engineering Companies of Colorado

Associated Builders and Contractors, Rocky Mountain

Brighton Economic Development Corporation

Castle Rock Chamber of Commerce

Chamber of Commerce of Highlands Ranch

Colorado Arborists and Lawncare Professionals

Colorado Association of Commerce and Industry

Colorado Association of Mechanical and Plumbing Contractors

Colorado Bankers Association

Colorado Business Roundtable

Colorado Competitive Council (C3)

Colorado Concern

Colorado Contractors Association

Colorado Farm Bureau

Colorado Oil & Gas Association

Colorado Republican Business Coalition

Common Sense Policy Roundtable

Craig Chamber of Commerce

Denver Energy Network

Denver Metro Commercial Association of Realtors

Denver South Economic Development Partnership

Douglas County Business Alliance

Douglas County Energy Coalition

Evans Area Chamber of Commerce

Fort Collins Chamber of Commerce

FUEL (Fostering Unity Energizing Leadership)

Grand Junction Economic Partnership

Greater Pueblo Chamber of Commerce

Greeley Chamber of Commerce

Hispanic Chamber of Commerce of Metro Denver

I-70 Regional Economic Advancement Partnership

Jeffco Economic Development Corporation

Keenesburg Area Chamber of Commerce

Loveland Chamber of Commerce

Metro North Chamber of Commerce

NAIOP-Colorado

NARO Rockies

Northern Colorado Economic Development Corporation

Northern Colorado Latino Chamber of Commerce

Northern Colorado Legislative Alliance

Northwest Douglas County Economic Development Corporation

Parker Chamber

Portland Cement Association-Rocky Mt. Region

Prime Rib Club of Brighton

Progressive 15

Rifle Regional Economic Development Corporation

South Metro Denver Chamber of Commerce

Upstate Colorado Economic Development

West Slope Colorado Oil and Gas Association

Western Energy Alliance

Representative John Becker

Commissioner Rod Bockenfeld

Representative J. Paul Brown

Representative Perry Buck

Senate President Bill Cadman

Representative Kathleen Conti

Commissioner Sean Conway

Commissioner Julie Cozad

Senator Larry Crowder

Representative Tim Dore

Commissioner Nancy Doty

Representative Justin Everett

Commissioner Mike Freeman

Senator Kevin Grantham

Senator Owen Hill

Senator Chris Holbert

Senator Cheri Jahn

Representative Janak Joshi

Commissioner Barbara Kirkmeyer

Representative Polly Lawrence

Senator Kevin Lundberg

Mayor Roy B. McClung

Commissioner Steve Moreno

Senator Tim Neville

Representative Dan Nordberg

Commissioner Ed Norden

Commissioner Don Rosier

Representative Lori Saine

Senator Ray Scott

Commissioner Libby Szabo

Commissioner Casey Tighe

Representative Yeulin Willett

Mr. John Andrews, Director, Centennial Institute, former President of the Colorado Senate

Ms. Kay Cary

Mr. Robert Cary

Ms. Deborah A. Deal, CEO IX Power Foundation, Inc. V.P. Marketing & Public Affairs, IX Power Clean Water

Ms. Tamara Door, President and CEO of the Downtown Denver Partnership

Ms. Simone Potter

Mr. William Potter

Mr. Troy McWhinney, Chief Investment Officer & Co-Founder, McWhinney

# # #

About Vital for Colorado: Vital for Colorado is a broad coalition of business, civic and economic development leaders along with thousands of Coloradans from across the state. Its mission is to support and promote the benefits of energy production in Colorado, highlight energy resource extraction as a critical part of Colorado’s state economy, and support a rational, well-regulated, and competitive regulatory environment which allows energy production in the state to thrive responsibly.

Jonathan Ekstrom
Vital for Colorado
720.936.2393
Jon@deftcom.us

Rich Coolidge
Vital for Colorado
303.478.4276
rcoolidge@eissolutions.com

Filed Under: Clients in the News Tagged With: Vital for Colorado

Digital Memory

September 3, 2015 by Jon Leave a Comment

A few mornings ago as I finished feeding my 10 month-old daughter, I had The Today Show on in the background. A girl-pop group I’d never heard of called Little Mix performed, and offered fun, dancey, cotton candy jams to the adoring group of adolescent girls in the audience who nodded along enthusiastically. None of this is exactly news, and before you completely tune out of this post, I promise I have a point.

