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Everybody Needs an Editor

The Essential Guide to Clear and Effective Writing

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 2 weeks
Longlisted for the Porchlight Business Book Award and The Non-Obvious Book Award

Wedding toasts, website copy, social media posts, even holiday cards—you'll become a sharper everyday writer with this witty and comprehensive guide to clearer, better communication.
You'll never write an email the same way after reading Everybody Needs an Editor, a game-changing guide to sharp, attention-getting writing. The authors use their decades of real-life journalism and marketing expertise to demonstrate the WTFF technique: Writing, Topping, Formatting, and Fixing.

You'll learn how to eviscerate your own writing—and enjoy doing so. You'll learn to create must-click subject lines, cut jargon, and write emails that people will actually read and remember.

If you've ever felt nervous to hit a "submit" button, this book is for you.
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  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      July 8, 2024
      Harris and Bane (Friendshipping)—the founder and creative director, respectively, of marketing agency M. Harris & Co.—present a concise and effective manual for improving writing in professional settings. Most of the advice focuses on punching up emails, as when the authors encourage readers to keep messages as short as possible and, when relaying bad news, to present it “clearly and directly in the first two sentences.” Other guidance covers how to generate speeches (“Say it out loud as you write”) and headlines (“Start with keywords” and think about what elements of the article will most interest the intended audience). Harris and Bane also outline general rules of thumb, discouraging readers from overworking metaphors, needlessly replacing “use” with “utilize,” or including such clichés as “beating a dead horse.” The authors can be delightfully snarky, such as when they caution against turning nouns into verbs and ridicule a job posting that used “laddering” as a verb: “Garage the laddering. Unless you need to reach a kitten who is treeing.” The sound suggestions are usually provided as bulleted lists (when writing an “irresistible subject line,” “make your purpose clear” and “create a sense of urgency”), making this easy to skim. This handy reference will be a boon to white-collar workers. Agent: Monika Verma, Levine Greenberg Rostan.

Formats

  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

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