Monday, December 24, 2012

My Holiday Recipe for more Peace, Love, Time, Faith and Money.

Given what we have all been through this year, what could you use more of right now?

Peace?

Love?

Time?

Faith?

Money?

All of the above?

Stop for a moment. Think carefully about your answer. Visualize your answer.

I am serious. Before reading any further, think about it. If your answer is all of the above, take a moment. Visualize what you would do if you had more peace, love, time, faith and money. Exactly how would having more of these precious resources change your life? How would you use them to improve your life?

Now continue reading.

With the end of the year approaching, here is an approach to communicating that can help you augment the first three (peace, love and time), and possibly the last two (faith and money).

You can use this approach in written and spoken communications. You can apply it in the workplace with co-workers, at family gatherings, or at parties.

It also works in every area of communications including business writing and artistic writing.

All you have to do is notice people. Not judge them. Notice them. There is a big difference.

By noticing people, you can improve your relationship with them. And that, in turn, can yield rich rewards.

Everyone likes to be noticed. That is universal. If you notice people, they will like you more. Notice readers in your written communications and they will like your writing more.

From what I have written so far, you might assume I am suggesting that you go around telling people that you like their shoes, haircut, purse, nails or clothing. But I am not suggesting that at all. Quite the opposite.

Issuing compliments does not necessarily create rapport with others, especially when the compliments are not authentic.

The trouble with compliments is that they are ''I'' statements. I approve of your shoes. I approve of your nails, etc.

I know this runs counter to all the personal success pundits who say you should search for something that you like about another person and tell them that you like that single thing. Flattery can work in some cases I suppose. It can even get you everything you are looking for if what you want in exchange for the flattery happens to be what the other person wants to give. However, this approach does not always lead to a feeling of mutual trust. It can also quickly become boring and seem like a chore if it does not come from the heart.

What is the approach I am suggesting you take here? Beginning sentences with the words, ''I notice,'' or opening conversations with what you notice, and, in the process, skipping the ego statement. When you address someone by telling them something you notice about them, you create instant rapport.

By following this approach, you will be making ''you'' statements rather than ''I'' statements. And you will be making yourself more appealing.

Imagine you are standing in line beside a woman who has little cartoon characters painted on her nails. You may hate little cartoon characters painted on nails. You may despise them. I am NOT suggesting you say to her, ''I notice how much I hate your nails.'' I'm not even suggesting you say, ''I notice your nails.'' Instead, I am suggesting you go more general and positive with a comment that gives the other person more freedom, more room to move.

Say: Oh, your nails are so colorful. Or: Wow! Nails that tell a story! Notice you do not have to use the words, ''I notice.'' But you could if you like: I notice you pay a lot of attention to your appearance. Or: I notice you put a lot of effort into putting your look together. Or: I notice you like fashion. Or: I notice your nails. How do they do that? Adding the question ''How do they do that?'' gives her room to explain.

The moral: What you think of her nails is irrelevant. As a direct result of what you noticed and mentioned, you will have an interesting conversation with someone that helps you establish rapport. In my opinion establishing rapport and finding out what makes people tick makes life interesting.

You will start having conversations with people you would never have dreamed you would have.

By noticing people, you will be giving them more freedom to be themselves, to feel more comfortable being around you. It's likely they'll reciprocate. They'll notice you. You'll find common ground. You might strike up a friendship.

Noticing your readers. It's not necessary to address readers directly in your writing in order to notice them. In your business writing you can show your readers that you notice them by writing about subjects that address their concerns as well as using appealing styles. It's pretty standard stuff: Doing an audience analysis before you begin writing, and writing to that audience in a way they appreciate.

Noticing your characters when writing fiction. What author would neglect to notice his characters in a novel or a screenplay when the success of the work is dependent on the writer's insights into what makes his characters tick? Not a very good one. Writers are constantly noticing their characters' internal concerns and conflicts and how they affect their behavior. Yet their characters are often capable of teaching their authors new insights and understandings of what they are capable of as a story develops. That is one of the things that makes writing fiction so much fun.

