Writing for the Workplace: Business Communication for Professionals



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Writing for the workplace business communication for professionals ( PDFDrive )
email-phone-collocations
PART I
Writing as a Professional



CHAPTER 1
Fundamentals of
Professional Writing
Whether you area student about to step into the world of work or a more seasoned employee with years of experience, you must be able to communicate effectively to advance your career. Employers consistently rank good communication skills—speaking with customers and colleagues, presenting information, and writing—in the top tier of desired skills for both new hires and current employees. The ability to concisely and accurately convey meaning to different people is a prerequisite in today’s fast-paced world.
Writing like a professional—whether the document is printed or on the screen—is best taken on as a process, with careful attention paid to detail. This chapter will describe how to breakdown all writing tasks into a series of steps to streamline the process as well as describe the characteristics that all professional writing should embody.
Writing as a Process
Many people think that good writing flows out of the brain, into the fingers, and onto the page or screen. Nothing could be further from the truth. Professional writers know that writing, like any acquired skill, requires patience and persistence. Whatever we are composing—whether an email message or a proposal fora new business—the key to writing well is to consider writing a process rather than a one shot deal. Your prose will be better and will take you less time to compose if you look at writing as a series of tasks. For those who suffer from writer’s block or who shudder at the thought of writing, I can promise that if you breakdown writing into several component parts, the result will be better and you will feel less anxious.
The task of writing can be broken down to three separate steps, for which I’ve developed an acronym AWE, short for assess, write, and edit.


4 WRITING FOR THE WORKPLACE
These three steps should be completed for every piece of writing that will be seen by another person. The only writing that doesn’t require this process is personal writing.

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