Writing
Skills
Getting Your Written
Message Across Clearly
Improve your writing
skills
with James Manktelow
& Amy Carlson.
A colleague has just sent you an email relating to a meeting
you're having in one hour's time. The email is supposed to contain key
information that you need to present, as part of the business case for an
important project.
But there's a problem:
The email is so badly written that you can't find the data you need. There are
misspellings and incomplete sentences, and the paragraphs are so long and
confusing that it takes you three times more than it should to find the information
you want.
As a result, you're under-prepared for the meeting, and it
doesn't go as well as you want it to.
Have you ever faced a
situation similar to this? In today's information overload world, it's vital to
communicate clearly, concisely and effectively. People don't have time to read
book-length emails, and they don't have the patience to scour badly-constructed
emails for "buried" points.
The better your writing
skills are, the better the impression you'll make on the people around you –
including your boss, your colleagues, and your clients. You never know how far
these good impressions will take you!
In this article, we'll look at how you can improve your writing
skills and avoid common mistakes.
Audience and Format
The first step to writing clearly is choosing the appropriate
format. Do you need to send an informal email? Write a detailed report? Create advertising copy? Or write
a formal letter?
The format, as well as
your audience, will define your "writing voice" – that is, how formal
or relaxed the tone should be. For instance, if you write an email to a
prospective client, should it have the same tone as an email to a friend?
Definitely not.
Start by identifying who will read your message. Is it targeted
at senior managers, the entire human resources team, or a small group of
engineers? With everything you write, your readers, or recipients, should
define your tone as well as aspects of the content.
Composition and Style
Once you know what you're writing, and for whom you're writing,
you actually have to start writing.
A blank, white computer
screen is often intimidating. And it's easy to get stuck because you don't know
how to start. Try these tips for composing and styling your document:
·
Start with your audience – Remember, your readers may know nothing about what
you're telling them. What do they need to know first?
·
Create an outline – This is especially helpful if you're writing a longer
document such as a report, presentation, or speech. Outlines help you identify
which steps to take in which order, and they help you break the task up into
manageable pieces of information.
·
Use AIDA – If you're writing something that must inspire action in
the reader, follow the Attention-Interest-Desire-Action (AIDA) formula.
These four steps can help guide you through the writing process.
·
Try some empathy – For instance, if you're writing a sales letter for
prospective clients, why should they care about your product or sales pitch?
What's the benefit for them? Remember your audience's needs at all times.
·
Use the Rhetorical
Triangle – If you're trying to persuade someone
to do something, make sure that you communicate why people should listen to
you, pitch your message in a way that engages your audience, and present
information rationally and coherently. Our article on the Rhetorical Triangle can help you make
your case in the most effective way.
·
Identify your main theme – If you're having trouble defining the main theme of your
message, pretend that you have 15 seconds to explain your position. What do you
say? This is likely to be your main theme.
·
Use simple language – Unless you're writing a scholarly article, it's usually
best to use simple, direct language. Don't use long
words just to impress people.
Structure
Your document should be as "reader friendly" as
possible. Use headings, subheadings, bullet points, and numbering whenever
possible to break up the text.
After all, what's easier
to read – a page full of long paragraphs, or a page that's broken up into short
paragraphs, with section headings and bullet points? A document that's easy to
scan will get read more often than a document with long, dense paragraphs of
text.
Headers should grab the
reader's attention. Using questions is often a good idea,
especially in advertising copy or reports, because questions help keep the
reader engaged and curious.
In emails and proposals,
use short, factual headings and subheadings, like the ones in this article.
Adding graphs and charts is also a smart way
to break up your text. These visual aids not only keep the reader's eye
engaged, but they can communicate important information much more quickly than
text.
Grammatical Errors
You probably don't need us to tell you that errors in your
document will make you look unprofessional. It's essential to learn grammar
properly, and to avoid common mistakes that your spell checker won't find.
Here are some examples of
commonly misused words:
· Affect/effect
·
"Affect" is a
verb meaning to influence. (Example: The economic forecast will affect our
projected income.)
·
"Effect" is a
noun meaning the result or outcome. (Example: What is the effect of the
proposal?)
·
Then/than
·
"Then" is
typically an adverb indicating a sequence in time. (Example: We went to dinner,
then we saw a movie.)
·
"Than" is a
conjunction used for comparison. (Example: The dinner was more expensive than
the movie.)
·
Your/you're
·
"Your" is a
possessive. (Example: Is that your file?)
·
"You're" is a
contraction of "you are." (Example: You're the new manager.)
·
Note: Also watch out for
other common homophones (words that sound alike but have different spellings
and meanings) – such as their/they're/there, to/too/two, and so on.
·
Its/it's
·
"Its" is a
possessive. (Example: Is that its motor?)
·
"It's" is a
contraction of "It is." (Example: It's often that heavy.) (Yes, it is
this way around!)
·
Company's/companies (and other possessives versus plurals)
·
"Company's"
indicates possession. (Example: The company's trucks hadn't been maintained
properly.)
·
"Companies" is
plural. (Example: The companies in this industry are suffering.)
To learn more about
commonly misused words, misused apostrophes, and other grammatical errors, take
our Bite-Sized Training session on Written Communication.
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