How can noticing others lead to more peace, love and time in your life? Building rapport with others makes you a more effective person. That, in turn, can bring good things into your life.

If my holiday recipe brings improved interpersonal relationships (and I believe it will) your life will become far more interesting. I hope you'll notice you have more peace, love and the time to enjoy being with your loved ones. And if you improve those first three, can the last two (faith and money) be far behind?

Happy Holidays, everyone!

Sunday, November 25, 2012

Flex your Verbs, not your Nouns.

Powerful writing comes from sentences that depend on active verbs to work. They are always more effective than sentences made from noun-forms of those verbs.

What do I mean by that?

Here is a list of verbs:

Specialize

Analyze

Explain

Recognize

Explain

Reconcile

Discuss

Limit

Eliminate

Save

Establish

Here is a list of nouns made out of those verbs:

Specialty

Analysis

Explanation

Recognition

Explanation

Reconciliation

Discussion

Limitation

Elimination

Savings

Establishment

The following sentence depends on a verb to work:

After studying many subjects, he specialized in one.

Here is one that depends on a noun to work:

He had many specialties before choosing one.

Which sentence (of the above two) seems to be written more professionally?

Here is a sentence that depends on nouns to make its point:

After a great deal of discussion, the committee decided on the elimination of expense accounts for overall department savings.

Here is one that depends on verbs to work:

The committee discussed the issue and decided to eliminate expense accounts to save money.

Of these two, which seems more succinct and professionally written to you?

Which sentence do you prefer?

The one dependent on nouns:The reconciliation between expenses and revenues was established.

Or the one dependent on verbs:The audit team reconciled expenses with revenues.

Which sentence gets to the point faster?

The establishment of the elimination of the deficit as its primary purpose dominated the discussion.

Or:

Ways to eliminate the deficit dominated the discussion.

Here's a second strategy: Zero in on clauses beginning with which or who. Zero in on sentences beginning with There were, There is as well as It is and It was. These sentences can usually be improved.

Which sentence do you prefer?

The Industrial Revolution, which was marked by the development of mass production methods, began with the invention of the cotton gin, which was invented by Eli Whitney in 1793.

Or:

The Industrial Revolution, marked by mass production, began with Eli Whitney's invention of the cotton gin in 1793.

Which of the next two sentences sounds wordy?

Any person who works all the time to the detriment of his relationships and outside interests can actually be less effective than the person who takes off and enjoys weekends.

Or:

People who balance their work lives with their social lives often make better employees.

Which sounds more professional?

There are many reasons why people find mathematics difficult to master.

Or:

People find mathematics difficult to master for many reasons.

Which sentence to you like more?

It was in 1848 that America's westward expansion became manifest.

Or:

America's westward expansion became manifest in 1848.

To summarize: Strength in writing comes from focusing on the power of well-chosen verbs instead of using nouns made from those verbs. Avoid clauses that begin with which or who. Avoid sentences that begin with There is, There are, It is and It was. Those are all symptoms of wordy sentence constructions.

Tuesday, October 23, 2012

Adventures in Morocco and Spain

Last Sunday, Gina and I returned home from a two-week tour of Morocco and Spain. Allow me to share a few impressions of our trip while they are still fresh in my mind.

The Marrakesh Local

I had hoped to catch the Marrakesh Express but we had to satisfy ourselves with the local. With no seats available in the warmly air-conditioned compartments of the train, for the first three hours we stood beside our luggage in the long, narrow hallway of our car wiping sweat away with one hand and holding on with the other.

Outside our smudgy window the rugged, ruddy desert passed by. It resembled broken pottery.

And here’s a shocker: The train we were riding on was packed with Moroccans. Incredibly young. Very courteous and helpful. Smiling eyes. Thin, long faces. Dusty, tan skin.

Most of the women wore headscarves. Some wore hijabs; some, colorful silk robes; and some, black wool burkas. Most were dressed in fitted jeans with Tommy Hilfiger shirts or the equivalent. The men were uniformly thin and rather tall. They wore sprayed-on jeans with long-sleeve leather jackets despite the heat of the day. Our guide told us that Moroccan men are convinced leather actually cools them in hot weather. I rolled my eyes. Something had to be lost in translation, no? Perhaps they think they look cooler in tight leather. Ah, to be twenty again. (Everybody looked about that age.)

