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You are here: Home > Writing and Speaking > Copywriting > Writing Excellence: How to Get Your Point, Make Your Point, and Stay on Point |
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Member You - Writing Excellence: How to Get Your Point, Make Your Point, and Stay on Point
Entrepreneurs - 9 Top Mistakes to Avoid keep your words working together. Question one can also work for you as a behind-the-scenes question, since the way you phrase your answer for yourself might be different from the way you phrase it to your audience!1. Isolating Yourself When setting up a business, you can get so overwhelmed with the administration that you don’t focus on building up your network. Networks can provide a way to catapult your business forward through referrals, joint ventures, or providing industry knowledge. Networking does not need to be through formal events but can come in many forms. Eve What d
What do I want my audience to know? This is the big one. Asking yourself this at the outset can help you establish why you're sitting down to write, and it doesn't matter if you're writing a blog entry, a novel, or a marketing circular. When you start writing, ask yourself this question to focus your attention and to focus your point. As you go through your writing task, ask yourself this question to keep your paragraphs united, to keep your sentences flowing, and to keep your words working together. Question one can also work for you as a behind-the-scenes question, since the way you phrase your answer for yourself might be different from the way you phrase it to your audience! What do
What do I want my audience to know? This is the big one. Asking yourself this at the outset can help you establish why you're sitting down to write, and it doesn't matter if you're writing a blog entry, a novel, or a marketing circular. When you start writing, ask yourself this question to focus your attention and to focus your point. As you go through your writing task, ask yourself this question to keep your paragraphs united, to keep your sentences flowing, and to keep your words working together. Question one can also work for you as a behind-the-scenes question, since the way you phrase your answer for yourself might be different from the way you phrase it to your audience! What d This is the big one. Asking yourself this at the outset can help you establish why you're sitting down to write, and it doesn't matter if you're writing a blog entry, a novel, or a marketing circular. When you start writing, ask yourself this question to focus your attention and to focus your point. As you go through your writing task, ask yourself this question to keep your paragraphs united, to keep your sentences flowing, and to keep your words working together. Question one can also work for you as a behind-the-scenes question, since the way you phrase your answer for yourself might be different from the way you phrase it to your audience! What d What d What does my audience want to know? Once you've clarified for yourself the point you want to make, be sure that it makes sense to your audience. Since most of what we write is for the use and benefit of others, it's important to keep their needs and wants clear. Where is this information best demonstrated? Now we're going on to the ways that you prove your point or show how your idea works. You can use examples, explanation, or demonstrations to prove the point that you've established with question one and honed with question two. This question works by giving you a way to write your examples, but it can also help you keep only the best examples, since "best demonstrated" means by you, too, so when you're done writing, make sure you apply this question to your text. Why is this important? In other words, so what? You have a point you want to make, you have examples for
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