Chris Pahlow:

Relationships are at the heart of impact.

Chris Pahlow:

You can't really do a whole lot just working away on your

Chris Pahlow:

own in the lab or at your desk.

Chris Pahlow:

We need connections.

Chris Pahlow:

You don't have unlimited resources.

Chris Pahlow:

You don't have unlimited time.

Chris Pahlow:

So it's really important to think about for the life cycle of the

Chris Pahlow:

project, who are the different types of people or organizations where

Chris Pahlow:

your time is gonna be best spent.

Chris Pahlow:

A personal mission is trying to create a better work environment

Chris Pahlow:

for those professional staff who are working so, so hard.

Chris Pahlow:

And I think they deserve a lot better a lot of the time.

Sarah McLusky:

Hello there.

Sarah McLusky:

I'm Sarah McLusky and this is Research Adjacent.

Sarah McLusky:

Each episode I talk to amazing research adjacent professionals about what

Sarah McLusky:

they do and why it makes a difference.

Sarah McLusky:

Keep listening to find out why we think the research adjacent space

Sarah McLusky:

is where the real magic happens.

Sarah McLusky:

Hello and welcome to another episode of Research Adjacent.

Sarah McLusky:

Chris Pahlow, my guest today, is joining us all the way from Australia.

Sarah McLusky:

I first heard of and heard Chris through his excellent podcast

Sarah McLusky:

Amplifying Research, and if you haven't listened to it yet, make sure you go

Sarah McLusky:

and check it -out after you finish listening to this episode of course.

Sarah McLusky:

Chris runs a consultancy business, also called Amplifying Research, where

Sarah McLusky:

he helps researchers think through research impact, and importantly the

Sarah McLusky:

relationships that underpin that impact.

Sarah McLusky:

Chris didn't have the most conventional path into this work.

Sarah McLusky:

He started out as an indie filmmaker and took on some teaching

Sarah McLusky:

work to help pay the bills.

Sarah McLusky:

This turned out to be a baptism of fire, but also the path that led him into

Sarah McLusky:

research communications, and impact.

Sarah McLusky:

Chris and I talk about why relationships are at the heart of the work he does,

Sarah McLusky:

how being independent can help him be honest, even when it's not what people

Sarah McLusky:

want to hear and the often invisible work of research professional staff.

Sarah McLusky:

Listen on to hear Chris's story.

Sarah McLusky:

Welcome along to the Research Adjacent podcast.

Sarah McLusky:

Chris, it is fantastic to have you here all the way from Australia.

Sarah McLusky:

Tell us a bit about who you are and what you do.

Chris Pahlow:

Sarah, thank you very much for having me on the show.

Chris Pahlow:

Big fan of what you're doing and the mission, of championing research

Chris Pahlow:

adjacent folks is something I'm a big believer in and I'm looking

Chris Pahlow:

forward to chatting about it.

Chris Pahlow:

What do I do?

Chris Pahlow:

I run a consulting company here in Melbourne, Australia

Chris Pahlow:

called Amplifying Research.

Chris Pahlow:

I work with academic teams, primarily focused on research

Chris Pahlow:

centers and folks like that.

Chris Pahlow:

And I think if I had to think of two words to sum up what my focus

Chris Pahlow:

is, it's impact and relationships.

Chris Pahlow:

I don't think the language the sector uses is always that helpful.

Chris Pahlow:

Terms like comms and engagement, and dissemination and science

Chris Pahlow:

communication get thrown around a lot.

Chris Pahlow:

And so sometimes I get put into those buckets.

Chris Pahlow:

But the way I think about it if someone says, Hey Chris, we wanna do a podcast

Chris Pahlow:

series to disseminate our research, or we wanna hold an event, or we

Chris Pahlow:

need to update our branding or update our website, inevitably when we are

Chris Pahlow:

thinking about external audiences that researchers need to work with, whether

Chris Pahlow:

that's practitioners, whether that's industry, whether that's the dreaded

Chris Pahlow:

general public in quotation marks.

Chris Pahlow:

Ultimately, when we start talking about things we end up talking about the team

Chris Pahlow:

within the research center or within the department or whatever it is.

Chris Pahlow:

And it's all about relationships.

Chris Pahlow:

I'm thinking about something Sarah Morton said, Sarah Morton, from

Chris Pahlow:

Matter Of Focus, basically saying that relationships are at the heart of impact.

Chris Pahlow:

You can't really do a whole lot just working away on your

Chris Pahlow:

own in the lab or at your desk.

Chris Pahlow:

We need connections.

Chris Pahlow:

And so what I do, when I'm working with researchers and academic

Chris Pahlow:

teams, I help them think about.

Chris Pahlow:

What do they want to do?

Chris Pahlow:

What impact do they want to contribute to, and what are the different relationships

Chris Pahlow:

they need to build and strengthen over time to make that impact possible?

