5 Ways to Write With Style

A little creative flair helps everyone write with style and hook readers. With the rise of generative AI, because it’s trained on others’ online content, bland or ordinary writing abounds. AI-created copy also promotes common writing woes, from clichés to the passive voice.

Here’s how to sell a product, a service, or an idea memorably to gain leads.

1. Evoke imagery – Writers have often been advised to “show, not tell”: to choose words that stimulate the five senses. “To be” verbs and other weak wording advise readers how to feel or think. Such passages are as exciting as endless vacation photos.

  • Example: The storm was terrifying.
  • Rewrite: The wind roared like a train, causing the hairs on the back of Jan’s neck to rise.

The latter shows the physical effects of the wind on Jan through the senses of feeling and hearing. Descriptive language adds impact to your storytelling, headlines, and body copy.

Poets excel at turning the literal into the figurative.

Example: “The fog comes on little cat feet.” ~ Carl Sandburg, Fog

Studying this art form can inspire creative wording. It can truly enhance your storytelling. In business terms, it can mean translating ordinary descriptions of a service into images everyone can relate to.

Example: “Like a good neighbor, State Farm is there.”

To enhance imagery, imagine a scene unfolding in your mind and describe it with action verbs, adjectives, or other details. In advertising, choose power words

For promotional purposes, descriptive writing reframes concepts or terms to make them sound more appealing. It prefers adjectives like “oven-crisp,” to “baked.” As Roger Dooley noted in “Brainfluence,” it doesn’t work in contexts that require a clear understanding of information, such as ordering instructions.

2. Add rhythm – Vary the length of your sentences. For instance, three short ones in a row sound robotic:

A man dressed as a female punk wearing an bright orange wig, green eyeshadow, and dark lipstick writing with a pencil on a pad of paper.

As they flow from one idea to the next, a mix of short and long sentences adds rhythm and engrosses readers.

When you repeat words for emphasis, you can produce a memorable statement. Leaders like Ronald Reagan and Martin Luther King, Jr. used this anaphora effectively to highlight their beliefs and ideas. They tied them together clearly while they evoked strong emotions in their listeners. 

Example: “Ask not what your country can do for you, ask what you can do for your country.” ~ John F. Kennedy

Anaphora also works well in ads. 

Example: “Big skies. Big scenery. Big possibilities for all kinds of adventure.” (WestJet)

Rhythm, coupled with the tone behind your words, adds grace or eloquence.

Alliteration, words that start with the same letter or sound nearby in a sentence, acts like music to readers’ ears.

Like anaphora, it makes passages “stickier,” adds emphasis, and stirs feelings. It also works well in slogans:

Example: Faster, fulfilling, and flexible business solutions.

Don’t veer into creating tongue twisters, though. Use similar-sounding words sparingly.

Example: You can’t cut corners.

3. Rhyme time – You don’t have to mimic Dr. Seuss — which can be a little “suss” to some — but similar-sounding words can also connect with readers.

According to cognitive fluency researcher Matt McGlone, rhyming phrases can feel more truthful or accurate to readers. They’re also easier for our brains to process, making them clearer and more memorable.

Rhyme can be most effective for boosting brand awareness and engagement in slogans, calls-to-action, or headlines.

Example: Plop, plop, fizz fizz, oh, what a relief it is! (Alka-Seltzer)

As shown, one word that rhymes with another is appealing. A one-syllable word also sounds natural.

Plays on words, however, can go over some readers’ heads. Prefer clear over clever phrasing.

4. Get creative – Clichés are overused passages that lack originality. 

Example: Think outside the box.

Consider other ways to say it with style. 

Revised: Find a new solution.

Cliché Finder can help you spotlight them in your work.

Behavioral marketing experts like Nancy Harhut have suggested that metaphors can transform abstract products into concrete or tangible ones. They help us grasp a concept quickly.

Example: “Crazy Egg is like a pair of X-ray glasses that lets you see exactly what people are doing on your website.”

5. Sound like yourself When I chose the phrase “write with style” as part of this blog’s title, I hadn’t read the International Paper ad by novelist Kurt Vonnegut. While I researched and wrote this piece, I stumbled across the ad, which is essentially an article featuring his tips on the topic. 

