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Posts within the category: Writing Skills
October 26, 2011
Nov 1 - Plain Language Writing Workshop: Six Strategies For Clearing The Clutter From Your Writing
Need to get up to speed on plain language? Interested in improving your own writing skills and learning how to improve the documents you edit for others? Enroll in this practical, hands-on, half-day workshop and gain strategies for writing in plain language. Learn how to use clear, accurate wording that will help your reader do what you ask and understand what you mean.
Register for the November 1 workshop
You'll learn six strategies for clearing the clutter from your writing:
- How to tailor your writing to your readers' needs
- How to use a two-tier process for editing for conciseness
- How to make your writing scannable
- How, and when, to display information in vertical lists or tables
- How to cut word count by 10 percent, 25 percent, or even 50 percent
- How, and why, to write in active voice
You'll learn about complying with the recent plain language law:
- What is the Plain Writing Act of 2010?
- How will this legislation affect government agencies?
- How should corporations and non-profits respond to this law?
You should attend this workshop if you:
- Value clarity in written communication
- Need to improve your writing skills
- Want to be able to explain to colleagues why their writing needs to be edited
- Want to learn how recent plain language laws will affect writing in the government and beyond
You will receive:
- A notebook containing course exercises and resources
- Before-and-after examples that show the power of a plain language rewrite
- A plain language resource list
Questions about the November 1 Plain Language Writing Workshop? Call 301-989-9583 or send an e-mail to Leslie@ewriteonline.com
Leslie
March 9, 2011
Hiring? Nine interview questions you must ask applicants about their writing skills
At last, the economy is picking up a little. After a couple of years of "doing more with less," you may be lucky enough to be hiring. Maybe you've spent all morning digging through piles of cover letters, resumes, and writing samples. It's not easy to figure out whether an applicant has excellent writing skills or even competent ones, and it's painful to discover after you've made an offer that your new employee is a poor writer.
Pose these questions during the interview, and you'll learn all you need to know about an applicant's writing skills, problem-solving strategies, and experience helping colleagues with their writing. And, best of all, you'll avoid "hirer's remorse."
- Do you like to write? Why? Liking to write isn't a prerequisite for on-the-job success, but it's one good indicator. The Why? follow-up should give you some indication of whether the answer is sincere.
- What are your writing strengths and weaknesses? Of course, you'll want to know what an applicant is or isn't good at, but the best reason to ask this question is to get a sense of how well the applicant can talk about writing, which is an important skill of its own.
- How much writing have you done in your previous jobs? (Use a specific measure.) Good writers know how much they produce. "I wrote four 250-word articles for each issue of our monthly newsletter" or "I answered between 20 and 30 e-mails to customers each day" would be good answers to this question.
- How do you measure the success of one of your writing projects? This question helps you assess whether the applicant has a results-oriented approach to writing. Does he or she think, as you do, that good writing accomplishes something?
- Can you describe three different writing tasks you had on your previous job? Can you arrange them in order of difficulty, listing the easiest one first? There's no right or wrong answer to this question, but it will reveal a lot about the applicant's writing experience.
- Can you cite one grammar or punctuation rule you are absolutely certain about? A job interview is stressful enough; you probably don't want to torture the poor applicant with a grammar quiz. But asking a prospective employee to cite one rule, just one, will indicate whether this person is comfortable with the mechanics of writing. It's a fair question, not a tricky one.
- Have you mentored or helped anyone else become a better writer? If so, what steps did you take to help? While not a writing skill per se, mentoring other writers does involve the ability to explain what's wrong with a draft document and help the writer make it better. These are important skills for anyone who will be part of a writing team.
- When you have problems with your writing, what steps do you take to improve? This question may help you get a sense of whether the applicant will take writing feedback well or—even better—seek it out.
- What changes could have been made to the workflow at your last job that would have improved the quality of the documents or content you produced? Applicants who can answer this question well will be real assets to your team because they understand that writing well is a process. Improve the process and the quality of the product will improve too.
OK, maybe asking all nine of these questions would make for a really long interview. Let me know which ones you'll use, or leave a comment here to list the writing-related interview questions you include in interviews.
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