Sarah McLusky:

I think that sounds very much aligned with

Sarah McLusky:

my take on things as well.

Sarah McLusky:

And I agree that the language that we use around it is not always helpful.

Sarah McLusky:

Where I find myself talking about, oh, I do things like communications, but

Sarah McLusky:

it's but that isn't really what I do.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

It is.

Sarah McLusky:

As you say, much more about people.

Sarah McLusky:

So tell us a bit about, so you're based in Australia and I think

Sarah McLusky:

impact, as we said, thinking a little bit about the language, impact is

Sarah McLusky:

a really big deal here in the UK.

Sarah McLusky:

I'd love to hear about whether that understanding of impact in

Sarah McLusky:

Australia is the same or whether it's slightly different and what are

Sarah McLusky:

the priorities there around impact.

Chris Pahlow:

I think we're probably still a little bit behind where

Chris Pahlow:

things are at in the UK, but impact is becoming increasingly important.

Chris Pahlow:

If we think about things like grant applications, the government funding

Chris Pahlow:

bodies, the big funding bodies, they do want to see some sort of

Chris Pahlow:

evidence of impact if they're gonna be awarding taxpayers, money to to

Chris Pahlow:

research projects, they want to see it.

Chris Pahlow:

I think.

Chris Pahlow:

I'd like to think it's becoming more and more something that's

Chris Pahlow:

on the radar of academics.

Chris Pahlow:

Certainly the people that I work with regularly and the people that

Chris Pahlow:

inspire me and even inspired me to completely change my career are

Chris Pahlow:

the ones who are focused on impact.

Chris Pahlow:

And yeah, I feel super grateful to be working with people like that every day.

Sarah McLusky:

Oh, that's brilliant.

Sarah McLusky:

And I think what I particularly love about, I know the concept of impact.

Sarah McLusky:

It isn't, sometimes it's a little bit of a tricky thing for

Sarah McLusky:

people to get their head around.

Sarah McLusky:

Sometimes it's a bit of a love hate thing.

Sarah McLusky:

I know here in the UK it's all become very incentivized, which

Sarah McLusky:

has become a little bit difficult.

Sarah McLusky:

But the general concept of it that it's, it is about not just let's randomly put

Sarah McLusky:

stuff out into the world, but thinking through really carefully who you want

Sarah McLusky:

to reach and why you want to reach them.

Sarah McLusky:

So tell us a bit about your process your kind of thinking of when

Sarah McLusky:

you're working with somebody.

Chris Pahlow:

That's a great question and you've caught me

Chris Pahlow:

at a very interesting time.

Chris Pahlow:

If I can share a little bit about, I guess me and my motivation, something

Chris Pahlow:

I've been saying a lot recently is.

Chris Pahlow:

I just get really cranky sometimes and I've I've ended up doing the work that

Chris Pahlow:

I do and indeed focusing on trying to develop new ways of working and thinking

Chris Pahlow:

about impact and thinking about the relationships academics need to have.

Chris Pahlow:

It's just because I get too cranky and too frustrated with

Chris Pahlow:

the way things have been done.

Chris Pahlow:

And I can give you some specific examples at varying levels of

Chris Pahlow:

infuriatingness, that's not even a word, but various levels that can make

Chris Pahlow:

my blood boil or, make your eyes roll.

Chris Pahlow:

And for a long time.

Chris Pahlow:

I was consulting specifically on academic videos and podcasts, 'cause we can,

Chris Pahlow:

maybe we can talk about this later, but I have a long background in the

Chris Pahlow:

film industry and so I ended up working with academics almost by accident.

Chris Pahlow:

And so yeah, people would come and say, Hey, we finished our research

Chris Pahlow:

project, or we're almost finished.

Chris Pahlow:

And let's disseminate it and then you'd be like, okay, well it would've been nice

Chris Pahlow:

if you came and talked to us at the start of the project that you're here now.

Chris Pahlow:

That's good.

Chris Pahlow:

That's a start.

Chris Pahlow:

Let's talk about

Sarah McLusky:

That's such a recurring theme.

Chris Pahlow:

I know.

Chris Pahlow:

I know.

Chris Pahlow:

And the thing is, everyone's trying their best.

Chris Pahlow:

So there's a, I hope, a happy ending to this story.

Chris Pahlow:

Certainly.

Chris Pahlow:

I'm very optimistic, but people would come and they know they need to do

Chris Pahlow:

something with their research, whether it is because on a personal level

Chris Pahlow:

they have a, an impact driven mission or whether it's just because the

Chris Pahlow:

incentives are changing, as you say.

Chris Pahlow:

But then you'd start to ask them questions about, do you have any behavioral goals?

Chris Pahlow:

Do you want people to change what they do?