In my head I was humming along to Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young’s Marrakesh Express.Listen to the song. Thinking, Ah to be twenty again when I first heard that song.

Arabic is their first language; French, their second. Morocco used to be a French colony. As you approach the northern area of the country, up by Tangier, they speak Spanish, too, because at one time Spain controlled that area.

Trying to Escape the Sweep of History

Everywhere we went we couldn’t escape the sweep of history, try as we might.

In the medina (the old Muslim quarter) of Fes with its narrow, winding passageways, donkeys are a common mode of transportation. Pictogram signs inform pedestrians to yield the right of way to passing donkeys. Once we stopped for one loaded down with iPhones and firewood. That qualifies for having two hooves in the twenty-first century, I suppose.

The city of Fes received a UNICEF grant that today allows craftsmen to continue making fine leather goods using the same process they’ve been using for eight hundred years. We visited a pottery factory where they use the sun to dry pottery before oven firing. How energy efficient is that? Our tour guide told us the hot summer days are not the best because the clay dries too quickly. This time of year, October, is perfect.

All the women bring their bread for baking to a central oven. Now that’s energy efficient, of course, but it also gives the women a place to gather and talk.

They reserve the longer time for women at the Turkish bath (In the late afternoon. They reserve the late morning for the men to gather and sweat). In the late afternoon: That’s when the women get to luxuriate and exchange news. They don’t get to luxuriate very long. They work, making crafts and taking care of their families while the men get to sit at cafes sipping mint tea. No women here! And that’s how they’ve been doing it for the last eight hundred years.

Seeing Jewish Ghosts

Everywhere we traveled in Morocco ghosts of the Jewish presence hovered over the land and we the living. Their presence in Morocco dates back to just after 70 C.E. when the Romans destroyed the ancient temple in Jerusalem, according to this Wikipedia article. Read the article. Today only about 7000 Jews live in Morocco.

All the guides we talked to (and we talked to quite a few) claimed that Moroccan Jews lived in harmony with Moroccan Muslims. Jews lived in separate quarters, of course, but in quarters that were side by side.

One guide told us that Jews fought alongside their Muslim brothers in wars against Spanish Christians. Another one said that when a baby boy was born, Jewish parents would call the Muslim “mohel” to do the brit milahor circumcision; and Muslim parents would call the rabbi to do the brit milah. It didn’t matter to them because the communities were that close; it was the same religious ritual, the same covenant the baby boys were being born into, after all.

Although Jews in Morocco are scarce today, Jewish symbols appear in pottery and in other crafts made there. The plate we purchased in Fes (which you will find on my Facebook page) displays a Star of David in the center, surrounded by a traditional Muslim design motif, meant to emphasize harmony of traditions over the centuries.

The sweep of history has both the Moors and the Sephardic Jews being swept out of Spain in 1492 and Portugal in 1493; then swept together into the dustbin of Morocco where they joined their brethren already there. As you can imagine, this caused a tremendous sense of loss and grief among all the displaced people.

Exploring Volubilis, a First Century Roman Settlement

Traveling through the scenic high country north of Fes on a small bus, we stopped and inspected the Roman ruins at Volubilis. It’s in the center of what once was a rich agricultural heartland.

On these lonely, windy outcroppings about two thousand years ago as many as 1,500 Romans lived, grew wheat and other crops, sending all the grain, olive oil, grapes and figs, the spoils of conquest, home to Rome. Our guide told us that Roman legions fought the Berbers for two hundred years before being allowed to settle in Volubilis. (I put a photo of what these ruins look like today on my Facebook page.)

That night we slept over in Moulay Indriss, a city built on a steep, rocky cliff that has its own rich history. The only way we could bring our luggage up to the hotel? By donkey. I had this strange feeling we were in Tibet, at the top of the world.

Visiting the “White and Blue City”

The next day we proceeded on to Chefchaouen, a city founded by displaced Jews and Moorish exiles from Spain who, in 1471, gathered up in the mountains to fight against the invading Portuguese who wanted to enslave them and take their land.

