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Power
Writing 101: Tips and Tricks to Get
You Taken Seriously!
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| By Dina Giolitto |
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In my ten years as an advertiser, Ive
encountered plenty of folks with a flair
for writing. They were born having some
idea of where to put the words within the
sentence, and the sentences within the paragraph.
They usually know what words to use
when to say bloom instead of
grow, or confused
instead of befuddled.
But having a flair doesnt make them
an expert in the field.
Im an expert ad copywriter. But I
cant write a journalistic piece to
save my life. I have no experience in this
area, and its just not my bag. So
I happily leave this task to the reporters.
Likewise, a retailer, marketer or salesperson
should leave the writing to the writer.
Yet they seldom do.
A copywriter is forever trying to explain
why he inserted a word where he did, or
why he chose one expression over another.
Frequently, a client or employer takes a
writers carefully constructed piece
and turns it into a wordgarbage wasteland.
An atrocity... of verbosity!
If youre such an offender, shame on
you! Let your writer do the job he or she
was hired for: to make you look good. But
if you insist on meddling with the marketing,
critiquing the catalog and butchering the
brochure, you may as well learn how to do
it right. Master the secret to writing that
packs a punch and makes people view you
as a credible source. Learn the tricks of
the trade that will get you taken seriously!
Use concrete examples to prove your point.
Repeating an idea in different words leaves
your writing flat and empty. "Were
great! Were so awesome! You wont
believe how cool we are!" Why are you
cool? Did you help a billion people save
money last year? Did you rescue an endangered
species from extinction? If you cant
back your claim with solid evidence, no
one will believe what you say. Be specific!
Im thinking of you might
win brownie points, but Im thinking
of you in that little black dress you wore
last weekendnow thatll
actually get you somewhere!
Resist the temptation to cheer for yourself.
Youre good, and you know it. But if
you must crow about it while doing your
peacock strut, tell it to your mother because
no one else cares. The worlds consumers
arent interested in what you can do.
Theyre interested in what you can
do for them.
Dont pepper your writing with bad
puns and kitschy wordplay. This is a weakness
of mine. Puns come to me at the strangest
times... in the shower, while Im driving,
as Im trying to fall asleep. I want
to paint the world with my puns, but alas,
this is not appropriate! No one wants to
click on their financial advisors
website and see him raving to everyone in
the free world that hes so money,
baby! Puns are fun, but the true meaning
of a well-turned phrase is one thats
used at the right time and in the right
context.
Use the active voice. I forgot about this
for a long time, and my writing suffered
for it. The active voice lends a certain
dynamic quality to your writing. The
teacher wrote the words on the blackboard
employs the active voice. The words
on the blackboard were written by the teacher
illustrates the passive voice. Dont
be passive! Avoid any form of the verb to
be, such as is, are,
was, were. Practice
this by literally using your own voice.
Read your writing aloud, doing your best
announcer impression. If as
you read, you find yourself lapsing into
a sing-songy elementary-school kid reading
his essay out loud, you probably failed
the assignment.
Get rid of the asides in parentheses.
They might look cute in an email to a girlfriend,
but asides that stray
from the main point of an informative paragraph
make you look like a scatterbrain. Interrupting
a thought with an unrelated remark is distracting
to the reader. Its a comedic tactic
that plays out well in informal writing,
but just doesnt fly in the real world.
Avoid the following: double negatives, redundancy,
dangling participles.
The double negative: Its not
impossible. Why not just say, Its
possible. A negative plus a negative
really does make a positive, even in writing!
Redundancy: Were also offering
free gifts to our members too. Also
and too may be at opposite ends
of the sentence, but theyre serving
the same exact purpose and that means one
has to go. Better: "We're also offering
free gifts to our members."
Dangling participle: Beware the dangler
in this sentence! Shivering with cold,
Annes hat barely covered her ears.
Here, Shivering with cold should
modify Anne because shes the one who
is shivering. The way this reads now, Annes
hat is the one with goosebumps. Acceptable:
"Annes hat barely covered her
ears, and she shivered with cold."
Employ parallelism. Parallelism helps reinforce
a point with repeated sentence structure.
Bulletpoints best illustrate parallelism.
An example:
The product effectively:
- relieves headaches
- eases tension
- boosts immunity
Notice that each bullet follows the same
format: action verb, object of verb. To
stray from this format is to do a disservice
to the bullet. Parallelism also works in
a sequence separated by commas. I
like pie, I like cake, and I like pudding.
