“Runners left in scoring position” is one of those “relative”
baseball stats.
If a team scores a lot of runs and wins big, RLISP (runners
who were on second or third base and in a position to score but did not) is an
afterthought. But if the game is tight or the team loses by a couple of runs, the
number of runners who had the potential to score but didn't takes on more significance.
At its core, RLISP is a measure of missed opportunities, of
something that began with great promise but was not brought to its ultimate
conclusion.
A lot of shows stumble with their own version of RLISP: good
ideas that don’t get sufficiently developed and simply remain “in scoring
position.”
To more get more interesting, unique and fully
developed content, try this 3-step, “brainstorm your brainstorming” technique. We
did this last week with a room full of morning shows but you can absolutely do this by
yourself with great results.
First, we brainstormed the big topics: things we believed listeners are or were going to
be doing or talking about, things that are now - or would in the near future be - impacting listeners' lives, and things the group had heard or experienced that they felt listeners
would find interesting. We wrote all the ideas down without judging. The first
round is about quantity not quality.
Next we choose one topic from our list that the teams felt
had the best potential and did a second round of brainstorming, this time on all
the different ways the topic could be approached. Again, we wrote down all the different
perspectives, angles, or “takes.”
Here’s what we came up with for our big topic: “school
reopens next week.”
Lastly from this list we chose the three approaches the teams
believed would be the most fun/entertaining to listen to, that provided a
showcase for each player on the show, that we could do stellar execution on, and
that offered opportunities for listener engagement and participation. Then we brainstormed how we’d execute each with the goal of presenting the big topic three times over the course of the show, but each time from a different angle.
“Schools reopen” put the idea on base.
Brainstorming the treatments put the idea into “scoring
position.”
Brainstorming the execution drove the idea home.
Your content will be richer if you approach your good ideas
as if they were simply in scoring position and it was up to you to keep batting
(developing and enhancing) until you brought them all the way home.
1 comment:
DO invite talent from other formats to join you. Fellow Consultants Harv Blain harvblain@vallierichardsdonovan.com, Peter Smith Peter@DemersProgramming.com and I did one with multiple formats which produced some great ideas.
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