The Jews and Moors fought bravely and ran off their attackers. And they stayed where they were. The Jewish people began painting their homes blue while all the Muslims began painting their homes white. That’s what you see now, a town of stucco white and blue block homes.

Yet no Jews have lived there for a long, long time. It’s another case of the Jewish ghosts. So why do descendants of the Moors still paint certain homes blue (if no Jews live there)?

The guide told us that the people of Chefchaouen got it into their head that blue keeps “the evil eye” away. So why don’t they paint their entire city blue? No one knew the answer to that one except me: Over the centuries, the people of Chefchaouen came to identify with their “blue and white city” positioning. That’s how it’s known today, “the blue and white city.” It’s a good marketing ploy and makes for standout photos. (See one that I recently put up on my Facebook page.)

Everyone in the town, both women and men, pitch in and repaint every house in Chefchaouen once each year. The women paint the walls as high as they can reach without ladders. Then the men use the ladders to paint the rest.

Organized by Intrepid Tours

Our tour, produced by a company based in Australia known as Intrepid Tours, included one week in Morocco where we visited Marrakesh, Casablanca, Fes, Rabat, Moulay Indress and Tangier; and one week in Spain, visiting Seville, Granada, Madrid and Barcelona.

Barcelona is the Austin, Texas, of Spain

I could go on and on, but I won’t. Just one other thing: Like everyone else, Gina and I fell in love with Barcelona. I have a theory: Barcelona is the Austin of Spain. Culturally speaking (if you squint your eyes like a Travis County country singer who’s had a pretty rough life) the Catalon people resemble the varieties you find around Austin. They have their own language (Catalonia), music, wines, cheeses, meats and cuisine. They’re aggressive about sustaining their very distinct culture.

We attended a food festival in front of the main cathedral in the Gotic neighborhood of Barcelona. What a blast I had when one of the merchants showed me a map of part of Catalonia with all the country wineries marked off. Let’s rent a car and stock up on Catalan wine! They must have “visitor centers,” right?

There was a lot of talk in Catalonia about an election that’s coming up on November 25th: Catalonians may vote to declare their region economically autonomous from Spain. I’ve got news for you: All the people at that food festival were aggressively declaring their independence the same way they do it in Austin, by keeping it weird, in the case of Catalonia with wacky spellings and pronunciations of Spanish words. It's Catalon, to them a completely different language. It’s a hoot! Ya gotta go! Next thing you know: Austin and Catalonia unite!

(Historic fact: During the Spanish Civil War, 1936-1939, Catalonia was a place where anarchists gathered. Maybe Catalonia a little bit too much like Austin for my blood.)

Monday, September 24, 2012

SEO Strategy: Lean Copy Wins Every Time

Want to optimize your web content to get the best web engine rankings? One of the most overlooked ways is to edit your content so that every sentence is clean, clear and succinct.

Best practices:

  • Keep word choices, sentences and paragraphs short, simple and to the point. Remember, most people do not actually read web copy, they scan it. Therefore, simplicity is essential.
  • Always put your reader and the action you're asking your reader to take first. Put everything else second.
  • Drop any words or phrases that do not add to your meaning. Edit out clichés.

Here are seven common mistakes followed by cleanly edited alternatives:

Example #1:

Wordy: By clicking on the icon you're not only able to make reservations by e-mail, you can also download a map and directions to the location.

Edited: Click on the icon to request reservations and download directions.

Example #2:

Wordy and clichéd: If you're looking for hot deals on cool ski packages, visit (website address).com.

Edited: For the best ski vacation deals, visit (website address).com.

Or:

Edited: Visit (website address).com for the best ski vacation deals.

Example #3:

Wordy and clichéd: Before you make up your mind who you're going to pull the lever for in the voting booth in November, look up what each candidate stands for on this chart.

Edited: Before deciding for whom you'll vote, compare each candidate's position on major issues. (Note: Place the hyperlink on the word ''compare.'')

Example #4:

Wordy: To update your existing password for a new one, start by clicking on My Account on your Member page.

