
The poor checklist.
Dull. Simple. Boring.
I mean, who can argue with that, right?
Huh? Save $175M? Save 1500 lives? With a boring checklist?
That's exactly what Dr. Peter Pronovost did with a simple checklist.
"Doctors are supposed to (1) wash their hands with soap, (2) clean the patient's skin with chlorhexidine antiseptic, (3) put sterile drapes over the entire patient, (4) wear a sterile mask, hat, gown, and gloves, and (5) put a sterile dressing over the catheter site once the line is in."
But the power of simple checklists can extend beyond doctors, nurses and hospitals. Checklists can be used in your corporate video story.
We'll get to that in a second. But first...

Don't tell Dan and Chip Heath. Dan and Chip, authors of "Made to Stick: Why Some Ideas Survive and Others Die," recently posted a "sticky" riff on the boring and dull "checklist." The brothers submit that the boring checklist can actually be "heroic" by:
Remember when I shared the importance of having heroes in your video story and video dragons to create empathy with your audience? We can take these ideas and wrap them into the power of a simple "heroic" checklist.
Let's take the "heroic checklist" concept and use it to create The Hero's Checklist.
Video clients need heroes embracing these qualities:
1. Passion. Helping others by aligning personal and organizational values ignites our hero into action.
2. Storyteller. Telling stories with others is fun and comes naturally to them.
3. Interesting. Sharing their points of view encourages us to learn more about them.
4. Personality. Revealing their charisma, charm and presence attracts us
5. Authenticity. Showing us their "truth," we know they're real; just themselves.
Simple? You bet. Heroic? You decide.
As the Heath's article mentions, Dr. Provonost would gather doctors and nurses together and ask, "Would you ever intentionally allow a patient's health to be harmed in your presence?" They'd say, "Of course not." Then he'd hit them with the punch line: "Then how can you see someone not washing their hands and let them get away with it?"
Let's ask the same question but framed with our hero in mind.
"Would you ever intentionally allow your corporate video story to be harmed with your knowledge?"
You say, "Of course not." Then you get hit with the punch line:
"Then how can you show your company's story without your heroes and let your company get away with it?"
---Tom