2 LEARNING TO WRITE WITHOUT FEAR

Some people say that writing is an art, something that requires God-given talent. Those people are professional writers who don’t want anybody to know how easy their job is. The truth is that good writing is a craft. Anybody can do it and, like any craft, the more you do it the better you get.

When you consider how important business writing is to any organisation, the fact that most firms don’t teach it is incredible; especially when the secrets of successful business writing are actually very simple.

In this chapter you will discover how a little bit of preparation and a little bit of reading can help give you the confidence you need to write effectively and without fear.

TAKE YOUR TIME

The most important thing in business writing isn’t talent. It’s time. Time to think about what you are going to write, time to do any research and collate any necessary resources, time to write and then time to edit the writing to make it better.

It’s also important to have time to read. The more you read, the more of other people’s writing you can look at with a critical eye, the better your own writing will become.

Your eyes will begin to glaze over when confronted with something like this:

As the pace of accomplishments continues to accelerate, proof-point has become a necessity. Cross-pollination and market practice digitize our agility resulting in a measured efficiency gain; this is why there can be no productivity improvement until we can achieve a sustained increase in margins.

That’s from a website called the Corporate Bullshit Generator,1 which automatically generates streams of convincing-sounding nonsense from real buzzwords and phrases. We receive genuine documents and emails exactly like that every day. Beware the added-value solutions provider, the game changer, the establishment of a new paradigm in customer facing solutions leveraging location specific core competencies.

If you have ever been shopping for a new car you’ll know how the cars you’re considering are suddenly everywhere: every second car seems to be a Ford Mondeo, an Audi A5 or a Mercedes E220. It’s the same with meaningless business jargon. Once you start noticing it, you see it everywhere – and you start to notice if you’re falling into the same traps.

BORROW BRIGHT IDEAS

It’s important to look for good writing as well as bad. Good business writing gets to the point, gets a message across clearly and, if appropriate, has a personality too.

Here is the ‘About Us’ intro from Linn,2 maker of high-tech home audio products:

Music makes life better.

It’s the sound of your greatest achievements and happiest moments. It’s the soundtrack to the best of times with the people you love the most. It’s a source of energy and inspiration, of comfort and of joy.

It’s beautiful. Powerful. Magical. And we make it better.

I’ll admit to a bit of bias, because I wrote that one, but hopefully you’ll agree that the writing does its job without going over the top: you immediately know what Linn is all about.

Here is the online project management service, Trello’s,3 board basics:

The Basics

Let’s go over some board basics. A new Trello board is like a clean slate, ready to organise any of your life’s projects.

A board represents a project. Whether you are redesigning a kitchen or launching a new website, a Trello board is the place to organise your tasks on lists and collaborate with your team of friends, family and colleagues.

That’s very good business writing: it’s clear, jargon-free and tells you exactly what you need to know.

And here is Apple,4 trying to sell you an iPhone 8:

iPhone 8 introduces an all-new glass design. The world’s most popular camera, now even better. The smartest, most powerful chip ever in an iPhone. Wireless charging that’s truly effortless. And augmented reality experiences never before possible. iPhone 8. A new generation of iPhone.

These are all marketing communications: Linn’s is about communicating a brand identity; Trello’s is explaining how you would use its service; Apple is trying to get you to buy a £800 phone. And you can learn from them because any kind of business writing is a form of selling.

You might be trying to sell an idea rather than a product, but the purpose is usually to persuade the recipient to do, say or agree with something. That doesn’t mean you should make your work emails read like iPhone adverts, but you can make them more effective by learning some of the same tricks the commercial copywriters have used.

KEY TAKEAWAYS

Writing is a craft. The more you do it, the better you get.

Good business writing gets to the point and communicates clearly.

Give yourself time not just to write, but to read others’ writing.

1 See https://cbsg.sf.net

2 See https://www.linn.co.uk/about

3 See https://trello.com/guide/board-basics.html

4 See https://www.apple.com/uk/iphone-8/

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