In it, Vonnegut advised against writing “like cultivated Englishmen of a century or more ago.” He also suggested you write like you speak and “say what you mean to say,” in easy-to-understand language. When you’re selling a product or a service, that can mean writing like your audience speaks.

Like Vonnegut’s works, his thoughts remain timeless. Our voices, perspectives, and experiences make us unique. ChatGPT hasn’t played darts. It hasn’t stubbed a toe or eaten creme brulee. Though it can create based on data, it lacks our perceptions. It doesn’t always duplicate humanity.

How do you write with style? Feel free to comment below.

QUOTES

“If you scribble your thoughts any which way, your readers will surely feel that you care nothing about them. They will mark you down as an egomaniac or a chowderhead — or, worse, they will stop reading you.”

Kurt Vonnegut

5 Ways to Boost Your Writing Style and Tone for Business

1. Know the purpose of your document. Let it determine the appropriate writing style and tone.

  • Emails: People often write them like they speak, with relaxed language, using contractions and slang (“Let’s talk soon.”). Depending on company culture, internal memos may use more formal wording, forgoing humor and emojis. It may use neutral pronouns to remove potential bias.
  • Articles, web pages, newsletters, social media, and blog posts: Those that inform can include more neutral wording than those that entertain. If you want to interest people in buying a product or a service or to support something, you may use persuasive wording with psychological triggers, like emails warning of a sale that will end soon.
  • Crisis communications: When an emergency strikes on a mass scale, consider the gravity of the situation. Serious topics, such as widespread layoffs, a mass killing, or a harmful virus need care and sensitivity. Depending on the circumstances, it’s more empathetic to deliver the news by phone, video, or in person.

2. Simplify. Large blocks of text can be hard to read online, especially without proper formatting. Shorter words, sentences, and paragraphs free of jargon are easier to read. Add a list or bullet points to reduce blocks of text to improve scannability. Write in an active, rather than a passive voice, which fosters complex words and phrases.

3. Clarify. Explain complex concepts. Use examples. Add links to boost comprehension and save words. Insert images if they will enhance your explanation.

4. Show empathy, respect, and sincerity. Think about who your reader is, where they’re at, and what they struggle with.

  • End your email with a greeting.
  • Use the words “please” and “thank you” as appropriate.
  • Consider writing for inclusivity: different races, ethnicities, and people with disabilities.
  • Consider how readers from another culture may interpret your message.

5. Proofread. As a Forbes article declared, typos, especially lots of them, can make you look sloppy or “kill your brand.” Spell-checking software maker Grammarly reported in their study of 100 LinkedIn profiles of native English speakers that it can affect a professional’s ability to be promoted. They found that the profiles of people who weren’t promoted to a director-level position in the first ten years of their careers had 2.5 more errors than those who advanced.

Need to improve the tone or other parts of your writing to boost your image and your success? Consider a business writing coaching session.

BOOK A COACHING SESSION

What kind of tone works for you in your writing? Feel free to comment below.

Quotes

“Don’t you type at me in that tone of voice.” ~ Anonymous

“A writer doesn’t have a soundtrack or a strobe light to build the effect she wants. She has conflict, surprise, imagery, details, the words she chooses, and the way she arranges them in sentences.” ~ Adair Lara

5 Ways to Hook Readers With Your Subheadings

1. Move from the general to the specific. As one whiskey maker put it, “Don’t be vague — ask for Haig.”

Example: Scenarios for Changing Trusts
Revised: How to Divide Trust Assets Fairly

Another way to clarify your subheadings (and improve SEO) is to use questions people ask from Google’s Instant or Answer box or Answer the Public.

Example: When Should You Decant a Trust?

Several subheadings in a long article can form a table of contents.

2. Keep count – In a study of 100 million article headlines by digital marketing experts BuzzSumo, the top two most engaging headlines began with a number.

Example: 7 Ways NOT to Win an Argument

Numbers in headings can also help your SEO. For instance, many top-ranked pages have numbers in the titles and subheadings. They’re timeless attention-getters in ads and on magazine covers.

3. Add benefits – Think of subheadings as part of the content that helps promote your piece throughout. Feature a different benefit in each subsection.