Chris Pahlow:

Do you want people to change their beliefs and who?

Chris Pahlow:

What type of people do you need to be engaging?

Chris Pahlow:

And sometimes they would say, I don't, I dunno, I didn't think about that.

Chris Pahlow:

And sometimes they would give you a very long list of my grandma, every person

Chris Pahlow:

in the village I grew up in, scientists, you people in space, alien, the general

Chris Pahlow:

public like I was saying before, right?

Chris Pahlow:

And again I don't put any blame on any of them, and this is something I've been

Chris Pahlow:

thinking about a lot the last few years.

Chris Pahlow:

I just don't think there's been nearly enough support.

Chris Pahlow:

Certainly not what I've experienced here in Australia.

Chris Pahlow:

I'm yeah, keen to hear what it's like in your experience over in the UK,

Chris Pahlow:

but I just saw so many researchers doing incredible stuff in all sorts

Chris Pahlow:

of fields and some of it very moving.

Chris Pahlow:

I felt really humbled to be just sitting in on some of the meetings where people,

Chris Pahlow:

they're dedicating their life to really trying to make a positive difference

Chris Pahlow:

and it just didn't seem like they were getting the support they needed to,

Chris Pahlow:

to drive that impact and the longer I got to work with people like that and

Chris Pahlow:

was kicking around the universities here in Melbourne, it just seemed like

Chris Pahlow:

there are some big structural issues.

Chris Pahlow:

And on the one hand, universities are trying to take lessons from industry,

Chris Pahlow:

whether, that's something like the film industry or podcasting is increasingly

Chris Pahlow:

big in the academic world now.

Chris Pahlow:

So whether they're trying to take lessons from those kind of folks, or whether

Chris Pahlow:

it's from consulting firms or whether it's from, advertising and marketing.

Chris Pahlow:

There's a lot of great stuff there, but the way it's applied,

Chris Pahlow:

in my opinion, in the academic world really has a lot of gaps.

Chris Pahlow:

And so that's what I'm trying to tackle now.

Chris Pahlow:

And so to go back to your question of what's my approach when it comes

Chris Pahlow:

to helping people think about who they work with, this is hot off the

Chris Pahlow:

presses I haven't even published it on my website yet, but I feel

Chris Pahlow:

like people need to prioritize.

Chris Pahlow:

That's a really big thing, I understand.

Chris Pahlow:

Your work is super important and you're dedicating your life for

Chris Pahlow:

a huge part of your life to it.

Chris Pahlow:

But you don't have unlimited resources.

Chris Pahlow:

You don't have unlimited time.

Chris Pahlow:

So it's really important to think about for the life cycle of the

Chris Pahlow:

project, who are the different types of people or organizations where

Chris Pahlow:

your time is gonna be best spent.

Chris Pahlow:

And there's been some great thinking done like Professor Mark Reed and his

Chris Pahlow:

team developing the three I framework, encouraging people to think about

Chris Pahlow:

not just influence and interest, which those are two criteria that

Chris Pahlow:

have been used for a very long time.

Chris Pahlow:

But we also need to think about who are we potentially impacting with our work.

Chris Pahlow:

So people have been doing great thinking about that, but I also think on top of

Chris Pahlow:

prioritizing, we also need to do a bit of categorization and differentiation.

Chris Pahlow:

Because in my experience on the ground, working with research teams, when

Chris Pahlow:

I'd asked them, okay, who are the stakeholders or who are the relevant

Chris Pahlow:

parties you think are most important?

Chris Pahlow:

We end up with a huge list or a huge Eisenhower matrix just

Chris Pahlow:

with so many different names and so many different cards.

Chris Pahlow:

And we'd look at them all, and people would ask, I think, very legitimate

Chris Pahlow:

questions of how are we supposed to choose between community members who might be

Chris Pahlow:

affected by our work and a funding body, or the faculty executive or, a peak

Chris Pahlow:

body, like they're just categorically different types of relationships.

Chris Pahlow:

And what I'm trying to do at the moment is to get teams thinking about

Chris Pahlow:

not just the dissemination or the translation or knowledge mobilization.

Chris Pahlow:

It's really good to think about the beneficiaries or

Chris Pahlow:

end users of the research.

Chris Pahlow:

But you also gotta think about what I'm calling ecosystem enablers.

Chris Pahlow:

So who are the people or organizations that are gonna set up your team

Chris Pahlow:

for success and if you're in a university that probably is gonna be

Chris Pahlow:

decision makers in the faculty or in chancellery or something like that.

Chris Pahlow:

It's really important that you understand the strategic

Chris Pahlow:

priorities of the funding bodies.

Chris Pahlow:

Increasingly I'm talking with people who are looking for philanthropic

Chris Pahlow:

funding or, or, industry partnerships.

