Monday, January 25, 2021

Using the Writing Process Effectively, Part 7: Writing Smart

Now I've covered the three steps of the writing process: Planning, Drafting, and Quality controlling. Remembering them is easy if you think Pretty Darn Quick (PDQ)—your goal for writing efficiently—and knowing when to use the complete writing process will increase your efficiency. 

Writing at work falls into three levels of complexity: routine, regulated, and reflective.

1. Routine – This writing requires little or no prompting for the writer to compose the message; it is generally brief and a part of the writer’s routine work. Examples of routine writing might be regular reminders, requests, and responses. In routine writing, we generally use just the drafting step of the writing process.

2. Regulated – This writing is more complex and detailed than routine writing; however, the writer can access established templates and retrieve the content from memory or other sources. Examples might be meeting minutes, employee appraisals, and executive summaries. In regulated writing, we don't use the planning step because we already have a plan, but we draft and quality control because our document will reach diverse readers.

3. Reflective – This is the most complex type of writing. It requires a high level of thinking about the purpose, audience, scope, and organization, none of which may be apparent to the writer. Examples might be business analyses, formal proposals, and investigative reports. In reflective writing, we use all the steps of the writing process.

The table below summarizes how we would approach the writing process depending on the level of complexity.

In summary, here are four tips for using the writing process efficiently:
  1. If the writing is routine, spend as little time as possible on it.
  2. If the writing is regulated, pull out those templates and fill in the blanks.
  3. If the writing is reflective, use the complete writing process.
  4. To write faster, transform as many Level 3 documents as you can into Level 2 documents.

Monday, January 18, 2021

Using the Writing Process Effectively, Part 6: Quality Controlling

After you have planned and drafted your document, you are ready for step 3, quality controlling, when you protect your REP: Revise, Edit, and Proofread. Depending on the complexity and length of the message, this step may come in three stages, in the following order:

1. Revising for purposefulness, content, organization, and paragraphing. 

2. Editing for respectful tone, clear sentences, concise phrasing, and correct syntax (sentence structure) grammar,  diction (word choice and spelling), mechanics (capitalization and abbreviation), and punctuation. 

3. Proofreading for typos, spacing and font inconsistencies, and other overlooked errors. 

Now you are ready to press send!

Monday, January 11, 2021

Using the Writing Process Effectively, Part 5: Drafting

Assuming you have completed the planning step of the writing process by using idea tags, idea maps, or idea lists, you are now ready to write a rough draft, the second step. I emphasize the word rough because quality is not yet important, as you'll revise, edit, and proofread in the third step, quality control. Three points matter during drafting, as you are seeking to maximize your writing time: speed, uniformity, and volume. Remembering the acronym SUV will be helpful as you plow through your rough draft.

Speed – You do not need to write at a breakneck pace. Steady is the operative word. When it comes to writing, steady is speedy. Just move your fingers to push that cursor forward, paying no attention to organization, sentence structure, grammar, spelling, or punctuation. Get it all down. Do not rewrite until you are through drafting.

Uniformity – You created a plan in step 1 to move easily through the first draft, so stick to it. It might not be a perfect pan, but it's what you've got. 

Volume – I'm a big believer in less is more—but not in the first draft. More is more when drafting to give you a lay of the land when quality-controlling. Leave nothing in your plan behind. 

Monday, January 04, 2021

WORDS ON THE LINE: Sixteenth Anniversary

This post is the 949th and this day the 16th anniversary of WORDS ON THE LINE. Since January 4, 2005, I have posted at least once a week about practical tips, useful resources, and inspirational ideas for developing, experienced, and reluctant writer at work, school, and home.  

In this blog, you can read about booksgrammar, punctuationemail tips, active and passive voice, parallel structure, famous writer viewpoints, and much moreIf you don't find what you're looking for, feel free to reach me at Phil@PhilVassallo.com.    


Friday, January 01, 2021

Using the Writing Process Effectively, Part 4: Planning with Idea Lists

 The third planning technique, idea listing, is my favorite because it wastes no time. It immediately brings writers to the computer where they will draft and quality control their message. The illustration shows the brainstorming phase in two steps and the organizing phase in three steps. It shows a writer planning a new policy message to all staff of a growing company.

In the brainstorming phase, the writer lists her topic in Step 1: requirement to display new employee ID badge. Step 2 of this phase is what some people would call a brain dump, when the writer lists every idea that pops into her mind about the topic without regard to its merit. You'll notice it is a disorganized mess of repetitive and irrelevant ideas. But the writer is happy with the list because she has plenty to work with in the organizing phase.

The organizing phase requires three additional steps. In Step 3, the writer cuts and pastes similar ideas into groups and gives each group a name, each of which will appear in a separate paragraph. In this case, the topics are purpose, getting, displaying, closing. In Step 4, she adds additional ideas as they occur to her. Notice Question anyone not displaying ID badge (appearing in a different font), is an addition after the brainstorming phase. In Step 5, she deletes ideas that don't fit into her plan, as in the three struck-through items at the bottom right. Now she can efficiently draft around these ideas. 

Do not stress over whether this process seems overly complicated with five steps. It's really two: brainstorming and organizing, and you'll be doing both steps simultaneously and nimbly once you get used to idea listing.