The 5 ways you hurt your own writing process
You may be sabotaging your own writing.
You may be sabotaging your own writing.
When it comes to asking questions and adding emotion, humans win out over bots for now.
Before taking Ragan’s 5th Annual Benchmark Report, here’s a look back at last year’s most prescient findings.
Hall of Famer Satchel Paige’s pitching style helps explain a balky misstep many communicators make.
Today, fewer communicators get to work for a tough editor who helped them work hard to get it right.
Corporate communicators can learn a lot from a master of long-form stories.
Tips for training your brain to give your own work a solid edit.
Ask these three questions to make sure you’re editing and not just proofreading.
For writers, the devil’s in the nitpicking details. Go from mediocre to meticulous by minding your adverbs, sentence structure, redundancies and vague wording.
The author distills guidance from 40 practitioners to carve your path to success in the new year–and beyond.
Use these tactics to tighten, brighten and enhance whatever sloppy copy comes your way.
An infographic from GrammarCheck offers a blueprint for making your writing concise, clear and captivating.
A strategic mindset adjustment (and a dash of perspective) can make a profound difference on your productivity. Here’s how to strike a healthier balance in your approach toward work.
Put your daily commitments to paper, set small, achievable goals, and don’t freak out about a messy first draft.
Joe Brumm, the creative force behind the beloved animated sensation, shares guidance on finding the concise core of a story.