
If one person puts their thoughts together and shares it with a team, this helps the rest of the team put their thoughts together. Give others a thing to react to. Or else your team may not examine the full breadth of a problem.
How to write better
If writing’s not your jam, now’s time to get better. Here are some tips that have helped me.
Get to the point faster.
When you send someone a long presentation, document, or message, here’s what they care about: “What’s your point?” Do your reader a solid and answer this question early in your message. They’ll thank you.
Write to someone who has no idea what you do.
Anyone who has zero context about what you’re working on and reads what you write should immediately understand what you’re trying to convey. There’s a neat trick that helps: write to someone who has no idea what you do. I choose my mom. She should be able to read an article of mine online and get the gist.
Spell out your acronyms.
Even if your client or boss uses acronyms, always spell them out. “Create, read, update, and delete” levels the playing field. “CRUD” does not.
Tell ’em what you’re gonna tell ‘em.
Whenever I write a presentation, I default to this format:
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Tell ’em what you’re gonna tell ‘em
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Tell ’em
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Tell ’em what you just told ‘em
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Tell ’em what happens next
For example:
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“I’m going to share you three options on how we could move forward. I’d love to know which option you prefer and why.” (Tell ’em what you’re gonna tell ‘em)
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“Here are our three options.” (Tell ‘em)
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“The three options we went over were A, B, and C.” (Tell ’em what you just told ‘em)
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“Given we chose option B, here are our next steps.” (Tell ’em what happens next)
This structure works so well for presentations because it makes your message easy to follow. Try it.
Use active voice, not passive voice.
“Our developers prefer Option B.” > “Option B is preferred by our developers.”
Passive voice plagues business communication. Don’t add to the plague. Use active voice.
Less commas. More periods.
I love complex ideas. But complex ideas always morph into long, rambling, verbose sentences, with lots of commas (and lots of parentheses). I’m working on this.
Gary Provost, author of Make Every Word Count, put it well:
from Hacker News https://ift.tt/2XQ7ueI
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