Imagine that you've received a performance evaluation. If it contains grammatical errors or poor compositional structure it dilutes the message even if everything is factually correct. Consciously or subconsciously it would be natural to think the reviewer was a fool. There might be important feedback in the review that is getting discounted because the reviewer can't write. Too bad.
Few things will sink a sale faster than a poorly constructed proposal. A few months ago I received a quote for some upholstery work. They may have been good upholsters, but they didn't get the business because their quote was crap. The writing was crap, the content was crap. Unreadable. I couldn't help but think it could be representative of the quality of their work.
"But I'm not in Sales," you say. "I don't do proposals or quotes." Ah, but you are in sales. We all are. We sell ourselves, our ideas. If you missed out on a job or promotion you really wanted, think of all the places where your
writing has represented you: cover letters, applications, written tests, or even posts to your favorite social media tool. Maybe, just maybe you would have landed that job had your writing been a little stronger.Last week I wrote a specification document, which is like a blueprint that precedes the construction of a program. It sat over the weekend, and today I picked it up to review and edit it. Pee-yew! I wrote this steaming pile? Although it is factually and technically correct, the writing is awful. If it were a proposal, it would never get approved.
It has been said that writing is like a muscle that gets stronger with use. I didn't have to create the spec document, I wrote it for practice. These blog entries are writing exercises too. Like the trainer who helps people tone up in gym workouts, critiques of these blog postings will help me develop writing muscle. That means I welcome all feedback.
Now to edit that specification document, the writing equivalent of squats.