Edited: To reset your password, go to My Account (on your Member page).

Example #5:

Wordy and clichéd: If you want to track statistics of your fantasy football team from week to week, sign up for ''Mega-Fan Rights'' and build graphs that compare any two stats to your heart's content.

Edited: Click on ''Mega-Fan Rights'' to generate graphs that compare two statistics.

(Best Practice: Eliminate sentences that begin with the words, ''If you want to…'' Usually begin with the action, ''Click on...'' Note: There are cases where you might want to begin with the benefit your user will get out of taking the action and then follow up with the action.)

Example #6:

Wordy: You can purchase money-saving coupons by clicking on the dollar-sign icon.

Wordy: If you want to purchase coupons, just click on the dollar-sign icon.

Edited: To purchase money-saving coupons, click on the dollar-sign icon.

Example #7:

Wordy: Your iPhone comes with a downloadable emergency contact application that allows you to call all your e-mail contacts from any web-enabled device.

Edited: The emergency contact application lets you call your e-mail contacts from any web-enabled device.

Sunday, August 26, 2012

On the Love of Writing

I know something about being a commercial writer by day and a novelist by night. Below are a few strategies that might help you live the life of a part-time artist with grace and equanimity (when you're tempted to take leave of your senses).

Trust. It takes time. It's a journey. Trust yourself that you will never quit until you get it right. Trust that the forces of the universe will align to give you exactly what you need, exactly when you need it. Trust that you'll know when its done and you will give it up to the world when it is time.

Stop the Stinkin' Thinkin'. By this I mean stop those annoying tapes that repeat in the back of your mind, tapes with messages like: This is such dreck! I can't write. I'll never finish. No one will ever want to read this. And the opposite Stinkin' Thinkin': I've got this knocked! Damn, I'm brilliant! Notice that they're both Stinkin' Thinkin'. Just do the work. Just be in the work. Don't think about the work.

Don't talk about it too much. Just write it. Writers have talked themselves out of stories by telling the story to too many people before they write it. Don't tacitly ask for permission to write your story. No one but you can give yourself permission to write it.

Stay in the now. Something is always happening. Notice what is happening inside you and around you. Turn off the observer-artist that wants to stay aloof and only observe. As much as possible, be part of what is happening around you.

Don't hold onto your artistic writing too tightly. Avoid getting all your identity from your artistic writing while, to yourself, you trash your day job. Find the love in all of what you do. I believe my artistic writing informs my commercial writing and the other way around. So it's not: I'm an artistic writer who happens to be writing marketing communications. It's: I'm both the artistic writer and the commercial writer. I get enjoyment and identity from both.

Don't forget to have a life. Sometimes the best thing you can do to finish your story is to go see a movie with a friend.

Next month: More advice on how to clean up your copy.

Monday, July 23, 2012

SEO Strategy: Clean Up Your Language.

There are many things you can do to improve your search engine ranking results. Weaving strategically important key words into the copy on every page is the first thing that comes to mind for most folks. However, the most overlooked way to optimize your web content is to edit your copy so that it is clean, clear and succinct.

''Succinct'' means short and to the point. And sometimes you may want to find ways to say more in fewer words. That's typically what editing is all about. However, in some cases it's appropriate to use more words, not fewer. It may be counter-intuitive that effective editing can include adding words that make the content more informative, but that's the way it is. Sometimes more words say more. Sometimes they say less or just sound wordy. Good writers know the difference.

So let's imagine you've completed your first draft and you want to make it better. Here are a few approaches:

First, try deleting all the adverbs (words that end in ''ly'') in your web content. Adverbs can give readers the impression the writer is pushing a point of view. It's known as ''editorializing.''

Using this approach, a sentence like ''The reporter scrupulously checked his facts'' or ''The reporter checked his facts carefully,'' would become, ''The reporter checked his facts.'' (I could have written, ''would simply become'' but using the adverb ''simply'' would be ''leading the witness,'' no?)

