.
Clear, effective business writing is more
important than ever.
Thanks to new technology, our skill (or lack of
skill) with words is beamed around the world in
black and white.
In a survey of Fortune 1000 executives, 80
percent said they've decided not to
interview job candidates solely because of poor
grammar, spelling, or punctuation in resumes or
cover letters.
Of those same executives, 99 percent also said
poor writing and grammar hurt an employee's
chances for promotion.
In another study, the U.S. Navy determined it
could save $27 million to $57 million a year if
officers wrote memos in a plain style. Navy
personnel spent more time reading poorly written
memos than those written in a plain style. Similar
savings could be realized in the private sector if
corporations stressed good writing in the
workplace.
But the best argument for good writing is
simple logic: People won't buy
what they don't understand.
Try some of the following tips the next time
you write a letter, memo, report, proposal, press
release, or other business document. Then
distribute your work with confidence, because good
writing is good for your business. (Want to know
how to create your letter instantly - Click
here)
1. The secret of Business Writing: One grain
of sand?
Before you start to write any business
document, identify the single idea you're
trying to get across.
Jot it down in one sentence on a note pad next
to your typewriter or computer keyboard.
If you were writing a news story, this would be
the headline. Or if you were writing a movie, this
would be the one-line description in the TV
Guide.
Here are some examples.
- You want an appointment to explain your new
product. (sales letter)
- Using computers to track inventory will save
thousands of dollars. (report)
- The janitorial crew will be working new
hours. (memo)
Your one-line synopsis is a grain of sand; it
will help you begin.
Large projects can be built from it, but the
grain of sand itself is neither overwhelming nor
intimidating.
As you write, reread your one-line
reminder.
It will keep you grounded,
focused, on target.
Know what you want before you begin to write,
and your business writing will come more
easily.
2. Give the who, what,
when, where, and why of Business Writing.
Be a reporter.
There is basic information all people want to
know -- no matter the subject.
Train yourself to answer in your writing all
the questions your reader might ask. Everything
you write may not have a who, what, when, where,
and why, but at least ask yourself if it does. In
good writing, omission of information is by plan,
not mistake.
John (who), please study the cost
of fish (what) for the next three
months (when) at our Seattle
facility (where). I believe we can
save money by purchasing fish for our performing
dolphins from a new Alaskan source
(why).
Thinking of your reader's questions before you
write helps you organize your business writing and
makes your business letters as complete as an
article in the New York Times.
3. Step up to bat and take
a few swings.
All writers have asked, "How do I begin?"
You begin by switching your brain into a
writing frame of mind.
Athletes often develop rituals to signal to
their brain that it's time to perform: Baseball
batters dust their hands with dirt, dig in their
heels, and take practice swings. Tennis players
bounce the ball a few times before winding up for
the serve.
You can develop rituals that put you in the
mood to write.
Some business writers use a special pen. Others
write better in a particular place, such as
looking out a window or not looking out a window.
Try some of these rituals:
- Deep breathing. Close your eyes and
take several deep breaths to center yourself.
Listen to your breathing. Shut out the ringing
of the phones, the conversations of your
coworkers, the buzz of your computer.
- Visualization. Close your eyes and
imagine you are staring at a blank billboard in
a snowstorm. The purpose of this trick is to
clear your mind of thought, to wipe the slate
clean. The mind can't stand a clean slate and
begins to compose.
- Affirmation. Look in the mirror and
say "Good morning, writer." Repeat this until
you believe it.
Rituals simply focus your inner attention on a
task to come. Find one that triggers your writing
self. (How to take the pain and
frustration out of writing Business Letters -
click here)
4. Adopt a plain Business
writing style.
It takes longer to read and comprehend a memo
written in a bureaucratic style than one written
in plain style. Bureaucratic writing buries
meaning under run-on sentences, big words, and
long paragraphs.
On the other hand, plain business writing:
- States the purpose clearly
- Lists major points
- Includes headings and lists
- Uses short sentences and paragraphs
- Seeks to express, not impress
- Avoids jargon
In business writing, plain is
beautiful.
The next time you want someone to understand
your writing, put away the fancy words and
convoluted sentences.
Say it simply.
It will save your time, the reader's time, and
your company's money.
5. Always Keep Business
Writing short.
Effective business writing avoids long
sentences and long paragraphs for the same reason
you avoid the long-winded conversationalist at a
party.
Like the party bore, long sentences and
paragraphs don't hold your interest.
In run-on sentences and paragraphs, the reader
struggles to keep from getting lost. Clear
business writing doesn't throw up detour
signs; it offers shortcuts to
understanding.
| No: We have long yearned
to create a marketing program full of energy and
pizzazz that would remain in the minds of the
customers and position our product as the
product to end all products in our industry
which should give us a good competitive edge
since everyone else in our industry has cut
their marketing budgets which means this is a
good time for us to forge ahead and make some
new customers now while everyone is either
sleeping or
afraid. |
| Yes: Now is the time to
create a marketing program full of energy and
pizzazz. This program would keep our name in the
minds of our customers, position our product as
the ultimate product in our industry, and give
us the competitive edge.
In these tough times, our competitors are
cowering in their offices and cutting their
marketing budgets. By being aggressive and
forging ahead, we will make new customers and
corner a greater share of the
market. |
6. Give the reader a
map.
If you want your readers to navigate the road
of your business writing and reach the proper
destination, make the going easy for
them.
Use these devices to make your business
writing more readable
- Paragraphs. Start a new paragraph as
often as it is logically possible.