Chris Pahlow:

So they're not just thinking about funding on a project level, but

Chris Pahlow:

they're thinking about the future of their center or their organization.

Chris Pahlow:

How can it last more than those first five years?

Chris Pahlow:

So I guess that's just an example yeah.

Chris Pahlow:

Prioritization, but categorization and thinking about the fact that

Chris Pahlow:

not all relationships are the same.

Chris Pahlow:

They do have different purposes in the lifecycle of your project or your

Chris Pahlow:

organization or indeed your career.

Chris Pahlow:

And I guess I'll say one other thing.

Chris Pahlow:

I really like the word relationships 'cause I think it has some

Chris Pahlow:

really helpful connotations.

Chris Pahlow:

And if we go back to my criticism of the existing language it's very common

Chris Pahlow:

for me to hear people say things like, oh yeah, comms is one way.

Chris Pahlow:

I'm just gonna be broadcasting out my ideas, which I think

Chris Pahlow:

is based on a fundamental and very unhelpful misconception.

Chris Pahlow:

And they talk about engagement is two ways.

Chris Pahlow:

So comms is one way.

Chris Pahlow:

I'm just gonna be shouting into the void and hoping someone listens.

Chris Pahlow:

Engagement, I, maybe I'll do some listening and I'll do some

Chris Pahlow:

talking and we'll split it 50 50.

Chris Pahlow:

But when people think about engagement, I think that can still

Chris Pahlow:

have some pretty heavy limitations.

Chris Pahlow:

They might think about consultation.

Chris Pahlow:

Like I, I'll go and do a focus group with some representatives

Chris Pahlow:

from a community group.

Chris Pahlow:

And it could just be a one-off or a short term kind of situation.

Chris Pahlow:

Whereas I think relationships suggest something that's ongoing, something

Chris Pahlow:

that's reciprocal something that requires, investment and even like

Chris Pahlow:

love and care from all parties.

Chris Pahlow:

And I think those things are all really important.

Chris Pahlow:

I guess just for life and just for being a person, but especially if you really

Chris Pahlow:

do want your work to have lasting impact.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah, I think it's so true.

Sarah McLusky:

I think when you say they're shouting into the void there's many

Sarah McLusky:

a research communication thing I've seen that it just felt like that.

Sarah McLusky:

It's just yeah, we've got some money.

Sarah McLusky:

We're just gonna create this thing and then we don't quite

Sarah McLusky:

know what we're gonna do with it.

Sarah McLusky:

I think it's so interesting is always when it's a tagged on part of the

Sarah McLusky:

research, there's always that people always say, I haven't got the time.

Sarah McLusky:

Whereas if you think about it as just an integral part of how the research

Sarah McLusky:

is done, as you say, not just thinking about it as like a one-off thing,

Sarah McLusky:

but like an ongoing relationship that runs, all the way through, that's just

Sarah McLusky:

threaded through everything that you do.

Sarah McLusky:

And then in those cases, you are gonna have considerably more impact

Sarah McLusky:

than chucking thousands of pounds in animation that you're gonna

Sarah McLusky:

post once on social media and then it's gonna disappear without trace.

Sarah McLusky:

And actually so much of that impact really is about the difference

Sarah McLusky:

that we make to people, isn't it?

Chris Pahlow:

A hundred percent.

Chris Pahlow:

Yeah.

Chris Pahlow:

Yeah.

Chris Pahlow:

I would be so happy.

Chris Pahlow:

I'd be overjoyed if I, if anyone listening who's a researcher.

Chris Pahlow:

I know we're pro Sarah, we're probably preaching to, to the choir

Chris Pahlow:

here because it is, I know you

Sarah McLusky:

I think probably the people who listen to this.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Chris Pahlow:

I guess what I would, what I'd love to see in the future is if

Chris Pahlow:

folks working in research organizations could just take one day a quarter.

Chris Pahlow:

Just take stock of where are your current relationships at, the

Chris Pahlow:

important ones, and just do a bit of thinking about what relationships

Chris Pahlow:

might be most important next quarter.

Chris Pahlow:

If we could just do that four times a year, I think that would

Chris Pahlow:

already make a big difference.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

Well maybe you're giving yourself something to organize there, to a

Sarah McLusky:

kind of online little retreat thing.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

Get people to come and talk about it.

Sarah McLusky:

I think, as you say, I think our, most of our audience for this podcast

Sarah McLusky:

are, will be on board with you.

Sarah McLusky:

But yeah, maybe if that message.

Sarah McLusky:

Even if people, I think sometimes I find with this podcast, even if it just helps

Sarah McLusky:

people feel that they're not alone, I think that can be really helpful.

Sarah McLusky:

And even if the conversations they're having are challenging it know that

Sarah McLusky:

other people are facing the same challenges, I think can be really helpful.