Let's imagine you know facts about the reporter's technique. You would be better off writing a second sentence (directly after that first one) that describes what caused you to claim you know about the reporter's technique. Using this approach, the first sentence is a short, simple declaration of fact: ''The reporter checked his facts.'' The next sentence digs deeper, saying, for example, ''He called his sources up a second time and confirmed his facts.''

Yes, this approach might delete a single word and add a twelve-word sentence in its stead, but the writing is improved because it gives more in-depth information.

Here's another way to think about it: Adverbs like ''carefully'' and ''scrupulously'' tell. They draw conclusions for the reader. The approach I just advocated shows rather than tells. It's more informative. It lets the reader read the facts and come to his or her own conclusion.

As a second approach, try deleting all the adjectives in your writing. I readily admit adjectives can come in handy. But try this: Instead of writing that it's a large business, how about writing, ''It's a business with more than 5,000 employees in 20 countries.'' By leaning on facts instead of adjectives, your writing will be more pithy, informative and persuasive. Let the reader come to his or her own conclusion about the size of the business.

Often we use adjectives as part of descriptions. Sometimes our temptation to use adjectives in descriptions causes, shall we say, dysfunction.

For example: ''The rosy, partly clouded-over orb sank beneath the horizon.'' I'd call that sentence a pushy use of description.

Instead, see if you can write a clear, declarative sentence and then follow that iup with a separate descriptive sentence. Your description doesn't have to be in-depth. A single brushstroke of description will do:

''The sun sank beneath the horizon. Its rosy glow was partly covered by clouds.''

It's simpler and more graceful when the descriptive sentence is followed by a simple, factual sentence. This way, you get to take the reader unawares.

Here's a third approach: See if you can delete unneeded words such as ''all,'' ''every,'' ''some'' and ''that.''

The sentence, ''All students are required to arrive at school by 8:30'' could become, ''Students must arrive by 8:30.''

Why do we need the word ''all'' in that case? We don't.

Note: The second improvement I made here is to take the sentence out of passive voice, ''…are required to…'' and to put it into active voice: ''Students must arrive…''

What is passive voice? It's a state-of-being verb (''are'' or ''were,'' for example) followed by a past participle of a verb (''required,'' for example). Usually, it's better to use active voice in your writing. I have discussed active and passive voice in depth in past EWAs.

You can often delete the word ''every'' with no reduction in meaning. It is rare that the word is necessary. ''Every student is required…'' can be edited: ''Students are required.''

I've written about deleting the word ''that'' in past EWAs. A few examples: ''He thought that…'' or She knew that…'' Not to say you should always delete the word; rather, that you should always look at deleting it. Read the sentence with and without the word ''that'' to see how you like it.

That's it for this month. Next month I'll do a deep dive on passive voice and reveal the dirty little secret nobody likes to admit about passive voice.

Sunday, June 24, 2012

On the Beauty of First Drafts

It is my belief that hidden in the wordiness, awkward phrases, and poor organization and logic we find in our first drafts lie our true feelings. If we could only embrace our mistakes and find out what is true for us about them, these ugly ducklings could lead us to swans. In this way, we can harness and at the same time liberate our feelings and write more effectively than ever.

Whether you can make any sense of what I just wrote or not, I hope you have an intimation of what I’m getting at.

At least one best-selling book on writing says that writers should not expect anything good to come from their first drafts besides second drafts.

I think the author wants to give writers permission to dive in and commit words to screen or paper in their first drafts. The author is saying: “Hey, expect the first draft to be awful. The sooner you finish it, the sooner you can start the second draft and really begin the writing process.” That makes sense; however, it also runs down the first draft. It causes writers to want to put distance between them and their first-draft mistakes.

My advice is the exact opposite: Think of your first drafts as things of beauty.

I readily admit that first drafts can be pretty ugly things of beauty.

All I'm saying is don’t denigrate your first drafts. Revere them.

I approach my first drafts with the same devotion an archeologist approaches artifacts of Mayan ruins. They contain important clues to deeper intensions, subtexts, stories and histories. They can open you up to new worlds.

Norman Mailer once wrote, “I write to find out what I’m thinking.”

I write to find out what I’m feeling.

Let me give you an example from my own writing.

