How to Improve Business Writing Skills

Mary Cullen
Post by Mary Cullen
Originally published July 28, 2020, updated March 16, 2022
How to Improve Business Writing Skills

It can be confusing when we either realize or are told that we need to “improve our business writing skills.”

“Better business writing" is a murky goal. How then, do we improve our business writing skills? 

In this post, I am going to outline six steps to start improving your English business writing today. This goes beyond business writing tips and tricks and lays out a simple step-by-step writing process for improvement.

You will learn how to correct common mistakes, tricks for better formatting, and how to reduce errors in your writing. 


1. Remove the emotions

We can feel a little hurt or defensive any time a weakness is highlighted. Many clients have told me that writing was not something they enjoyed in school and memories of a mean English teacher with a red pen poised to slash an essay apart are still vivid. For others, even though they enjoyed writing in school, they realize that business writing is a somewhat different skill than academic writing.  

Whatever the emotional response, let it go.

The truth is everyone needs to write well at work to succeed. If we’re good at it, our careers opportunities improve. Turning your attention to improving your business writing is all good! Let go of any negative emotions and focus on the career benefit and ease of knowing exactly how to tackle the task of better, effective writing at work.


2. Identify your particular weaknesses and strengths

This can be challenging if the only feedback we have received is we “need to improve.” Where to begin? There are so many embedded skills in business writing, so it’s important to understand what is working and what needs improvement.

There are three essential metrics for business writing:

  1. Separate the information/substance/content of a document from the words that express that information/substance/content. There is the information, and there are the words that express that information. We have to look at these separately to identify strengths and weaknesses.

  2. Reflect on the information contained in your typical documents. Do your readers have the information they need? Is it logically grouped? Does it flow logically? This is the information or substance of your document.

  3. Reflect on the words you use to express the information. This is the syntax, or the way you use words.

For a deeper analysis of this issue, read Improve Business Writing Skills to Measure What Matters.

While it’s possible to review your business writing skills, it’s hard to be truly objective because we know the facts of our documents so well and we understand what we are trying to express. A professional business writing assessment, which should always be part of a good business writing course is always the best measurement.

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3. Review and correct your information and organization

One of my grandmother’s favorite expressions was “that’s just putting lipstick on a pig” when someone tried to improve or polish something that was innately flawed.

Trying to fix the language and words in your business documents before the information and substance is accurate, relevant, and well organized is just like putting lipstick on a pig. Sentence improvements will never fix gaps in content or disorganization.

Review several documents you’ve written at work lately. Review varying types of documents and include email and reports.

To hone good information and organization:
  1. Define your audience clearly.

  2. Overtly state the purpose of a document - “I need my audience to know or do X.

  3. Decide on the major categories of information necessary for your defined reader to know or do what you want. Develop details around these major categories of information.

  4. Sequence the information logically. What category would lead best and what category should close? Remember the acronym B.L.O.T. - bottom line on top. 90% of business documents should begin with the information most important to your audience. This beginning statement should be the purpose statement you identified while you analyzed your audience.

The concluding information should elicit the business response you seek.

For example, let’s imagine you are an insurance sales representative and a client has inquired about adding additional flood insurance to her homeowner’s insurance policy. You know this coverage would be beneficial to her, and it would increase business, so you want your reader to understand the benefits and purchase the additional coverage.

Your introduction could be:

The additional flood insurance coverage would protect your home if it were to flood because of hurricanes, river overflows, or excessive rain. All of these hazards have increased in your area in the past five years by 36%.

Your conclusion should make it easy for your reader to act as you need:

To enact this coverage, please sign the enclosed coverage agreement on both pages three and five. Scan the signed coverage agreement into a PDF document and email it back to me by May 13.

Look back at your sample work documents. By following these steps, can verify that your information is correct? And, breaking it down will help you identify where you tend to lose focus.


4. Next, review and correct your format

Study several different documents you wrote in the past few weeks and ask yourself what formatting enhancements would make them easier to scan.

Helpful format elements are:

  • Headings above document categories
  • Indenting text to show it’s a sub-element of the previous information
  • Bullet and number lists
  • Lots of white space
  • Short paragraphs
  • Appropriate use of bold and emphatic text

Related: How to Format Your Business Document

5. Now it's time to review and correct your language

Everyone makes different grammar and stylistic errors, so nothing will improve your business writing as well as business writing training that includes a professional instructor review of your writing. If that is not possible, you will need to self-diagnose your language and grammar.

Grammar diagnosis

Run at least ten recent documents through Grammarly. Grammarly is an excellent spelling and grammar checker that will flag errors and explain what is wrong. You want to look for patterns.

If, for example, Grammarly tells you that you made three “me, myself, and I” errors across your documents, accept that as a strong indicator that “me, myself, and I” usage is an error you need to correct.