Sarah McLusky:

So you've hinted there that you're, this isn't a world

Sarah McLusky:

that you've always worked in.

Sarah McLusky:

You came from a very different background.

Sarah McLusky:

Tell us a bit about how you've ended up doing what you do

Sarah McLusky:

now, what you did before.

Chris Pahlow:

It's a pretty long and unusual story.

Chris Pahlow:

I imagine I'm probably quite far from the average listener of this podcast.

Chris Pahlow:

I imagine a lot of them like yourself, probably went and did PhDs

Chris Pahlow:

and had this period where they were considering are they gonna continue

Chris Pahlow:

on the academic path or are they gonna do something research adjacent?

Chris Pahlow:

That's not my story.

Chris Pahlow:

I didn't go to, I didn't even go to film school.

Chris Pahlow:

I went to art school, so I'm really coming at it from a different angle.

Chris Pahlow:

And um, there's a lot of like little steps in my journey, which

Chris Pahlow:

at the time just seemed like really strange, almost random and at times

Chris Pahlow:

really frustrating kind of things.

Chris Pahlow:

And I. Only now I look back and be like, oh, they all make sense now.

Chris Pahlow:

They all contributed.

Chris Pahlow:

And so one of the things that happened when I was doing my Bachelor of Creative

Chris Pahlow:

Arts here in Melbourne was the university very kindly decided to delete the

Chris Pahlow:

degree when I was halfway finished it.

Sarah McLusky:

Oh, goodness.

Chris Pahlow:

Yeah, I know.

Chris Pahlow:

It's great.

Chris Pahlow:

I know.

Chris Pahlow:

But it meant I did a bunch of philosophy subjects just from the arts faculty

Chris Pahlow:

and really enjoyed that and got along with one of my lecturers really well.

Chris Pahlow:

And I was, at the time I was pursuing being a screenwriter and director

Chris Pahlow:

and I was already working on a bunch of short films and documentaries

Chris Pahlow:

and having some pretty good success in festivals and stuff like that.

Chris Pahlow:

And so I just needed some money to live while I made

Chris Pahlow:

independent uh, films because if.

Chris Pahlow:

If anyone listening knows anything about the film industry, it's a terrible,

Chris Pahlow:

terrible way to make any kinda living.

Chris Pahlow:

And I real, I thought teaching would be fun and I thought it'd

Chris Pahlow:

be something I would enjoy.

Chris Pahlow:

So I just asked one of my philosophy lecturers like, Hey,

Chris Pahlow:

can I come work for you as a tutor?

Chris Pahlow:

And he's no I don't need anyone, but I just got offered this

Chris Pahlow:

job at another university.

Chris Pahlow:

I don't think you're qualified, but why don't you just give them a call

Chris Pahlow:

and see, and I wasn't qualified.

Chris Pahlow:

It was teaching a master's course in a graduate school of business,

Chris Pahlow:

and the subject was critical thinking and communication.

Sarah McLusky:

Oh.

Sarah McLusky:

Oh, wow.

Chris Pahlow:

I'd only really done continental philosophy.

Chris Pahlow:

I hadn't studied any formal logic or anything, but you know what it's

Chris Pahlow:

like in university sometimes they just need someone to start next

Chris Pahlow:

week, and if you show up at the right time they'll give you a job.

Sarah McLusky:

You're just the one that's there.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Chris Pahlow:

And so I went in and had my interview and they're like, okay, great.

Chris Pahlow:

Have you read these books on the reading list?

Chris Pahlow:

And I'm like, no.

Chris Pahlow:

But I certainly could read them like, terrific, go to this tute now

Chris Pahlow:

you can watch what this tutor does and then you can do it tomorrow.

Chris Pahlow:

And, already I, that's already strange enough as my kind of

Chris Pahlow:

induction into the, a academic world.

Chris Pahlow:

But then I went to the tute and teaching is now my friend Ashley Barnett, and

Chris Pahlow:

he starts the class pretty normally talking about what critical thinking is.

Chris Pahlow:

And then he starts doing magic tricks.

Chris Pahlow:

He's like literally like pulling things out of his sleeves and making

Chris Pahlow:

things appear behind people's ears.

Chris Pahlow:

And I'm like.

Chris Pahlow:

I'm like looking around what the, am I supposed to learn how

Chris Pahlow:

to do magic to teach this class?

Chris Pahlow:

And no, that wasn't the expectation.

Chris Pahlow:

He just happened to be an academic who was like a magician in his part-time and he

Chris Pahlow:

was like an exceptionally good teacher.

Chris Pahlow:

Yeah.

Chris Pahlow:

But if I look back at that was, a real baptism of fire, but it's really paid off

Chris Pahlow:

because so much of what I've done over the last few years has been, challenging

Chris Pahlow:

folks to think about different ways of communicating stuff and not just

Chris Pahlow:

going to the obvious kind of situation.

