You may not want to hear this, but at least 60% of any idea is how it’s communicated. 40% is the idea itself.
This means bad ideas get real traction. And do all the time. So good ideas need to be competitive on the information battlefield.
Kevin brings more than 15 years of public policy communications and political advocacy experience in Washington, D.C. and Texas. He has led or managed 10 policy communications efforts, including at the Human Rights Campaign, the Gill Foundation, boutique public affairs firms, and for the largest nonprofit public health system in Texas, Legacy Community Health.
Kevin has been a national on-the-record spokesperson in the New York Times, Washington Post, Politico, Wall Street Journal, NPR, and Texas Tribune. He has served as a ghostwriter, on-the-record spokesperson, and policy research director.
He earned his Master’s in American Government from Johns Hopkins University; a higher education certification from Harvard’s Derek Bok Center; and Bachelor’s from Tulane University.
Kevin is a lecturer in political science at the University of Houston.
About Kevin
Antidote is a short book by Kevin Nix on civic engagement during the 21st century’s biggest battle: freedom versus autocracy.
Get 28 action items that leaders and voters and leaders can do to slow the roll of autocratic creep. Antidote hits the market Dec. 2.