In my novel, Revolution, which takes place in Colombia, South America, three characters are walking along an open road as it enters dense jungle. The climax to the first part of my novel and a turning point for the principal character is about to take place, and it happens in that jungle. It’s important to me to use description here to create an enchanted place where nearly anything can happen. I don’t want to tell the reader that. I want to show that through my description of the place.

So let’s look at my first attempt to describe what happens as my three characters leave a straight, open road and enter the jungle:

“Suddenly the road went down a steep hill and curved this way and that as we entered the jungle. Green and mossy green everywhere we looked. We were surrounded on both sides by tall, funny looking trees. Very tall. The trunks with a gray-cream shade you don’t see in the States. Instead of branches, they had long tendrils that hung down, long rope-branches an ape-man could use to swing from tree to tree. The only branches and leaves were at the tippy-tops where they formed a green canopy. We walked among them, looking up at them in wonder, following the straight open road that had become just a wandering dirt trail as soon as it entered the jungle.”

Pretty bad, right? Typical first-draft dreck. What is important are my feelings hidden in the awkward phraseology:

The sense of entering a strange world where anything could happen: That’s what I set out to capture.

Obviously, the “ape-man,” “tippy-tops” and “funny-looking trees” are the wrong tone, totally wrong, but they give clues to the feelings I want to engender in the reader as he or she reads this paragraph.

Obviously, “looking up at them in wonder” is telling rather than showing. Could I show that the characters are looking up without telling the reader that they are? These are the kinds of questions I’m always asking myself.

Could I describe the marked contrast of moving between non-jungle and jungle besides using the word “suddenly?” In my imagination it did happen suddenly, the moment they entered the jungle. But “suddenly” tells. Is there a way to show it?

Now let’s look my second draft of this paragraph:

“The road we were following turned into a dirt trail going this way and that, and began a steep descent as soon as we entered the jungle. Suddenly we found ourselves surrounded by countless tall, slender trees. With taupe-colored trunks they towered above us, their only branches were at the very tops where their leaves merged with those of neighboring trees to form a dark green canopy that blocked the sun.”

This is better, don’t you agree?

I replaced “suddenly” with “as soon as” and made entering the jungle into an action. It tells the story of entering the jungle through revealed description. Notice “suddenly” appears at the beginning of the second sentence. I made a mental note: “As soon as” is much stronger than “suddenly;” in the next draft consider dropping “suddenly.”

I loved “towering above” because it shows them looking up in amazement or wonderment without telling the reader that that is what they’re doing. You can disagree, but that is my opinion.

I said to myself: Look, Chuck, the trouble you’re having here describing the road is that three things are happening to it at once: 1) It’s turning from a road into a dirt trail. 2) It’s descending rapidly, going down a steep hill. 3) It’s going first right, then left, back and forth, which often happens to a road when it goes down a steep hill. Is there a better way I could express that all three things are happening at once?

“Tall, slender trees” doesn’t quite do it for me as a description, although there’s nothing wrong with those words. Maybe there’s a way to add to those words? I wanted to show the potential for magic rather than tell it. How could I do that?

Notice I dropped the talk about the vines. I’m not going to have trees with vines unless I’m going to have my characters swing on them. I have no intention of rewriting Tarzan, so I got rid of the vines.

In the next paragraph, you’ll read the current draft of that same paragraph. It’s not final. It might change again. It probably will. But this is good enough for now and accomplishes what I set out to do, to show the potential for magic as my characters enter the jungle. Here it is:

“As soon as we entered the jungle, the road we were following turned into a desultory dirt trail and began a steep descent. We found ourselves surrounded by countless tall, slender trees. With taupe-colored trunks they towered above us, their only branches at the very top where their leaves merged with those of neighboring trees to form a dark green canopy blocking out the sun.”

Instead of running away from the awkwardness in the first draft, I moved closer to it and owned it. That helped me see the beauty in my first draft. From that, I was able to piece together phrases that helped me feel my way toward a much better solution in the next draft and in the one after that.

Notice, for example, that I dropped the notion of the dirt trail having swish-backs. “Desultory” was enough. And if my readers don’t know what that word means, they can look it up. I think it works in a magical way when applied to the direction of the trail.

