Writing for the Workplace: Business Communication for Professionals



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Writing for the workplace business communication for professionals ( PDFDrive )
email-phone-collocations
Wordy phrase and example
Solution

Tighten verb phrases with auxiliary + ing verbs
Management was holding a staff
meeting.
Replace is/are/was/were/have + verb with a one-word verb.
Management held a staff meeting.
Avoid using there is/are within a sentence.
When creating a mail list, there are
many pitfalls.
Find an active verb to replace there
is/are.
When creating a mail list, many pitfalls
exist.
Remove redundancies.
An anonymous stranger maybe
dangerous.
Know the true meaning of a word.
Strangers maybe dangerous.
Editing and Proofreading Checklist
Check your draft for the following

document content is tailored to meet the needs of the audience and attains writing purpose
Copy is edited for conciseness
Body paragraphs have unity and cohesion and are shortened for visual appeal
Transitions in and between paragraphs adequately link ideas
Grammar is correct
Punctuation is used correctly
Copy has good rhythm and flow uses a natural and conversational tone
Sentences show variety in beginning and length
Names are spelled correctly phone numbers and URLs are accurate
Words are used correctly
Capitalization is consistent and adheres to specific stylebook guidelines document adheres to specific genre formatting guidelines document shows professionalism
Avoiding Wordiness Checklist (Continued)


CHAPTER 2
Basics of Document Design
One of the most important elements of workplace writing is a document’s appearance. Writing in professional contexts requires as much attention to the way a document appears on the page or the screen as its content. The reason is that as writers, we must make the task of reading easy for our audience. If you have ever waded through dense pages of text with long paragraphs or tried to follow a single line of type that goes across an inch computer screen, you know that reading can become tedious if good design is not factored into what your eyes must look at.
In this chapter, we’ll cover the basics of document design for print and screen. We will discuss the conventions of document design as they pertain to specific genres in the remaining chapters.

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