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Phil Turner

 
Internal communications, channels and tools, writing, social media, rock n'roll

The business of writing

We’ve been talking about how to write in the business world. Here’s my starting point:

"Short sentences, short paragraphs, active verbs, authenticity, compression, clarity and immediacy."

Recognise this? It’s Ernest Hemingway. It’s the first thing he was taught as a young reporter on the Kansas City Star. He later said: "Those were the best rules I ever learned for the business of writing. I've never forgotten them."

It’s easy to forget ourselves that when Hemingway was writing like this it was near-revolutionary. This style of writing is almost commonplace today. He did away with all the florid prose of the Victorian era and replaced it with a lean, clear prose based on action rather than reflection.

Nowadays if people ask me to recommend a book on business writing, I give them a copy of The Old Man and the Sea. Just 100 pages. Not a word is wasted. It’s written for a 12-year-old and yet it won Hemingway the Nobel Prize.

Communicators in business can learn a lot from Hemingway.


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Published 06 February 2007 18:15 by Phil Turner
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