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How To Improve Your Lousy Writing Skills In The Workplace
If there’s one
important reason
why you need to
write
effectively in
the workplace,
it is this: the
quality of your
writing imprints
a lasting
impression on
the reader. This
reader may be
your boss, a
client, or a
person who is
ready to make a
billion dollar
business deal
with you.
Have you ever
read a
poorly-written
document that
made you lose
interest right
away? It was so
poorly-written
that you lost
trust in the
author and asked
yourself why the
author was
wasting your
time? How about
those junk
e-mails that
sneak into your
junk box like
annoying
cockroaches? You
know the ones
I’m referring
to: the ones
pitching
vitamins,
software, and
sex aids. These
e-mails are the
biggest showcase
of writing
blunders,
stricken to
death with
grammar
mistakes,
misspellings,
and sloppy
sentences. I
doubt these
e-mails pull a
sale because
their poor
writing style
immediately
alienates the
reader.
What impression
does your
writing leave on
your boss,
clients, or
co-workers? Does
your writing
alienate
readers, cause
you to lose
sales or
clients, or cost
you job
promotions? Or
does your
writing build
streams of loyal
readers,
increase sales
for the company,
and help you
earn six figures
a year at your
job?
Whatever type of
writing you do
in the
workplace,
always know this
reality: readers
believe the
quality of your
writing reflects
your skills,
work ethics, and
integrity as a
person. If you
write
eloquently,
clearly, and
lively, the
reader trusts
you and you are
able to build
rapport quickly.
If your writing
is sloppy,
disorganized,
and riddled with
errors, the
reader assumes
the rest of your
work is flawed,
your work ethics
are flawed, and
perhaps as a
person you are
flawed. Why
should this
reader waste his
time reading the
rest of your
junk or even do
business with
you?
This article
provides
fail-safe
strategies to
help refine your
writing and help
you to
communicate with
clarity,
simplicity, and
impact so you
will never write
junk again. You
will learn five
masterful steps
to guide you in
planning,
writing, and
refining an
article; and you
will learn how
to avoid common
writing
mistakes.
AIM! FIRE! FIRE!
To become a
superb writer,
your first task
is to establish
your aim.
Yiddish
novelist,
dramatist and
essayist, Sholem
Asch, once said,
“Writing comes
more easily if
you have
something to
say.”
What message do
you want to
convey with your
writing?
To establish
your aim, ask
yourself:
1) “Why am I
writing this
document?”
2) “What do I
want to
communicate?”
3) “Do I want to
inform, educate,
report,
persuade,
challenge, or
entertain?”
Developing your
aim will help
you to adopt the
best writing
style for your
reader. For
example, an
educational
document will
likely be more
formal than one
written for
entertaining.
CONNECT WITH
YOUR READERS
To write
effectively, you
need to connect
strongly with
your readers.
Ask yourself:
1) “For whom am
I writing this?
Will I be
writing for
colleagues, my
supervisor, my
team of
employees, or
our clients?”
2) “How much
information do
my readers
need?”
3) “How familiar
are my readers
with the topic?”
4) “How much
time do my
readers have?
Would my readers
prefer a short,
succinct
presentation of
facts and
statistics, or
more narration
and exposition?”
Knowing your
audience will
allow you to
write content in
a way that
appeals to your
readers.
SHAPE YOUR
DOCUMENT
You know your
aim. You know
the people who
will likely read
your document.
Now plan your
document. What
information will
it contain? What
information will
most likely grab
the reader and
hold their
interests? What
points do you
need to get
across? Start
with a rough
outline of
ideas. Then go
through the
outline and add
more information
and more detail.
An outline will
create the
structure for
your document.
Soon enough your
writing will
come more
easily, quickly,
and with greater
clarity.
WRITE WHAT YOU
KNOW BEST
At this stage,
read over your
outline and
write the first
draft. Establish
the main idea of
the document and
support your
argument
throughout. If a
blank white page
glares back at
you like
headlights, just
start writing on
whatever topic
you know best.
According to
American
novelist Jack
London, “You
can’t wait for
inspiration. You
have to go after
it with a club.”
Don’t worry
about the
sequence if the
ideas come to
you out of
order. You can
cut and paste
later.
WORDY WEIGHT
LOSS
If you have
time, step away
from the
document. Come
back to it later
with a fresh
mind. Now add
material where
needed. Trim
away unnecessary
sections. Refine
the text to
communicate what
you want to say.
Remember: less
is more. Try not
to repeat ideas.
Repetition,
unless
necessary, is
tiresome for the
reader. Keep the
piece moving
along. Use a
lively pace.