Little Mix on The Today Show. Image from Demotix.com
Little Mix on The Today Show. Image from Demotix.com

The thing that struck me watching them perform was how the live audience was watching them. So many of the audience members weren’t looking directly at Little Mix as they jumped and danced and sang onstage, they looked at Little Mix through the small screen of their phone capturing and saving the moment in their personal digital files forever (presumably – although how long any individual digital files lives is anyone’s guess), a small, individual version of a performance seen by millions of people.

Here is but a small sample of the phone barrage. Photo taken from Perrie Edwards' Zimbio page.
Here is but a small sample of the phone barrage. Photo taken from Perrie Edwards’ Zimbio page.

I understand the impulse, but my question is: Is this actually a good thing?

As I write this post, I have more than 2,000 photos saved on this very hard drive. After taking a quick digital stroll through them, many of these photos I haven’t looked at in years, and, to be perfectly honest, many of them suck quality-wise. What I am saving them for? What will I do with them? I can’t delete them because the thought of doing that makes me want to have a panic attack. These are my memories. I can’t just cast them aside. How cold-hearted would I have to be to discard MEMORIES???? [clutches pearls]

But to get philosophical for a moment, if I never look at these photos, what’s the point in having them? Do they even exist in a practical sense if I never look at them? Are my memories more or less important with the existence of these photos I never look at? And am I more inclined to discard a memory if all I have to remember is that I took a photo of it, and it exists somewhere in the bottomless pit of my hard drive?

I don’t have answers to any of these questions, but what I do know to be objectively true is that those girls in the audience recording Little Mix while watching them perform outside 30 Rock are not enjoying their performance to the fullest the first time, which is the best time. They’re staring at them on a little screen and not absorbing the show in all its glory with their very own eyes.

If they’re hoping to keep their very own little version of the performance for all-time, fine. Again, I get it. But have you ever re-watched video you’ve taken of a live music performance on your phone? I can pretty much guarantee you it’s not even a close facsimile of what the experience was like live and in person. It’s removed, tiny, and antiseptic. The sound quality sucks, and the video is nothing like you remember it looking. Honestly, re-watching a concert video you took yourself is incredibly dispiriting.

By contrast, I can recall with incredible clarity the last time I saw Strung Out (one of my favorite bands) perform their first two albums in their entirety. I remember where I stood in the Summit Music Hall, I remember how lead singer Jason Cruz looked as the sweat cascaded off him and soaked his black shirt and tight black pants, and I remember very vividly putting my arm around the dude next to me (someone I’d never met, and haven’t seen since) and singing our faces off as our favorite band tore the house down. The lucidity of this memory is stronger than even the best HD camera used by the best photojournalist in the entire world.

And yet I can’t always help myself, and find myself struck by the desire to capture, catalog, and preserve forever. This is just how we live now. It’s a point that’s been made before, and one that was probably best captured in the Sports Illustrated cover photo of American Pharaoh winning the Triple Crown. Look at everyone trying to capture the moment on their own little device to preserve for eternity.

Click photo for original story on SI.com
Click photo for original story on SI.com

As someone who partially makes his living in the digital space, part of me hesitates even publishing this essay because the central thesis here could be read as articulating the pointlessness of digital artifacts and the advocacy of living in the moment, not in the endless void of cyberspace and digital storage. As a content provider, professional obligation requires me to want you to keep staring at your phone.

But simply as a member of the world, I want you to pick your head up and experience the world as it happens, not through a substandard-to-your-magical-and-endlessly-capable-brain intermediary. You are your own best capturer, cataloger, and preserver. And I’m certain you don’t need ME to explain this to you, but a gentle reminder never hurt anyone.

I don’t think we give ourselves enough credit. And since thanks to smartphones life is an open book test, we don’t have to give ourselves enough credit. It’s easier to check the box and store everything in the magical pocket device. Hey, at least I know it’s there. I’ve got my digital memory all shored up.

