The Green Sheet Online Edition

May 5, 2016 • 16:05:02

Word play your way to success

A unique facility for complex verbal language is one of the things that set human beings apart from other mammals. And word games are a tool people use to entertain and educate. Acrostics, for example, are excellent in aiding the retention of useful or inspirational information.

With an acrostic, the first letters of each line, when combined, spell a word, or sometimes an acronym, that is easy to remember. We're all familiar with the acrostic KISS. In this example, each line is only one word:

Paul H. Green put acrostics to good use in Good Selling!SM: The Basics. When making the point that success takes effort, he used the acrostic EFFORT. It contains sentences after each letter instead of single words, which affords the opportunity to include more information or instruction. Using sentences does, however, make the acrostic more difficult to remember, so there's a tradeoff:

Acrostics for challenging situations

Green offered another acrostic for times when you're meeting with a high-level executive and in danger of forgetting the basics of selling because you're caught up in the importance of the person you're facing. "If you start to get flustered or intimidated by the stature of the person, all you need to do is remember to put out your RADAR," Green wrote.

So, next time you come across an idea you want to remember, why not come up with an acrostic of your own? Here's one I just created:

End of Story

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