Another example: She enjoys climbing,
hiking, and fishing. The incorrect
version of this sentence: She enjoys
climbing, hiking, and to fish.
Avoid wordiness. Eliminate the following
words and phrases from your vocabulary,
and feel better about yourself: very, unique,
being that, utilize/utilization, a lot,
needless to say, it goes without saying,
in back of, without a doubt, at some point
in time, as to whether, it seems to me,
oddly enough. Theyre just filler,
and theyre in the same category as
their credibility-stealing cousins redundancy,
the double negative, and the passive voice.
Go easy on the prepositional phrases. The
girl who was sitting on the porch of the
house that was up on the hill, felt the
breeze as it was gently blowing through
her hair. Eegads, what a mouthful!
Correct this problem by breaking up your
ideas into separate sentences. "The
house stood atop the hill, and as the girl
sat on the porch she felt the breeze blowing
through her hair."
Use adjectives sparingly. What? But
my English teacher taught me... Forget
about what your teacher said. Youre
running with the big dogs now. Which is
more interesting? The boy skipped
happily and grinned openly, or The
boy skipped down the hill, a grin playing
about his face.
Dont repeat words. I repeat: dont
repeat words.
Avoid hyphenating words that shouldnt
be hyphenated. What is this new trend thats
sweeping the nation? Put-on your coat.
Please check-in before 9 pm.
Hyphens are used to join two words that,
when used in conjunction, take on another
word form. Put on your coat
doesnt require a hyphen because you
can also say Put your coat on.
Check-in would require a hyphen
if the sentence read like this: Check-in
is at 9 pm. This is because check
and in work together here as a noun. Hyphenation
is tricky, I admit; even as a grammarian
I must consult my styleguide from time to
time. I suggest you do the same.
For the Love of God, SPELLCHECK! Enough
said.
Dont over-exclaim or use excess punctuation
marks in formal writing or advertising.
And for Gods sake please dont
slip emoticons in to help you convey a feeling.
Thats what the vast English vocabulary
is for. When people see you dropping exclam-bombs
everywhere, theyll think youre
cheap, tawdry and lacking design capabilities.
Remember, you can use big bold fonts to
make certain buzzwords jump right off the
page.
Dashes and ellipses... are
not acceptable ways to finesse a poorly
constructed paragraph. Theres nothing
wrong with having two separate sentences
instead of one thats broken up into
sections. Dashes and ellipses are a copywriting
crutch. Im tempted by them just as
much as the next guy. Its so easy
to insert a little pause in my rambler of
a run-on using those three cute little dots.
The ellipse... I love it! But I must control
myself. Make a simple statement, punctuate
with finality, move on to the next idea.
Dont underestimate the power of the
period. We all need a break now and then!
Dont be afraid to use contractions.
More and more I come across emails written
by people who are either too lazy to use
contractions, or they are simply fooled
into thinking it is going to make them look
smart. Whats wrong with the sentence
I just wrote? Contractions such as its,
Im, were, youre, theyre,
couldnt, wouldnt didnt,
doesnt, arent etc. are a way
to sound conversational in writing. Thats
how people talk. What if you were making
a formal speech? If you eliminated all the
contractions, youd sound pretty robotlike,
wouldnt you?
One space will do. Those who are behind
the writing times still type two spaces
after an end punctuation mark. Modern word
processing programs have eliminated the
need for this, as they can sense the need
for a skoche more room after periods, question
marks and exclams. So as much as I applaud
you for being fastidious in your space insertion,
you can stop it right now. Do your clients
a favor! Theyre not doubling up on
spaces in their websites, so when you submit
writing for them, dont you do it either.
This article is lengthy, but every single
sentence holds weight. Read, and heed these
words! Dont be an advertising amateur;
if you really want to wow em with
your wordsmithing wizardry, memorize and
hold true to the writing rules outlined
here. Above all: practice, practice, practice!
Master these tactics, and youre sure
to establish yourself as a writer with valuable
insights, expert information and a powerful
message to the world. And a writer like
that gets taken seriously.
Copyright 2005 Dina Giolitto. All rights
reserved.
About the author:
Dina Giolitto is a New-Jersey based Copywriting
Consultant with nine years' industry experience.
Her current focus is web content and web
marketing for a multitude of products and
services although the bulk of her experience
lies in retail for big-name companies like
Toys"R"Us. Visit http://www.wordfeeder.com
for rates and samples.
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