Writing is a fundamental part of communication, yet many people are poor writers.
Part of becoming a great writer is practice. You become a better writer with every email, story or blog post you draft.
There also are things you can do to improve your writing immediately.
Here are 30 tips to improve your writing now from my friend, Carrie Coppernoll, a staff writer and columnist at The Oklahoman:
1. Do a word count. Cut your story by 10 percent.
2. Stop worrying about sounding smart. Jargon is lame.
3. Take out what doesn’t further your story, even if it’s interesting.
4. Find the expletives. Hunt them down.
5. Don’t use more than three prepositional phrases in a sentence.
6. Plan. Create an outline. Writing anxiety comes from a lack of process.
7. Print your story. Circle the verbs. Compare the active verbs to the “to be” ones.
8. Get one more source.
9. Put attribution at the first natural pause, even if it’s in the middle of a sentence.
10. Ask interesting questions in your interviews.
11. Don’t use the thesaurus.
12. Reword sentences with “could be.”
13. Delete “currently.” That’s what the present tense is for.
14. Understand what you’re writing about.
15. Make sure you have identifiable antecedents.
16. Verify the verifiable.
17. Don’t use the same words.
18. Question sentences longer than 23 words.
19. News first, attribution second.
20. Don’t make math excuses. Check your numbers.
21. Use eight digits or less in a paragraph.
22. Round off.
23. Cut clichés. Cut them right now.
24. Sharpen the picture with details instead of generalities.
25. Say what IS happening, not what is NOT happening.
26. Identify and answer the compelling question.
27. Write. Take a break. Edit.
28. Use “said.”
29. Read your story aloud.
30. Accept editing.
Corey Michael Blake says
Love this post. I’m fairly insane over chopping out “began to” or “started to” in favor of getting right into the verb. I also eliminate the use of “really” and “very” as much as possible. It’s typically wasted space. The difference between “scared” and “very scared” or “really scared” is less than most writers imagine and statements without them are more concise and bolder. Also adamant about single spaces after periods. Nerd to the 10th. I love the rhythm of words!
Prof KRG says
Corey,
I train “very” right out of my students. I also forgot how much I hate two spaces after periods. It’s such a waste of space and looks terrible on screens.
Thanks for reading and commenting!
Kenna
Joshua Wilner/A Writer Writes says
Very nice list. A good writer looks for a good editor and a good editor remembers that style and voice have their place too. Some of my “best” pieces were destroyed by editors who didn’t like the style of writing.
Great writing comes from a partnership between both sides.
DPumagualle says
profkrg Thank you for this very helpful list, Professor Griffin.
profkrg says
DPumagualle You are so welcome! I’m glad you found it helpful.
kayakendall says
profkrg Don’t you find that it’s different based on the audience? Blog vs. article?