Chris Pahlow:

And I did that for about six and a half years, and then I taught another

Chris Pahlow:

couple of unis in their film schools, which made a lot more sense at the

Chris Pahlow:

time when I was making my first movie.

Chris Pahlow:

And yeah, like I said, the film industry's a terrible way to make money, so I

Chris Pahlow:

just kept hanging around universities and eventually got asked to consult

Chris Pahlow:

at the University of Melbourne on a bunch of different media projects and I

Chris Pahlow:

worked off and on with them for a very long time, and it was some of those

Chris Pahlow:

situations I described before seeing just how hard researchers were trying

Chris Pahlow:

and how big their impact goals were.

Chris Pahlow:

And again, I just didn't feel like the structures were set up to help them.

Chris Pahlow:

And I felt like I was getting involved too late.

Chris Pahlow:

Like I said, it might be the end of a project but even the fact that I was

Chris Pahlow:

consulting with a video and media team and kind of like you said, it's good to

Chris Pahlow:

think about who your audience is and what you want them to do differently before

Chris Pahlow:

you spend all the, all that money on an animation or a podcast or whatever it is.

Chris Pahlow:

And I found myself in the very awkward position of, the video and media team

Chris Pahlow:

at this university would say, Hey Chris, can you come and take a look at these

Chris Pahlow:

podcast projects, these video projects, and we wanna know what you think about

Chris Pahlow:

it and what you think they should do.

Chris Pahlow:

And I'd have to say, I don't think they should make a video, or I don't

Chris Pahlow:

think they should make a podcast.

Chris Pahlow:

And eventually that led me to basically just consulting on comms strategy,

Chris Pahlow:

and then the more I work with these organizations, like I said at the

Chris Pahlow:

start of the episode, very often it would be like, yeah, great, let's

Chris Pahlow:

communicate with your external audiences.

Chris Pahlow:

But right now you've got a team of amazing people who don't even know what each

Chris Pahlow:

other do, and they don't know how to, talk about their work in the same way they

Chris Pahlow:

have potentially fundamental disagreements about what they're doing, and how

Chris Pahlow:

they should talk and think about it.

Chris Pahlow:

This is I think, probably particularly challenging when we talk about

Chris Pahlow:

interdisciplinary research, but I guess a long story sorry, hopefully

Chris Pahlow:

there was some LOLs along the way.

Chris Pahlow:

But yeah a long, strange journey of going from teaching in universities

Chris Pahlow:

when I probably shouldn't to working on podcasts and movies to, yeah, eventually

Chris Pahlow:

like consulting on research strategy, particularly about stakeholders.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

That is a very unusual and very interesting journey, but

Sarah McLusky:

you are reminding me of Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

I've certainly been the person in the room where I've just

Sarah McLusky:

gone, no, you really shouldn't be spending your money on this thing.

Sarah McLusky:

And that is quite a brave thing to do sometimes, especially when it's

Sarah McLusky:

potentially like putting you out of a job.

Sarah McLusky:

I've certainly been there, but when you think Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

But this is the right thing to do.

Sarah McLusky:

How do you approach situations like that?

Chris Pahlow:

You're right.

Chris Pahlow:

It is hard and there's definitely been a lot of emotions over the years,

Chris Pahlow:

particularly in the early years when I was finding my feet with this stuff.

Chris Pahlow:

I used to joke it's lucky that I'm a consultant 'cause I can just throw a

Chris Pahlow:

hand grenade into the room and if, if people don't like what I say, I can, I

Chris Pahlow:

just don't have to show up to the office for a few days 'cause I don't work here.

Chris Pahlow:

And I'm joking, but I do think that's actually been a bit of a superpower.

Chris Pahlow:

Like I, I'm thinking of one particular meeting where a project

Chris Pahlow:

was, had really gone off the rails.

Chris Pahlow:

It was like six months overdue.

Chris Pahlow:

All the stuff that can happen in any big organization like staff have changed.

Chris Pahlow:

And, the briefs been changed five times and everyone's trying their best, but the

Chris Pahlow:

circumstance is just not really working.

Chris Pahlow:

And I could go into the call and say Hey, this project's not

Chris Pahlow:

working, we need to finish it.

Chris Pahlow:

These are the things we need to do.

Chris Pahlow:

And if we can't do that, I think we just need to stop and start again from scratch.

Chris Pahlow:

And.

Chris Pahlow:

That was quite a shocking thing for someone to say when there's been what I'm

Chris Pahlow:

struggling to remember from my critical thinking days, the sunk cost bias.

Chris Pahlow:

Yeah, that's what I'm trying to think of.

Sarah McLusky:

Sunk cost fallacy.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Chris Pahlow:

Everyone's been working it for so long.