But your real memory trumps your digital memory every time. I’m trying to learn to trust mine more. Will you?

Filed Under: Culture, Deft Touch

Mike Gaughan

August 27, 2015 by Jon 4 Comments

Mike and I at the Damon Runyon Dinner in March 2014.
Mike and I at the Damon Runyon Dinner in March 2014. He told me it was his first selfie.

I was 26 years old, brand new to the account, and still pretty green when it came to working for a PR agency. I attended a meeting of the various consultants under the employ of the client not really knowing what the hell I was doing, and came away from that meeting feeling condescended to, subjugated, and even a bit bullied by one of the project leads. I didn’t know what to do, so I turned to you, the senior lead on the account and the Chairman of our firm.

As I sat in your office nervously recounting the experience of the meeting, I could see you getting annoyed, maybe agitated. I figured I was the cause of your aggravation – looks like this kid can’t cut it – and awaited my deserved comeuppance for failing to further our work adequately and expected to be re-assigned, or worse.

You said, “Let’s give Mark a call.” Mark was the project lead, and the person by whom I felt bullied during the consultant meeting. I didn’t know how to feel about this turn of events – were you going to apologize for me and promise to get someone more capable on the project? – but I sat in your office nevertheless pregnant with anticipation at what came next.

And what came next I’ll never forget. With the call on speakerphone, you proceeded to jump down Mark’s throat, stood up for me, for our firm, and for our place in this project. The call got heated, but you never backed down and held your ground fully. I was at once relieved and invigorated by your moxie. I’d never had a boss stand up for me like this, and I couldn’t believe how lucky I was not only to have the unqualified support of my leader, but to get to see it in such a demonstrable way.

The next meeting I had with the consultant team, Mark was sweet as pie and from that day forward solicited my input and took a collaborative approach to everything we did together. It was a stunning turn of events, and one I reflect upon frequently when I’m nervous about standing up for myself and my work.

Mike Gaughan, you taught me to have confidence in my work and to stand up for myself. You always had my back and had best interests of your team in mind in everything you did.

And I’m going to miss you so much.

***

Nearly two and a half years ago, I wrote this piece about my depression and all the many things in my life contributing to my hopeless state of mind. As my situation has vastly improved since then, I wish not to revisit that, only to point to this pertinent section about my wife, and an opportunity with a different PR firm in town that presented itself:

“Sure enough, I set her up with one of my consultants to talk about corporate training. The meeting is serendipitous as this company needs her exact skillset at the exact time she’s waltzing into their consciousness. The company is so jazzed about her, they have to have her RIGHT NOW.

She explains to them that she’s happy to come work for them, but they need to understand that in order to have her RIGHT NOW, she’s going to have to burn a couple bridges. In her words, “So if you hire me, DON’T FUCK ME.” They agree, and proceed to hire her.

Three months later, they fucked her.”

I share this anecdote only because working for a PR agency can be extremely unforgiving, and when the winds of billable hours change (and they can change quickly), one of the easiest ways to stay in business is to lay off employees. This is exactly what happened to Kristin, and the bruises this left in its wake were painful.

A couple of months later, Kristin and I had dinner with Mike and Jeff at Barolo, their favorite spot. I shared this story with them because it had re-contextualized my experience during the economic downturn in 2008 and 2009. At MGA, we were affected like thousands of other businesses, and saw our profitability erode.

Rather than function like a traditional PR firm, they laid off only one employee while everyone else took a pay cut. Mike, Jeff and Cricket Smith (the third founder of MGA) met with each of us individually to explain the situation, assert our value to the team, and solicit our input for how to generate new business. In the moment it’s happening and you find out you’re taking a pay cut, you don’t know exactly how to feel – angry? resentful? bummed out? – but when a couple of years later I saw the alternative path, I became nothing but grateful for the way they handled it.

I shared with them my gratitude and my appreciation for their choice in a tough situation and teared up as I thought about what that choice symbolized in terms of the affection they must have felt for all of us who looked to them for guidance and leadership. They told me it was, in fact, not an easy storm to weather, but that my words meant a lot to them. They could have handled it differently, but they chose this way. I’ll always be thankful for the way they did.