Example: Sharpening Your Subheads to Build Engagement

4. Get active – Through action verbs and persuasive wording, subheads can lead into a call-to-action.

Example: “Listen to music ad-free and offline, free until December 6, 2022. Cancel anytime.” (Spotify)

5. Use moderation – Explain, but not too much. Leave some mystery with simplicity.

Example: How Sears Keeps its Promise

 

Interested in repurposing or re-posting your existing content? Consider a makeover to help increase impressions.

BOOST YOUR ENGAGEMENT

 

How have you used subheadings effectively? Feel free to comment further below.


Quotes

“Subheadings are like signposts for your readers.” ~ Cinden Lester

“Write subheads that reveal, rather than conceal, your contents.” ~ Ann Wylie, Wylie Communications


Comments? Suggestions? Need help with your communications? Contact me.

5 Ways to Think Clearly to Write Clearly for Your Business

1. State the theme or goal – To write clearly for your business, jot what you want to say and why in one sentence. This sentence may serve as a guide throughout, helping you keep to one topic.

Someone reading a book on a table.

2. Know your reader – Put yourself in their shoes. Marketers often espouse the concept of personas, creating sketches of an average reader. For example, what does your average reader look like? Where do they live? What do they do? Thinking about them can help you refine your concept and the language you’ll use to reach them.

3. Think through it – Consider the 5 W’s and the H of journalism: who, what, when, where, why, and how. As part of critical thinking — based on information gathered from observation, experience, reflection, reasoning, or communication, connect these parts logically to each other, building on each point. Follow a logical progression of ideas. Talking to others about these concepts before you begin can help you clarify your ideas and expose you to other views.

4. Set boundaries – Decide on the format and structure — outline the key points. Or, as prewriting practice, write through your concept in a series of numbered steps. Or pretend you’re writing a Twitter post and break each thought into bullet points or numbers. This can help you arrange your thoughts logically.

5. Prime your mind – Before you write, read pithy prose by Ernest Hemingway, E.B. White, William Zinsser, or the greats in your genre as examples of how to keep it simple.

Is your writing as clear as mud? Find out how to turn your gibberish into everyday English to gain the right clients.

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How do you think clearly to write clearly? Feel free to comment below.

Quotes

“Writing is thinking. To write well is to think clearly. That’s why it’s so hard.” ~ David McCullough

“Anyone who can think clearly can write clearly. But neither is easy.” ~ William Feather

5 Ways to Say More With Less in Your Business Writing

1. Cut the qualifiers – “Very,” “really,” and other qualifiers can bloat your writing. Remove them to say more with less.

2. Watch your adverbs – These words usually end in “-ly.” Use them sparingly, only when you need to make a point. They’re usually a sign you should trim the fat.

Example: “The car rolled down the driveway slowly.”
Revised: “The car crawled down the driveway.”

3. Look at adjectives objectively – Like adverbs, adjectives aren’t always necessary. Often, you don’t need them unless they’re relevant to your subject matter.

Example: “Made of high quality steel, these knives are tough enough to slice tin cans.”
Revised: “Made of quality steel, these knives slice through the toughest tin cans.”

4. Be less specific – Instead of writing a long description or explanation, link to another article on the topic to give readers more info. Also, in your wording, you can move from the specific to the general:

Example: “We looked at three houses on Elm Street and one on Forest Avenue before we made an offer on our current home.”
Revised: “We looked at four houses before we made an offer on our current home.”

5. Think visual – Focus on how best to format blocks of text for easier reading. Especially for items in a series or lists, numbers and bullet points are your best friends. For a practical and attractive way to simplify complex information, try using columns. For a more visual approach, infographics can attract attention to your topic.

Advice from an experienced wordsmith can help you learn how to “weed” your words for better growth as a writer and gain you the right leads.

BOOK A FREE COACHING CONSULTATION

What are some of your favorite ways to say more with less? Feel free to comment below.


Quotes

“I would have written a shorter letter, but I did not have the time.” ~ Blaise Pascal

“The poem is a form of texting…it’s the original text. It’s a perfecting of a feeling in language — it’s a way of saying more with less, just as texting is.” ~ Carol Ann Duffy