4 Nov 2018, 06:39

I was interested to hear the topic of persuasiveness come up because I am honestly fascinated by how much this is part of businesses today. The whole advertising industry, for example, relies on the fact that wording things a certain way makes us feel a certain feeling in relation to a product or service.

I'm also fascinated by the idea that society can be seen as being made up of three protagonists per se: institutions (like businesses, agencies, government, etc.), individuals, and communities. Each is deeply tied to the other, and ideally, each should support and serve the other. It seems like a weakness in society today is that these protagonists are distrustful of each other, and all three suffer because of this.

I think that one way we can contribute to weaving these three protagonists closer to each other, thereby strengthening the very fabric of society, is by not considering our "individual/personal" life as different from our "work" life. Work may deal more with a community of people or clientele who we don't know on a personal level, or it may deal with a company or organization that we feel has no soul of its own. But without the bigger picture in mind of how society is strengthened by trust between these three protagonists, I tend to approach my professional connections with people in a different way.

I wouldn't try to make a close friend see me as more or less accomplished than I really am because it might damage our friendship when the truth came through. Could the same be true for a professional relationship?

I may be the only one in this boat, so please feel free to share your own views in contrast to this, but as individuals working with clients and companies, wouldn't complete truthfulness in all matters have a strengthening effect in the long run? I just worry that even in an instance where my approach might be to come across as busy (which I'm not hating on you guys for, I promise!), I might not perform to the standard that I would if I actually had the amount of experience and practice that a truly swamped artist would have, which might let my client down in the end. I'm genuinely interested in your thoughts guys, because I want to better understand where people are coming from who do this.

Also, I've been meaning to say somewhere that I think the amazing culture on this forum, where people are extremely considerate of each other compared to other places on the internet, has to do with the example set by Will, Jake and Lee. You guys are great people, and it's rubbing off on a whole generation of artists. Deepest gratitude for what you all do.