If you're a communications manager or consultant for a company, you're going to be writing things that need the approval of the CEO before they go out.

And the VP of Marketing, of course. And the VP of Engineering better have a look too, because it's technical. And hey, this piece is about our new customer—everyone who worked on the sale and implementation better review it too.

And so you enter the Approval Death Spiral—revision after revision—trying to work in everyone's pet idea, arbitrate conflicting viewpoints, and remember why writing the piece seemed like a good idea at one time.

Writing by committee—unless the writer imposes strong discipline—ends with too many words and too little focus, and it is a colossal waste of time.

A simple tool called the “goals worksheet” can help you avoid the Approval Death Spiral, keep your sanity, and still give everyone a chance to review and approve what goes out. It goes back to one basic concept: making sure that goals and expectations are clear from the outset.

What Is it?

The goals worksheet is a one-page document that states why you're writing the piece, what it must say, and who will review it. It's especially effective with high-tech organizations that value a structured, methodical approach to everything.

Our goals worksheet has four sections: the positioning statement, reviewers, goals and key messages.

Section 1: the Positioning Statement

Have a positioning statement. Don't have one? Get one. Put it at the top of your goals worksheet. Everything you write had better support that positioning statement. If you can't do it, then (a) the piece isn't going to further your company's message, is a waste of time and should be abandoned, or (b) your company's positioning statement is out of line with the company's daily activities, and—if the activities are the right ones—needs to be revisited.

Section 2: Reviewers

Who needs to approve your piece before it is published? This will vary according to what type of document you're writing and how formal your management structure is. The CEO usually wants to approve press releases. The VP of Marketing may be the only one who needs to approve email newsletters. For customer case studies you may want to broaden your reviewer network to include the people closest to the customer. Enter their names on your goals worksheet.

Section 3: Goals

Before you start writing, get together with at least one of your key reviewers. Include the person who has the “final say” on the piece (probably the CEO). Include the other person on your list who usually disagrees with the CEO. Get them together now and save yourself the headache of arbitrating their disagreements later (usually by writing and rewriting and rewriting).

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ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Lisa Schaertl Lisa Schaertl is president of Tech Savvy Marketing (www.techsavvymarketing.com).