Run all of your documents through Grammarly and compile a list of all the errors Grammarly diagnosed. Grammarly is not foolproof, but it’s quite good to help ensure correct grammar. Without a professional review of your business writing, it’s the best objective assessment.


Grammar correction

The best grammar resource on the Internet is the Purdue University Online Writing Lab (OWL). Use the search button on Purdue’s OWL and search for the first error in your compiled list.

Purdue OWL has detailed explanations and exercises to help clarify your understanding and use of that grammar rule. Stay with the exercises until your grammar understanding of this first error is corrected.

Once you feel comfortable with the correction of your first grammar error, then move on to the next. Make sure you’re comfortable with your new grammar skills before you move on because grammar correction is primarily a habit of practice. Your grammar skills will improve from awareness and practice.


How to hone clarity

Business writing is notoriously bloated. Instead, business documents should be clear and concise. Fewer words are better than more.

Bloat typically creeps in through sloppy verb use.

 
Business Writing Clarity Strategy #1: “Unsmother” your verbs

Focus on verbs. They are the action of a sentence, and the best opportunity to enhance clarity.

Imagine watching a Bruce Willis movie that shows Bruce napping or knitting or whittling on a park bench for 90 minutes. Bored yet? So too are readers if your writing has little action or wimpy verbs.

This article will explain smothered verbs in detail.


Business Writing Clarity Strategy #2: Avoid adverbs

Choose powerful verbs that connote meaning that doesn't need a second modifying word to do their job! For instance:

  • "The attendant shouted loudly."
  • "The attendant shouted," is a perfect sentence. "Loudly" is inferred and extraneous.
  • "The executive ran quickly into the boardroom."
  • "Ran quickly" is wasteful. Pick a better verb. "The executive sprinted into the boardroom" is concise, visual, and lively.

This strategy will also help you eliminate passive voice and use active voice.

Business Writing Clarity Strategy #3: Use shorter words

Years back, some business writers felt they conveyed their intelligence more by using long words when short words worked better. Long words don’t make you sound intelligent unless used very skillfully and judiciously. In the wrong situation, they’ll have the opposite effect, making you sound pretentious and arrogant. They’re also less likely to be understood and more awkward to read.

I've always loved Hemingway's response when Faulkner criticized him for his limited word choice:

Poor Faulkner. Does he really think big emotions come from big words? He thinks I don’t know the ten-dollar words. I know them all right. But there are older and simpler and better words, and those are the ones I use.

Example:

Fine, but can be improved:
It has never been a good writing practice to use big words indiscriminately.

Better:
It has never been a good writing practice to use big words needlessly.
("Needlessly" is shorter and simpler than "indiscriminately.")

Best:
It has never been a good writing practice to bloat with big words.
(More powerful verb "bloat" instead of the vague verb "use" eliminates the need for modifying adverb "needlessly.")

Good business writers use short words and fewer words well.

Richard Lederer sings the praises of the short word to enhance clarity in his book, The Miracle of Language:

Here is a sound rule: Use small, old words where you can. If a long word says just what you want to say, do not fear to use it. But know that our tongue is rich in crisp, brisk, swift, short words. Make them the spine and the heart of what you speak and write. Short words are like fast friends. They will not let you down.

6. Ongoing improvement to your business writing

  1. Read good business writing blogs. Our blog addresses business writing improvement specifically. Join 30,000+ other monthly readers by subscribing to our newsletter here. Grammar Girl will explain the nuances of grammar very well. 

  2. Read good writing. Read anything that interests you that is written well - novels, newspapers, good blogs, short stories, or essays. This helps you develop skills needed for good writing. If you want to hone clarity, read anything by Theodore White or the short stories by Andre DuBus.

  3. Read our Guide to Business Writing and subscribe to our blog for regular tips and tricks.

Practice your business writing skills 

No matter if you're struggling with sentence structure, perfecting your writing style, or using a clear, professional tone, effective writing takes time and practice.

These six steps will diagnose and improve your business writing skills. It will also improve your overall business communication skills. 

If tackling all of this on your own is too much, contact us for information about business writing courses. We’re here to help. 

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Mary Cullen
Post by Mary Cullen
Originally published July 28, 2020, updated March 16, 2022
Mary founded Instructional Solutions in 1998, and is an internationally recognized business writing trainer and executive writing coach with two decades of experience helping thousands of individuals and businesses master the strategic skill of business writing. She excels at designing customized business writing training programs to maximize productivity, advance business objectives, and convey complex information. She holds a B.A. in English from the University of Rhode Island, an M.A. in English Literature from Boston College, and a C.A.G.S. in Composition and Rhetoric from the University of New Hampshire.

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