Chris Pahlow:

They've invested so much time and money and energy, but it's just not working.

Chris Pahlow:

And if we keep going, they're just throwing good money after bad.

Chris Pahlow:

And I realized when I said that I was the only one on the call who could say that

Chris Pahlow:

and the senior manager, she paused for a moment and she looked at me and she said.

Chris Pahlow:

You don't work for the university, do you?

Chris Pahlow:

And I was like no, I don't.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Chris Pahlow:

And I found, even though those moments were scary and there were

Chris Pahlow:

times I was like, oh, that's it i'm getting kicked off that project now.

Chris Pahlow:

I think people, I. Trusted that I was being honest because yeah, I

Chris Pahlow:

think it is scary and I don't know, I just couldn't sleep at night if

Chris Pahlow:

I just went along with this stuff.

Chris Pahlow:

And like I said, I just got too cranky and if I think if I wanted an easier

Chris Pahlow:

life I wouldn't be doing anything I'm doing, but I just can't, I can't bear

Chris Pahlow:

the frustration sometimes, Sarah.

Chris Pahlow:

I just, we gotta do something about this.

Sarah McLusky:

Oh, I can completely relate to that.

Sarah McLusky:

And I think, again, I do think it is powerful.

Sarah McLusky:

I don't think I could have made this podcast and said some of

Sarah McLusky:

the things I've said if I had been employed in an organization.

Sarah McLusky:

So yeah it can be a very powerful place to, to be.

Sarah McLusky:

Power that needs to be used with responsibility, as you say, when doing

Sarah McLusky:

it, when you feel it's the right thing.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Chris Pahlow:

Yeah and like I don't want us to just be congratulating

Chris Pahlow:

ourselves too much, but like I said at the start, I really do believe in your

Chris Pahlow:

mission and I think what you're doing is really important because while I

Chris Pahlow:

could make a joke and say, yeah, I'll just not turn up to the office for

Chris Pahlow:

a few days 'cause I don't work here.

Chris Pahlow:

Everybody else still did work there.

Chris Pahlow:

And it really made me upset to see how often professional staff and

Chris Pahlow:

universities were treated like second class citizens and bossed around.

Chris Pahlow:

And as my, a big part of my mission is trying to help amazing researchers

Chris Pahlow:

drive impact, but I, a secondary mission, a personal mission is

Chris Pahlow:

trying to create a better work environment for those professional

Chris Pahlow:

staff who are working so, so hard.

Chris Pahlow:

And I think they deserve a lot better a lot of the time.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

Couldn't agree more.

Sarah McLusky:

And I think well perhaps that nicely leads us onto a question I like to ask

Sarah McLusky:

all of my guests, which is, if you had a magic wand, what would you change

Sarah McLusky:

about this world that you work in?

Chris Pahlow:

The whole world or just the academic world?

Sarah McLusky:

Just, just your little impact, research impact little corner.

Sarah McLusky:

Although, it can be something connected, but it's your choice.

Sarah McLusky:

If money and time were no object.

Chris Pahlow:

I mean there's a million things, but something

Chris Pahlow:

that's, I think a personal bug bear.

Chris Pahlow:

I think the academic world needs to put a lot more money into, yeah,

Chris Pahlow:

what would come under professional staff or professional services?

Chris Pahlow:

I'm biased because most of what I have done over the years has been communication

Chris Pahlow:

sort related, but I've just been in too many meetings where the leaders

Chris Pahlow:

of a department or a center are saying like, we don't understand what's wrong

Chris Pahlow:

with our operations, or why does it take so long to get any anything done?

Chris Pahlow:

And I have to point out again and again, this is a multimillion dollar

Chris Pahlow:

operation you're running here.

Chris Pahlow:

And if we looked at a commercial business who had the same yearly revenue.

Chris Pahlow:

They would have it's not even a comparison I don't know, 10 x, a hundred x in terms

Chris Pahlow:

of the spend and amount of staff they'd have working on things like marketing

Chris Pahlow:

and sales and all that kind of stuff.

Chris Pahlow:

And so I feel like I, it's, there's just, it's just a lose lose situation.

Chris Pahlow:

It's bad for academics 'cause they get frustrated.

Chris Pahlow:

And it's also not fair to the professional staff who are working so hard and

Chris Pahlow:

they're trying to do five people's jobs and they're not getting paid enough.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

And I think that is very much what we're about is just making it

Sarah McLusky:

apparent this work that is being done, because I think so often it is

Sarah McLusky:

invisible unless there's a problem.

Sarah McLusky:

And if there's a problem, suddenly yeah, it explodes.

Sarah McLusky:

And I think also that really genuinely valuing the professional staff

Sarah McLusky:

who work in these organizations is the secret to almost everything.