We finished our meal and then proceeded to The Crown Social where we drank, laughed, and told stories well into the night, running up an impressive bar tab in the process. It was a glorious night, and the night where I felt comfortable calling Mike and Jeff not just my former employers, leaders I deeply respected, and professionals I admired… I could call them my friends.

***

Mike (along with Jeff and Cricket) was a pure humanist. His words, his work and his interactions were always done with intent, and that intent was always about providing something additive to the world. No matter the client, Mike taught me that everything we do should have meaning, should be thoughtful and well-crafted and should be in service of advancing understanding or empathy.

That’s what makes Mike a legend in this industry. He was better at his craft than 99.9% of everyone who’s ever done it, and I am humbled at the opportunity to learn under his tutelage. Having worked directly with him on more than a dozen different clients over the course of four years, I can say with certainty that I learned more from him about how to be a professional communicator than anyone else. But that’s not what I’ll miss about him. Although, that is why I chose him as the very first guest on my podcast.

Mike and I at the MGA offices after I interviewed him for my show.
Mike and I at the MGA offices after I interviewed him for my show.

When I think about Mike, I first think about his incredible, booming laugh. It was seismic. And it could shake whatever ennui you were sticky with loose from your psyche and turn your day around. It was a force of nature and one of the rare sounds I can call up in my head at will. It never fails to make me smile.

I’ll miss that laugh. I’ll miss his incredible zest for life. I’ll miss the way he used to bust my balls, which, admittedly, took me a while to learn that he did this because he loved me. I’ll miss his endless well of entertaining anecdotes. I’ll miss his warm, smiling face.

I’ll miss my friend.

Rest in peace, Mike Gaughan.

Filed Under: Tribute

Around Town

August 14, 2015 by Jon 3 Comments

paqUHha

Building on my previous post about becoming one of the “Day People,” and having now worked in a variety of places all over the city, it’s time to build on this concept a bit. I find it uncouth to be some freeloading crotchstain and just show up at a business to use their free wi-fi, so it’s vital that I buy something.

I tried working at the libraries near my house – where it’s fine to be a freeloading crotchstain since you’ve (presumably) already paid your taxes, and thus, have no further commerce pre-requisites to fulfill – but I ran into two problems with this.

  • There are kids EVERYWHERE during the summer, which, even with your headphones in, is distracting because kids move with such unpredictable and different cadence from adults. You can’t not watch kids even if it’s just to see what they do next. They’re mystifying.
  • Thanks either to poor management of resources by our government, the increasing distaste of voters to fund basically anything that even appears extraneous, or some unholy combination of the two; libraries are open at weird, short, and not terribly convenient hours.

[shakes fist at government cronies] [shakes other fist at misguided voter ideology] [remains unsure which fist he should actually engage]

Thus, coffee shops and cafes! What follows is a list of places I’ve gotten work done, and something from there I happen to really like. Important note before we start: I don’t drink coffee – which I realize could get me branded a heretic depending on your level of coffee fetishism – so you won’t find any of it listed here, which will likely influence your enjoyment of this list.

Look, coffee tastes fine and I accept that my Facebook feed is flush with people who believe they can’t live without it, but I neither need the caffeine, nor like the taste THAT much. I also accept that my position is objectively wrong, much like my inability to care about Game of Thrones. So let’s just move on.

Here’s some good stuff from some cool places around town. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Denver, Good stuff Tagged With: Cake Crumbs Bakery, Deft Communications, Denver Bicycle Cafe, Denver PR, Fork & Spoon, Hooked on Colfax, Rooster & Moon, Sugar Bakeshop

Deft Communications Announces Three Additions to its Client Roster

July 16, 2015 by Jon 1 Comment

deftcomm

DENVER (July 16, 2015) – Deft Communications, Denver-based communications counseling firm specializing in communications training, content creation, employee engagement and employee activation is proud to announce three new clients in the oil and gas sector and real estate.

“We are honored to work with these organizations to help them achieve their business and communications goals,” said Deft Communications Principal Jon Ekstrom.

The Peak Properties Group, a full-service, Denver-based real estate team, has hired Deft Communications to provide copywriting, content generation and promotional strategy.

