Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Your Business Writing Tells Who You Are


In the world of business, you only get one chance for a great first impression. The stakes are high – you are asking an investor for money, a customer for an order, or another executive for a partnership. Badly written letters, long rambling or emotional emails, or an obvious lack of spell checking will brand you as a poor business risk before the message is even considered.

No one is born with business writing skills, and everyone can learn them. Yet this seems to be one of the most common failures I see in business professionals. I get serious letters to investors, requests for assistance, and business plans almost every day which violate the basic rules of business communication. We both lose when that happens.

Thus, I thought a quick refresher on business writing basics might help you more than another tip on the next big thing on the business horizon:
  1. Select clear purpose and focus. Before you start writing, it's important to ask yourself what you intend the document to accomplish. What action you want the reader to take as a result of your message? Make every word focus on that purpose. Get to the point in the first sentence, and restate it in the last.

  2. Tailor writing to your audience. The audience makes all the difference. People subconsciously tailor their conversation, and same rule applies to writing. Consider your recipient's motivation, culture, socio-economic status, education level, gender, and relationship to you. If you don’t know this information, aim high rather than low.

  3. Organize toward a specific outcome. Think about the conclusions you'd like your readers to reach by the time they finish your writing. In general, you will either inform or persuade, and you should have one of these two approaches in mind as you write. Always use the same basic elements of opener, body, and conclusion.

  4. Make it look good. A poorly formatted document, unsightly fonts, and lack of white space will kill even the best writing. Place all the parts of the message in the correct positions. Use short paragraphs for readability and spacing. Put information where your reader expects to see it. Show your readers respect, and you’ll get respect back.

  5. Action items should be highlighted and positive. Underline action items, or even separate them in bullets to give visual cues to their importance. Readers will focus better on positive words rather than negative, so state negative messages in the most positive light to make them more palatable. Focus on what is, rather than what is not.

  6. Develop a friendly business writing voice. This will create a sense of familiarity for readers, making them more open to what you have to say. Inject confidence, and courtesy, always using non-discriminatory language to avoid offence and apparent bias. Write at the audience reading level or below.
In general, I don’t recommend phone text messaging or Instant Messaging for business purposes, unless the recipient already knows you well. Email is acceptable, but keep these to one page, addressed to one person, with meaningful subject lines, and use that spell checker.

Always remember that even the best written message can’t convey the body language and emotions of the sender. If the subject is sensitive or the message can be easily misinterpreted, don’t use email or anything written, but pick up the telephone or meet in person instead.

Who you are and who you can be, depend on the image your writing communicates to the mind of the receiver. That image is set more by the way you write, than by the content of your message. It’s worth the extra effort and learning time to get it right. It’s like dressing for success. You may not get a second chance.

Marty Zwilling

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3 comments:

Lynda McDaniel said...

Thanks so much, Marty! We need more voices like yours encouraging people to take a little extra time to write professionally. As director of the Association for Creative Business Writing, I keep seeing two issues holding businesspeople back: One, they think the right words don't really matter anymore (if the idea is strong, that's good enough). Two, many have deep-seated fears and frustrations about writing. Their inner "ornery editor" keeps telling them they're no good at writing, so why bother. I'm glad you're plugging away at this issue too!

Jane Shafrin said...

Their is a lot of bad writting around ... seriously, in the NYT (!) the columnist used they're instead of their ...

any ideas on how to get started as an editor/ghost writer? I have writing skills to die for, and would love to make them available!

MartinZwilling said...

@Jane, why not use those skills to create your own website, do the marketing, blogging, and public relations to find clients?

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