Progress through
your points
efficiently.
The following
sections address
some of the most
common writing
problems. Use
these tips to
write more
clearly,
effectively, and
lively.
I.) PUNCTUATION
a) Apostrophes
Do not use an
apostrophe in
the possessive
form of “it.”
Incorrect: Our
department
submitted it’s
reports for 2005
last week.
Correct: Our
department
submitted its
reports for 2005
last week.
Do not use
apostrophes in
the possessive
forms “his,”
“hers,” and
“ours.”
Incorrect: The
window office is
her’s.
Correct: The
window office is
hers.
Do not use
apostrophes in
plural nouns.
Incorrect: How
many new
computer’s are
we getting?
Correct: How
many new
computers are we
getting?
b) Commas
Do not connect
two complete
sentences with a
comma.
Incorrect: The
meeting was
cancelled, I
finished my work
early.
Correct: The
meeting was
cancelled, so I
finished my work
early.
Correct: Since
the meeting was
cancelled, I
finished my work
early.
II.) MECHANICS
a) Split
Infinitives
Do not insert
words between
“to” and the
infinitive form
of a verb.
Incorrect: I was
told we needed
to slightly
tighten the
deadline.
Correct: I was
told we needed
to tighten the
deadline
slightly.
III.) SPELLING
a) “A lot” is
always two
words.
Incorrect: I
have alot of
work to do.
Correct: I have
a lot of work to
do.
b) “To” is a
function word
often used
before the
infinitive form
of a verb (to
go).
c) “Too” is an
adverb that
means
“excessively”
(too difficult).
d) “Two” denotes
the number 2.
Incorrect: This
file cabinet is
to heavy for me
to move.
Correct: This
file cabinet is
too heavy for me
to move.
e) “There” is an
adverb
indicating a
place (over
there).
f) “Their” is a
possessive word
that shows
ownership (their
computers).
g) “They’re” is
the contraction
form of “they
are.”
Incorrect: There
results for this
quarter were
excellent.
Correct: Their
results for this
quarter were
excellent.
Incorrect: Their
working very
hard today.
Correct: They’re
working very
hard today.
IV.) STYLE
a) Sentence
Variety
To write more
lively, vary
sentence
structure. Use
alternate ways
of beginning,
and combine
short sentences
to create
different
sentence
lengths.
Before:
I organized the
files for all
the new accounts
this week. Then
I created a more
efficient
labeling system.
I color-coded
everything. I
made sure all
paper files had
been documented
electronically.
I put these
files in the
empty file
cabinet.
After:
This week I
organized the
files for the
new accounts and
created a more
efficient
color-coded
labeling system.
After I
documented all
paper files
electronically,
I put these
files in the
empty file
cabinet.
V.) ACTIVE VOICE
vs. PASSIVE
VOICE
The English
language has two
"voices": active
voice (the
subject performs
an action); and
passive voice
(the subject is
acted upon). In
business
communication,
all good writers
write in active
voice. Lazy
writers write in
passive voice.
Writing in
active voice
shortens your
sentences and
makes your
writing sound
more direct and
formal.
Examples:
PASSIVE: The
recipe book is
read by her.
ACTIVE: She
reads the recipe
book.
PASSIVE: The
radio
announcement
should be
listened to by
everyone.
ACTIVE: Everyone
should listen to
the radio
announcement.
PASSIVE: The
photo is being
taken by the
photographer.
ACTIVE: The
photographer is
taking the
photo.
HELPFUL
RESOURCES
To learn more
about fixing
common writing
mistakes, check
out The
Electronic
Writing Course (
http://www.ElectronicWritingCourse.com
). It’s a
program that
teaches the
basics of good
writing and
editing. If you
want to check
your document
against 36,000
style and usage
mistakes, check
out StyleWriter
(
http://www.StyleWriter-USA.com
). It’s a style
and usage Plain
English checker.
If you want to
write more
lively and
creatively,
check out
WhiteSmoke
Software (
http://www.WhiteSmokeSoftware.com
). It’s a
program that
fixes and
enriches your
text.
If you follow
these
guidelines,
you’ll stop
yourself from
writing lousy in
the workplace.
Your writing
will be lively,
clear, and
concise, and you
will build
rapport with
readers. Perhaps
it’s now time to
e-mail your boss
a
perfectly-written
e-mail
requesting a
salary raise?
Article Source: http://www.articledashboard.com
Brian Konradt has been a professional freelance writer for over ten years. He is founder of FreelanceWriting.com ( www.FreelanceWriting.com ) and LiteracyNews.com ( www.LiteracyNews.com )