Vital for Colorado, a broad coalition of business, civic and economic development leaders along with thousands of Coloradans from across the state, brought together to support and promote the benefits of energy production in Colorado, has chosen Deft Communications to promote expanding the availability of US oil and natural gas.

Whiting Petroleum, an independent exploration and production company with an oil focused asset base, has retained Deft Communications to enhance and implement an employee education and engagement program for its employees in Colorado and North Dakota.

About Deft Communications: Deft Communications is a Denver-based communications counseling firm specializing in communications training, content creation, employee engagement and employee activation. We call ourselves “Deft” because it guides our approach to every client we work with, and each project we do. Any communications project your business undertakes should be in service of helping to achieve your business goals. Being “Deft” means understanding those goals, and tailoring our approach to stay nimble in a constantly evolving environment, being resourceful, and maintaining a sureness of touch. We are savvy communicators with more than two decades experience in a variety of disciplines and across communications platforms.

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Filed Under: Announcements Tagged With: Announcements, Client Additions, Deft Communications, Denver PR, Press Releases

The Kids Are Alright

July 9, 2015 by Jon Leave a Comment

While in Chicago recently, I got into an argument with my mom and uncle about music. My uncle basically asserted that “only the music of the 60s and 70s had substance” (which is ludicrous on its face), but allowed me to break out a line from one of the most underrated movies of our generation, Airheads. I said, “Is that a fact? So are you gonna tell me that ‘Purple Haze’ says something?”

We ended up going back and forth for several minutes while I basically served as defense counsel for three decades of music and youth culture in general. It’s a stance I take up probably more than I should, but for whatever reason when people want to pick on the youngest generation, it always gets my hackles up. I can’t fight the urge to call nonsense on this entire posture. Here’s a quote to illustrate why:

“The children now love luxury. They have bad manners, contempt for authority; they show disrespect for elders and love chatter in place of exercise.”

You know who said that? Socrates.

So literally, crapping on the new generation has been going on since the beginning of civilization, and yet we persevere. Starting with Socrates, if every generation seems to be worse than the one that preceded it, how are we even still here? Because that belief is just patently wrong, that’s why. The new generation is fine. They’re just different, and that’s frightening.

A perfect example is this Slate article called “Why Teenagers Love Making Jokes About 9/11.” The article’s title is slightly misleading because what teenagers actually love to mock are 9/11 Truthers, who, with some distance and ironic detachment, look increasingly ridiculous. I encourage you to read the whole thing, but summarized, I think this line is telling:

“Teenagers have surveyed the digital artifacts left in the wake of their parents’ trauma and decided they were taking up too much cultural space. So they’re flattening them into jokes and throwing them away.”

That’s wonderful! That’s progress! Dammit, that’s seeking to make the world a better place. They’re taking these 9/11 Truther memes and now using them to scathe the idiocy of anti-vaxxers as well. If that isn’t evidence of tremendous critical thinking and cultural appropriation in the name of science, logic, and rationality, I don’t know what is.

Teenagers necessarily have a unique worldview, and in expressing it, they disorient the hegemony we take for granted as we age. I’m grateful for this disruption. And although the older we get, the more uncomfortable that disruption becomes, it’s inevitable, so why fret and why not embrace it?

And lest you think the teenage world is all Weird Twitter and non-sequitir memes on social media platforms you don’t use, check out this video: Teens React to 90’s Fashion – JNCO Jeans.

Listen to those kids talk about how big those pant legs are! And why would anyone wear these?!? You know who they sound like? They sound just like their grandparents. Yep, those same people who freaked out when their kids wore them to school in the 90s.

I personally remember those exact reactions from the parents at my school when JNCOs were popular, and to hear these same traditionalist opinions from people nearly 20 years my junior only made me laugh. Hard.

And I laugh because while it’s expected that teenagers will surprise you with their opinions, it’s not usually in the direction of agreeing with the oldest generation. You never know what they’re going to say. But I do know one thing.

The kids are alright. The kids are always alright.

(This post was partially inspired by a Facebook conversation with William and Ryan Nee. h/t to William Nee for posting the Slate article on his wall.)

Filed Under: Culture

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