Technical writing: How to survive a brain cramp
Our guide to writing it well when you just don’t get it.
Our guide to writing it well when you just don’t get it.
Not willing to risk lousy editorial copy, a former reporter now working at Intuit created a system to measure, grade and improve everything from news stories to press releases.
If we all ban together, maybe we can win the battle against live bloggers, crackberry addicts and cell phone junkies.
David Murray gave a speech to the IABC Dallas chapter. Can you help him critique his own speech?
What corporate editors can do during the hiring and training process to ensure strong writing skills from new hires.
The active voice is for braggarts, whiners, and finger-pointers, says B.S. Reiter, the nom de plume of a recovering corporate editor.
How to polish copy with only minutes to spare.
Communicators make embarrassing confessions about typos and proofreading errors.
Make sure your comparisons are strong, valuable additions that motivate readers through your story.
Ragan readers react to a study about their education, salaries, budgets and problems.
Write to impress, not inform, says B.S. Reiter, the nom de plume of a recovering corporate editor.
The man behind this government blog explains how it started, how it works and where it’s going.
A few guidelines to help new corporate writers and editors succeed.
The editors at Ragan get an eyeful of bad newsletters every day and it’s become rather upsetting. For Sweetland’s sake, improve your pub!