My focus is on teaching writing in the thought-leadership style, but occasionally, I teach people copywriting for their business.
In April, I taught my Business Origin Story Crash Course to members of Harvard Alumni Entrepreneurs. In this session, people created a first draft of their business origin story, a text that helps their readers understand where their business came from and why they are pursuing it.
This was a fun session with people from diverse fields, including justice, medicine, and beauty & wellness.
Following a template
We started with a bit of theory on origin stories. They’re stories that are mostly backward-looking but do open up possibilities for the future.
Then I showed the group an example of my own business origin story, and we looked it line by line.
Finally, I provided a template based on my own story, I set the timer, and participants all began writing.
Here’s a beautiful story that one participant wrote in my workshop.
Meet Sylvia Clute, a former prosecutor who is now the president of the Alliance for Unitive Justice.
For 28 years…
I was a trial attorney. I can tell you from personal experience that we have a broken justice system that produces way too much injustice.
Ours is a system of proportional revenge—it answers harm with more harm and calls it “justice,” as long as the harm we do is equal in measure to the harm for which we seek revenge.
When we say, “the punishment fits the crime,” or “I’m going to get even,” we are talking about proportional revenge.
Instead, we can implement a justice system that has no punitive elements, a system that may be called “justice as love.”
I discovered this concept in 1987 when, while practicing law and exploring my spiritual journey, I encountered the idea that there are two models of justice: vengeance and love.
By Rhea Wessel