Monday 19 November 2012

Err...up there a bit and on the right


I have big flapping ears. I am, in common parlance, a nosy bugger. I make a point of listening in on the conversations of people I pass in the street or supermarket, in fact, anywhere I go. I’m not being nasty nosy you understand. It is, I assure you, rubber-necking with purpose. You see I’m fascinated by the way people give directions or instructions and I’m equally fascinated by the way people accept, absorb or disregard them.

Who hasn’t given or asked for directions at some point? This year, by dent of the Olympics and Paralympics, seemingly everyone in London became an unofficial tourist guide and information bureau. And one wonders how much damage the ramblings and misdirection of the average Bert or Hilda did to our national brand. Because the truth is that most are total rubbish when it comes to this kind of stuff...laughably so. For example; I once heard someone ask for directions to Hampton Court maze and saw the person they asked point to the ivy-clad bunkers at the top of Horseguard’s Parade.

‘Err’…up there a bit and on the right’ means absolutely nothing to most, let alone to a stranger to the city and yet vagaries such as this seem to the norm. If asked the way to ‘x’ the brain immediately calls up your cognitive map of that journey and it will consist of landmarks such as shops, buildings and monuments, the identifying markers that lace the journey together. Knowing that you will walk by Waitrose and the dragon statue in the middle of the road is a more concrete and visual way of giving instruction and it’s certainly more reassuring, as the markers are sought and mentally ticked as they are passed. But verbalising their map never occurs to most.

Worst of all are those who ‘umm’ and ‘arr’ and misdirect rather than say they don’t know.

Of course it works the other way around. Some will ask for directions and then tell you what you’re going to say before you say it, or contradict what you say in the belief that they know best even though they have no idea where they’re going. These types are usually macho-blokes who (by their spouses’ admission) can’t take instruction from women. One New Yorker actually said that to me when apologising for her husband’s manner. And here I have to confess that I once allowed a truly obnoxious bloke to go to South London to visit the British Museum because he insisted, contrary to my directions and superior knowledge, that that was where it was. And if you’re prepared to take the time to help others the comedy comes thick and fast; like the American student who I found standing with her back to Nelson’s column in Trafalgar Square, map in hand, who proceeded to ask me where (I promise you) Nelson’s Column was.

On an average day when I’m out and about I probably give directions to eight to ten people or groups. Many of them comment on the clarity of the instructions I give them and I suppose you might say that that is unsurprising given what I do. You might also say that people who work in communications are obviously going to be better at explaining stuff than those who don’t, but I don’t think that’s the case. I’ve worked with ‘communicators’ who couldn’t describe what they ate for breakfast let alone anything else.

Description is an art based on science; the words and diagrams that enable, whether that’s the completion of a safe and successful journey; the wiring of a plug; the baking of a cake; or the injury and divorce-free laying of a new floor.

It’s fundamental and that’s why it should be on the curriculum. Earlier this year, in response to the perceived decline of oratory skills across the board, there were also calls to introduce public speaking to the national curriculum as a stand-alone subject. But both are already part of the same. In some strata of the system they’re called ‘show and tell’, but for some reason that’s considered be the province of the Infants and Juniors’ and that’s a bit mad really, because one way or another we never stop doing either.