Spelling, Grammar, thesaurus and voice
Heart of successful writing no doubt results from perfectly structured sentences with just the right spellings. Surfing your thesaurus all time to find the right synonym won’t in fact help if writing plainly demands intricate explanations. You should get to understand one important trick. Well, all that easy. Read easily graspable usages of the same word in several other distinct sentence patterns if on a synonym search. It could possibly take time. As always; everything gets better by practice and experience. However it’s never imprudent if you’re keeping the synonym search on alongside writing your content. Remember; never use the wrong synonym that would completely mess your thoughtful penning.
Correct your spellings through an auto check or enable your spell check while writing. And grammar, that’s s the big base. If you’re not strongly sourced, I don’t think content writing could fetch you a box of chocolates. Get yourself a course or a training done in a local English language training center, so then you would start penning reasonably good English.
It’s a heavily vital aspect that you keep your writing lively and user friendly... Make sure you reach the user or the traffic directly with not much passives written... Passives can eventually transform the content to less appealing and rarely hunted stuff. Nobody wants it more professional and bear in mind that you’re not into writing a thesis… Just writing a one on one user based content could get a lot more popular than what a conventional, largely passive article would.
Example:
It is obvious that there is going to be more precipitation.
So Obvious has no lesser than 10 synonyms where I presume employing best suitable words can render clearer understanding.
Obvious (Synonyms)
Clear
Apparent
Bald
Fathomable
Explanatory
It is clear that there is going to be more precipitation.
You can replace obvious with clear wherein employing words like bald would make no sense.
Example
I’ll do it maybe with a passage that clearly tells how passive totally eliminates the excitement in the content.
“Well, the lush vegetation near Keel Maanar and Mulli weren’t giving us to way to walk deep down the forest... With all the natural aroma of tea from the estates around, my camera focused on wildlife and unseen plants… From rarest species of birds to a small herb I literally photographed everything.”
If on passive, you won’t really love how it gets changed.
“Well, we weren’t given way by the lush vegetation near Keel Maanar and Mulli to walk deep down the forest… With all the natural aroma of tea from the estates around, wildlife and unseen plants were focused by my camera… From rarest species of birds to a small herb, everything was literally photographed by me… “
Not worthy of note because nothing plainly deals with YOU… It’s not straight, cleanly written; Funny enough; it does look like a grammar lesson on Passive…
I guess I’ll end my operational strategies on grammar, spelling, thesaurus and voice just here… I should also be kick starting the other set of requirements for effective content writing in the subsequent blog post which possibly might take a week’s time…
There are quite a lot of copies floating around in the web corridors about how to be great with content writing. We just thought we will take the other route and for once stop sounding monotonous; it’s good to take it light sometimes!
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