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1. Writing for BUSY readers
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Writing for BUSY readers

A sales manager from a major telco recently told me he gets 100–150 emails daily. How do you get someone in an information avalanche like that to absorb your message?

Since most of your readers would say they're busy, here's how to write for them:

  1. Big news first: Cut to the chase! People don’t have time for preamble. This is the journalist’s “inverted pyramid”. More: http://bit.ly/Pyramid_Power
  2. Key Points: Take a tip from the Australian Financial Review – start your doc with a “Key Points” box of two-to-four bullet points summarising your message.
  3. Be brief: Write as concisely as you can. That means plain English, active voice, and no waffle or redundant words. More: http://bit.ly/Keep_it_Short_Sport
  4. Subhead signposts: Flat-out readers will skim-read, so catch their eye with subheads that tell the story. More:http://bit.ly/GPS_for_Your_Reader
  5. Stand in their shoes: Be empathic. If you were them, what would you be looking for? You’d probably be trying to work out what’s relevant in the message, what priority to make it, and what’s next. So make those things clear to your reader.
  6. Change mediums: I’m not talking about Madame Zorba, but about sending your message in a medium that’s not already overloaded. If the guy gets 100 emails a day, consider communicating another way, e.g. by phone, SMS, instant message, postcard, internal mail, or fat-o-gram.

The information avalanche is here to stay. But smart writers can work around it.

What’s your favourite tip? Please share it on our blog.

Paul sig

Paul and Petrina

   
 

Writing for LAZY readers

Video: Classic writing blunders

101 tips eBook (free)

Video: Writing to Persuade

Dumb Distractions

Pyramid Power

Hyphen Syphon

Know thy readers

Exterminating errors

Writing in your underpants

Apostrophe catastrophe

Make it rare to
get “Well done!”

Keep it short, sport

Fat-free writing

ALL back issues

   

BRAIN GYM
A strong busy-ness case

Next time you to write to someone super busy (e.g. your boss?), try applying the tips above, and note their reaction:

  • Did they respond faster than normal?
  • Did you get what you asked for?

 

 

Public writing masterclasses
- SYD, MEL, BNE

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Magneto Communications Pty Ltd

Phone/fax 1300 658 580

www.magneto.net.au
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