Related Links

Featured Links





Recommended Products



 

 
Featured Articles

Are You A Creative "Meathead"?
Remember Archie Bunker's description of what a Meathead was on All in the Family?Dead, from the neck up!When it comes to creaivity, innnovation, coming up with ideas that magically turn into money - are you alive?Ever wonder how some of the big names in ...

Brainstorming! The Key To Wealth
Advertising executive Alex F. Osborne first coined the word “brainstorming” in the early 1940’s. Since then literally millions of ideas, products, services and solutions have been created and improved on. Every institution from Fortune 500 companies to ...

Top Ten No Money Promotion Ways That Create New Clients and Fast Sales
Better than offline promotion such as press releases, talks, or networking? Better than search engine placement, banner ads, ezines and news groups? Yes! The number one way to promote your service and your products is through informational how-to articles ...


Custom Search
10 tips to help you pack more power into your business writing
 

2. Identify your target audience and get to know them very well. No matter how beautifully structured your message is if it doesn’t take into account the real circumstances and needs of the audience, it won’t work. Align your message’s objectives with these circumstances and needs.

3. Study the media you’ll be using; be aware of how people will receive your message and where your message will be competing for their attention, use your common sense and creativity to make it stand out in the crowd. (Or if the crowd’s too big, reconsider the choice of media if that’s within your power.)

4. Now develop your message based on these issues, and add in the final magic ingredient … “what’s in it for them?” Successful business messages are always based on benefits for the target audience – either actual or implied. Ensure you know the difference between features and benefits, and how to convert features into benefits.

5. Research the way your target audience speak and communicate, and phrase your message in their language – which may not necessarily be yours. Avoid corporate pomposity and unnecessary jargon. Talk to “you,” not some vague third party, and keep your English as simple as possible, especially when your message is going to people who originate from other cultures.

6. Traditional grammar and even spelling mostly have been thrown out of the window. However there are still a few grammar rules you need to follow if you don’t want your message to look amateurish. Your knowledge of the audience and how they communicate will dictate your writing style to a large extent. Don’t let catchwords, “internet-speak,”


emoticons, etc. obscure your message or its benefits.

7. Time pressures and the influence of the internet have made us into a world of browsers, even when we’re reading brochures and other print. Unless it’s very short organise your offline text so readers who are browsing get the key points very easily. Always separate technical detail and other lengthy data from the main text so readers aren’t obliged to plod through it unless they want to.

8. Never be tempted to transplant text written for print into an online environment. Online text is as different from offline text as a PC screen is from paper. Because reading from screens is so unfriendly, online text must be very short and crisp and must make it extremely easy for readers to absorb the key points. Don’t let web designers talk you into flamboyant graphics that could inadvertently swamp your message.

9. When you give a speech, make sure you write it for yourself and your natural way of speaking – not your (or someone else’s) idea of how an important business person should speak in public. Use a tape recorder to get an objective view of your voice, style, weaknesses and strengths. Keep sentences short with only one idea in each. Avoid telling jokes unless you’re naturally funny. And rehearse, rehearse, rehearse.

10. If you think you may be out of your depth with a business writing project (e.g. a TV commercial, major direct marketing campaign, complex video or business theatre script) you’re probably right – so call in a professional writer. Don’t risk embarrassing yourself or your organisation with an attempt that’s amateurish – there’s no shame in admitting you can't be an expert at everything!


About the Author
Canadian-born Suzan St Maur is an international business writer and author based in the United Kingdom. Read more - and check out her free biweekly business writing tips eZine, Tipz from Suze, - at her website, SuzanStMaur.com
© Suzan St Maur 2003-2005


News



Teen play explores the creative force of flash mobs
Philadelphia Inquirer
"One of the things we started off talking about . . . was creativity vs. destruction," said Colleen Hughes, the codirector. "We wanted to bring the same ...

and more »

117 Days brings St. Louis creativity to Pageant
St. Louis Post-Dispatch
117 Days, a celebration of St. Louis' creativity, unfolds at 8 pm Sunday at the Pageant. Kevin Gagnepain of Stir, Joe Dirt & the Dirty Boys Band and El ...

and more »

Hubbard Hall offers creative movement
Bennington Banner
CAMBRIDGE, NY -- The Hubbard Hall Dance and Movement Program begins a new term of Creative Movement for ages 2 to 5 in September! ...

and more »

The plan for Manny Pacquiao in MMA
ESPN (blog)
There's no room for creativity in boxing -- it's the same game of rock 'em, sock 'em robots every time out -- and Manny Pacquiao's handlers ...

and more »

Bad Art: Online Sources For Creativity Gone Wron...
Phoenix New Times (blog)
2 2010 @ 2:20PM ​We all might like to think we're a bit creative in our own ways. And if you use said creativity in order to make a living, ...

and more »