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> Get Articles > Copywriting > Five Easy Ways To Add Punch To Your Words

Five Easy Ways To Add Punch To Your Words


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Angela Booth
abdigital-e.biz

Five easy ways to add punch to your words
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*Article Use Guidelines*



Use in opt-in publications, or on Web sites, but please include

the resource box. If you could send a copy to me at email

address: <a href="mailto:abdigital-e.biz">mailto:abdigital-e.biz</a> , I appreciate it. Many thanks.

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Summary: Writing is hard, even for writers. These five techniques

will make your writing chores easier, and your writing livelier.





Total words: 800



Category: Small Business







Five easy ways to add punch to your words





Copyright (c) 2002 by Angela Booth





Writing is hard, even for writers. These five techniques will

make your writing chores easier, and your writing livelier.







It's time to write something important, and your palms sweat. You

force yourself to write, while gritting your teeth and hating

every moment of the process. Your palms sweat some more. And your

head aches, because you realize that your words have all the life

of roadkill. Why is it that the more important the writing task,

the more lifeless your words? Maybe it's performance anxiety. You

tense up, instead of letting the words flow.



Try these five easy ways to add punch to your words:



1. Get conversational, and write fast



When you're writing, imagine you're talking to someone. Just

having a quiet chat. You want to tell them about whatever it is

you're writing about.



To make this easier, write in the form of a letter: "Dear Joanne

Let me tell you about..."



Write quickly, exactly as you'd speak. Don't worry about grammar,

spelling and typos. Just blurt out whatever you have to say.



Force yourself to do this by setting a time limit. Set a timer

for five minutes. Tap out (or write, if you're using pen and

paper) any kind of gibberish at all for five minutes. Turning off

your monitor helps, because it stops you seeing the words and

going back to correct typos.





2. Get specific



Want to write waffle? Generalize. Like in this sentence from a

real estate agent's ad for a house:



"You are certain to be impressed by the space in this three

bedroom family home."



I looked at the photo of the house, and wrote:



"Shaded by palms and eucalypts and surrounded by a well-

maintained garden, this three bedroom, honey-gold brick mini-

mansion offers your family space to play and grow. "



Not Shakespeare, but the words describe this house specifically.





3. Get sensuous



Be a reporter. Use your senses. What can you see, hear, smell,

touch and taste?



When you report what's happening, your reader is right there with

you.



Let's say you're writing a letter to your bank, whining about the

latest foul-up with your account.



"Unfortunately I was climbing my front steps when I opened my

card statement, and I was so surprised I tripped. The bruise on

my shin's blossomed from red to blue to dark-blue, and I'm

gulping painkillers every four hours. You need to put warning

labels on your envelopes."



Not hard to write, and not boring either. You're just telling

what happened.



4. Get enthusiastic



What you're feeling comes through in your words, always. So, to

liven up your words, you have to be interested in what you're

writing about.



This can be hard, but luckily enthusiasm is transferable. For

example, let's say that you're writing a presentation for your

latest product. You don't like the product, you can't imagine

that anyone will ever like it, much less pay money for it. In

that frame of mind, guess how the presentation will sound?



OK, close your eyes and imagine your favourite pastime, let's say

it's swimming. You're doing lazy laps in the pool, the sun is

shining, you've got the whole day to yourself, maybe a movie

later...



Hold that feeling! Keep the feeling, and dive into writing the

presentation. (Try this, I swear it works.)



5. Tell the reader what to do



Always tell the reader what you want him to do.



If you're writing an ad, don't forget to give the address of the

store, or give a phone number. You'd be amazed at how much

advertising is happily inserted into everything from newspapers

and Web sites to the Yellow Pages without giving basic contact

information.



If you're writing a letter, or an e-mail message, do the same

thing. You may think that what you want the reader to do is

obvious, and it may be, but give the instruction anyway.



Try these five techniques, and please send me a message

(sun818_98yahoo.com) to tell me about your results. If you've

got other techniques that work for you, tell me about those too.

I'm always looking for ways to make writing easier. If I use your

technique in a future article, I'll happily give you credit.





***Resource box: if using, please include*** When your words

sound good, you sound good. Author and copywriter Angela Booth

crafts words for your business --- words to sell, educate or

persuade. Get in touch today for a free quote:



<a href="mailto:abdigital-e.biz">mailto:abdigital-e.biz</a>



Free ezine: Creative Small Biz --- subscribe at:

<a href="http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Creative_Small_Biz/

">http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Creative_Small_Biz/

</a>





**END**










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