Why and how to add POP to your writing
Crystallizing your purpose, objective and process is crucial to focusing your messages and fine-tuning how you convey them.
Crystallizing your purpose, objective and process is crucial to focusing your messages and fine-tuning how you convey them.
How can you let your audience know more about your organization with the limited space and options in your Instagram or Twitter bio? Here are some handy rules.
As we roll into 2020, let’s remind ourselves to prioritize the reader’s takeaways, key on clarity and brevity, and use punctuation judiciously.
Apportioning a segment of your day to string words together is only part of the battle. Here are steps for setting aside and optimizing your available hours.
Wolfie didn’t plop himself down at the keyboard without first rolling ideas around in his noodle, and neither should you. Cogitate and percolate, so you won’t have to hyperventilate.
Make specific promises, use numerals, ask questions, and put ‘impact’ words at the beginning.
Don’t let Twitter litter, Instagram envy or Facebook bile bog you down or sour your outlook.
Your content marketing plan is a big investment of time and resources. What are the signs that your efforts and money are misplaced or mismanaged?
Articles about needless adjectives, cutting your prose in half, and words to express approval topped our list of popular stories.
Avoid loose sentences. Keep related words together. And don’t write your copy with beer.
Descriptive language can bring your prose to life—but a preponderance of trite words can make an editor’s eye twitch.
Needless introductory verbiage just wastes time—the reader’s and your own. Save yourself the keystrokes, and say what you mean to say.
Eliminate redundancies, substitute potent words for tepid phrasing, and pinpoint your focus as you rewrite.
Slang evolves with every generation, though certain awesome terms have epic linguistic legs. Enjoy these groovy words that have gained favor among hipsters and swells.
We keepers of the editorial flame don’t want much—though fewer comma splices and run-on sentences would be nice. A grammar-themed mug would be icing on the gingerbread house.