Sarah McLusky:

So when academics are saying, oh, we're too busy and we can't, and now you

Sarah McLusky:

expect us to do all this other stuff on top of our jobs, it's like well, no, we

Sarah McLusky:

don't necessarily expect you to do it.

Sarah McLusky:

You could put other people in place who can do these other things that feel

Sarah McLusky:

like it's, another demand on your time.

Sarah McLusky:

And yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

So I think the secret to making things better is bridging that

Sarah McLusky:

divide between this kind of sense of academic and professional staff

Sarah McLusky:

research adjacent, whatever you want to call them, and thinking about

Sarah McLusky:

how we can get them working together because that's what they're doing.

Sarah McLusky:

They're all working together for a shared aim, but at the moment,

Sarah McLusky:

doing it in very different ways.

Chris Pahlow:

And look, I empathize, like I know things are hard.

Chris Pahlow:

I know.

Chris Pahlow:

The structures aren't set up to make what I'm suggesting easy.

Chris Pahlow:

And a lot of people would say it's not even possible, but I guess it's

Chris Pahlow:

the magic wand question and I hope

Sarah McLusky:

Absolutely.

Chris Pahlow:

If we have this conversation again in 10 or 20 years, I really

Chris Pahlow:

hope things have started to shift.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah.

Sarah McLusky:

Me too.

Sarah McLusky:

Me too.

Sarah McLusky:

Saying then that, we haven't really talked about this, but we're seeing

Sarah McLusky:

what you can see on this podcast.

Sarah McLusky:

Part of the reason we're thinking about that is 'cause you have

Sarah McLusky:

a podcast as well, don't you?

Sarah McLusky:

So would you like to tell the listeners a little bit about your

Sarah McLusky:

podcast and where they can find it?

Sarah McLusky:

The sorts of things you cover?

Chris Pahlow:

I'd love to.

Chris Pahlow:

So the pod is called Amplifying Research, just like my company and I have the

Chris Pahlow:

great pleasure of talking to amazing people from all around the world people

Chris Pahlow:

who are passionate about impact, and we talk about how research organizations

Chris Pahlow:

can communicate more effectively, how they can engage more effectively, and how

Chris Pahlow:

they can collaborate more effectively.

Chris Pahlow:

Um, Incredible guests, like people talking about how can you co-design

Chris Pahlow:

research projects with different communities, people talking about stuff,

Chris Pahlow:

more like what we've been talking about.

Chris Pahlow:

How can you work in comms or engagement and embed the right

Chris Pahlow:

kind of approach in your center?

Chris Pahlow:

Yeah, I feel really grateful just to get to talk to super, super cool people

Chris Pahlow:

who yeah, they're trying to share everything they've worked on and all the

Chris Pahlow:

knowledge they've got with the world.

Chris Pahlow:

Yeah, so check it out.

Chris Pahlow:

You can find it on Spotify, Apple Podcasts.

Chris Pahlow:

Just type in Amplifying Research.

Sarah McLusky:

Yeah, I would definitely recommend it for anybody who is in

Sarah McLusky:

this kind of comms engagement impact kind of space you've had some fantastic

Sarah McLusky:

guests on and really talking about this, more the strategic piece, isn't it?

Sarah McLusky:

It's the whys and where fors of doing things better.

Sarah McLusky:

So yeah, definitely recommended.

Sarah McLusky:

And if people want to get in touch with you personally or find out

Sarah McLusky:

more about your company, where would you have them go and look?

Chris Pahlow:

You can find me on amplifyingresearch.com or just come look

Chris Pahlow:

me up on LinkedIn and shoot me a message.

Chris Pahlow:

Yeah, very happy to have a chat if you care about impact and any

Chris Pahlow:

of the things we've talked about.

Chris Pahlow:

Very happy to have a chat.

Sarah McLusky:

Fantastic.

Sarah McLusky:

So it just remains to say thank you so much for coming along and sharing

Sarah McLusky:

what you do and sharing your story.

Chris Pahlow:

Sarah, thank you very much for having me.

Chris Pahlow:

Again, huge fan and it's yeah, it's like an honor and a pleasure to be on the show.

Sarah McLusky:

Oh, thank you.

Sarah McLusky:

That's really kind.

Sarah McLusky:

Thanks for listening to Research Adjacent.

Sarah McLusky:

If you're listening in a podcast app, please check your subscribed and then

Sarah McLusky:

use the links in the episode description to find full show notes and to follow

Sarah McLusky:

the podcast on LinkedIn or Instagram.

Sarah McLusky:

You can also find all the links and other episodes at www.researchadjacent.com.

Sarah McLusky:

Research Adjacent is presented and produced by Sarah McLusky,

Sarah McLusky:

and the theme music is by Lemon Music Studios on Pixabay.

Sarah McLusky:

And you, yes you, get a big gold star for listening right to the end.

Sarah McLusky:

See you next time.