What
is easier to read: a newspaper or a law tome?
Readers will muddle through long paragraphs and
pages of unending text only when they
need the
information.
Newspapers learned
long ago that they have only seconds to grab the
reader's attention and keep it; a story composed
of several short paragraphs appears more
accessible than one that resembles a scientific
paper.
- Bullets and lists. Bullets are
typographical symbols (boxes, circles,
asterisks, dashes) that draw attention to a
particular piece of text.
These are
excellent for lists, which are wonderful
signposts themselves. Any information that you
can boil down into an easy-to-grasp listing
boosts the readability of your writing. Bulleted
lists work well for outlining the steps in a
process.
- Subheads. Use mini-headlines to break
up the copy in memos and letters and direct the
reader through your writing.
Don't
lose your reader. Remember it's not only
what you say, but how you say
it.
but how you say it.
 |
|
How our Software can
write all your Business letters
....instantly! |
7. Be
active.
If you were one of those people who yawned when
your eighth grade English teacher began her
lecture on active and passive voice,
wake up.
What you don't know about active and passive
voice may be putting your readers to sleep or
making them suspicious of you and your ideas or
product.
A sentence written in the active voice
is the straight-shooting sheriff who faces the
gunslinger proudly and fearlessly. It is
honest, straightforward; you know
where you stand.
Active: The committee will review all
applications in early April.
A sentence written in passive voice is the
shifty desperado who tries to win the gunfight by
shooting the sheriff in the back, stealing his
horse, and sneaking out of town.
Passive: In early April, all
applications will be reviewed by the
committee.
Passive writing is popular in business because
it helps the writer avoid responsibility and
remain anonymous.
Customers are suspicious of writing that evades
responsibility. Employees and managers distrust
ideas that appear more vague than strong.
8. Cut unneeded words and
prune windy phrases.
If your readers respond with "say what?" after
finishing one of your memos or reports, you may be
using businessese and doublespeak.
Businessese is language we use not
because it is clear or effective, but because we
get into the habit of using it.
Businessese promotes lazy, self-important
writing. Consider these precise, everyday
substitutes for businessese words
- Find out instead of ascertain
- Send out instead of
disseminate
- Use instead of utilize
- Plan instead of strategize
- Best instead of optimum
Doublespeak is finding a complicated,
highfalutin way of saying a simple phrase.
Doublespeak also cares more about self-importance
than clearly communicating with the
reader.
Here are some ways to simplify your
language.
- Janitor instead of sanitation
engineer
- Apparently instead of it would
appear that
- Explain instead of furnish an
explanation for
Be a ruthless gardener when it comes to
weeding words. To paraphrase a popular commercial,
"just say it."
9. Watch out for these four
commonly misused words in your Business
Writing.
Some words in the English language take a
constant beating in business
correspondence.
Be one of those writers who use them properly
and pleasantly surprise your readers. Your
conscientiousness may sell your next idea or
product.
- That vs. which. Which often
follows a comma and introduces a phrase that
provides additional information not essential to
the meaning of the sentence. That
introduces a phrase that is essential to the
meaning of the sentence.
The report, which is twenty pages long, is
mandatory reading. (Which introduces
additional, but unnecessary, information.)
The report that is twenty pages long is
mandatory reading. (That points out a
characteristic of the report and distinguishes
it from a ten-page report.)
- Hopefully. This doesn't mean I hope.
Hopefully, I'll finish the report by
noon. Do you mean you'll finish the report
in a hopeful frame of mind by noon? Or do you
mean you hope you'll finish the report by noon?
Say what you mean: I hope to finish the
report by noon.
- Very. Avoid this lukewarm, unspecific
adverb. I'm very happy that you elected me
chairman of the Society for People with Super
Sensitive Feet. Is very happy happier than
just happy? Why not overjoyed or: I'm
tickled to be the new chairman of the Society
for People with Super Sensitive Feet.
10. Stress benefits, not
features.
Everything you write in business, from sales
letters to budget plans, is intended to elicit
a response.
You want someone to do something. In the sales
letter, you want a client to grant you an
appointment so that you can demonstrate your
latest product. In the budget proposal, you want
the board of directors to fund a new project in
your department.
To be successful in business and in writing,
you must persuade.
Persuasive writing stresses benefits
instead of features. Your reader
doesn't care how many bells and whistles your
product has. The reader wants to know what your
product is going to do for him.
Consider the perfume industry. Perfumeries do
not sell stuff that makes you smell nice (the
feature). They sell romance -- how he will court
her after she sprays it on (the benefit).
Feature: Our widget has three new
attachments -- a cat feeder, a plant waterer, and
a thermostat controller.
Benefit: Buy our widget with its three
new attachments and, finally, relax on a vacation.
Our widget works while you enjoy yourself. There's
no need to worry; our widget will make sure your
cat is fed, your plants are watered, and the
temperature of your home is maintained at a
constant, fuel-saving level.
11. Give your business
writing the conversation test.
After you have finished writing your memo or
letter, read it aloud.
Ask yourself if you would say to your reader
what you are writing. Trust your ear. Wherever
your writing is stuffy, wordy, or impersonal,
rewrite it.
- Use contractions to warm-up your message and
take the starch out of stiff sentences.
- Delete words, sentences, and phrases that do
not add to your meaning.
- Make it personal. Speak directly to the
reader, human to human. Remember people don't do
business with businesses; they do business with
people.
Copyright © 1992 The Roberts
Group, Greensboro, North Carolina
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