Write how you speak

If you’re stuck, shut down the word doc you’re working on and start again, from scratch, in an email (putting the name of a close friend in the “To:” field can help). —Matt WestonWrite how you speak (Business Bricks)

While I don’t think the adage “write how you speak” applies universally, it makes good sense in the context within which Weston presents it (on a website for small business owners), and at any rate this e-mail suggestion is a good tactic.

2 thoughts on “Write how you speak

  1. My sense is that the audience for the Business Bricks is small business owners who are probably good at talking, but who tend to get bogged down — either in marketese or annual-reportese — when trying to do routine written communication tasks.

    As an academic, I’m used to communicating on one level to my students, and on another level to my professional peers, so I think I’ve developed a variable approach to complexity that serves me pretty well.

  2. Is writing as you speak different from reading papers aloud? I remember that as something Dennis suggested for me to do when I work on a paper, which is extremely helpful when I write papers in graduate school, since talking through a point helps me control flow and tone better.

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