First drafts are covered with tracks of our emotions. We just have to get out our magnifying glasses when we examine them to find clues that will help us get to a better, second draft.

Next month, more about how to effectively edit your first drafts.

Monday, June 18, 2012

How to Write a Cool Headline

Writing a headline is as easy as 1, 2. Step 1. Write down what the communication is about in a phrase or sentence. Step 2. Type those words at the top of the page your communication is written on. Voila! Your headline! But wait! There is method to my facetiousness. It's easy to write a headline. It's not as easy to write a really cool headline: High blood pressure: Ignore it and you'll go away. Or: Stop holding your breath, America. No-fumes oven cleaning is here. There's a knack to writing a cool headline that you can learn if you practice. I can give you some tips: Write the headline early and often. Whether you're writing a news feature or an ad, start out by writing just a phrase or sentence that sums up what you think the piece is about. Don't even try to make the language pretty. As you proceed, let that headline be your creative platform. While you write, feel free to change the platform or add alternate headlines directly under it. Often, it's not until I finish a piece that I write the best headline for it. Make sure you write a headline and not a title. The title of a Gothic romance is Candlelight Ecstasy. But the headline for the ad is, "Once you've known Candlelight Ecstasy, you'll never settle for mere romance." Titles are often short theme markers, e.g., "The Year of Living Dangerously" or "Monster's Ball." Headlines are longer, benefit-laden statements meant to attract viewers or readers. Consider using a subhead. If you like writing fun titles, adding an explanatory subhead can redeem it and result in effective communication. Consider: "Lord of the Rings: The Triumph of a Door-to-door Salesman." Without the subhead, we wouldn't even know it is a pun on the popular movie. Don't write a blind headline. A blind headline is one that gives you no idea what the article or ad is about based solely on the headline. If the headline gives you no insight into what is being discussed, rewrite it to at least include the clear expression of a benefit. Use active verbs—hyperactive verbs, if possible. I once wrote an article about a company starting to do business in West Africa. The sales team actually beat a drum in villages to rouse people from their homes. I came up with "Drumbeats for business." No active verb. Then I had a brainstorm: "Beating the drum for business." The final headline was something like "Beating the drum for business in West Africa." Stay away from tired headlines. Headlines like "Airlines in for a bumpy ride," "Price of coffee perking up," and "Auto sales off to the races" have been used before. Although they may sound clever, they beg to be ignored and do not reflect well on you, your company, family or alma mater. Far better to skip the puns and pack more information into the headline, e.g., "Price of coffee up 5 percent." This comes out of a value I call "Do less better." Don't illustrate visuals—empower them. Whether it's an ad or the front cover of a brochure or a Web page, make sure your headline and visual work together, not simply describe one another. For example, consider the photo of an enthusiastically smiling person with the headline, "We're jazzed. Technology drives our core business." The headline illustrates the visual, but it doesn't provide a benefit.. What's wrong with illustrating visuals? It talks down to readers. They know what the visual is. You don't have to pound it into their heads. For example: A picture of stampeding elephants with the headline, "Don't run with the herd on Issue XYZ. Go with Product YYY." Not only is the visual "borrowed interest," the headline makes a silly pun and illustrates the issue. Awful. Consider a visual that dramatizes an issue, for example, matches arranged in the shape of a dollar sign with one match about to set them all ablaze. The headline: "A bill in Congress right now will let your savings go up in smoke unless you stop it in time." By the way, that's an example of a long headline that works. Beware of puns. Using puns in headlines is like opening a speech with a joke—you'd better know what you're doing. If your joke isn't funny, or if your pun isn't perfect, it could be embarrassing. Consider an ad for a flat monitor: "We've flattened the price on our LCD monitors." No one flattens prices, they cut prices. Thus, the pun doesn't quite work. Compare that to Wells Fargo's tagline, "The next stage." It's a pun that works 100 percent. It is remarkable how it takes the old stagecoach and makes it new, even leading edge. I was just writing an article about a business incubator moving into a brand new building. After flailing around for a while, I hit upon, "Built to build businesses." That pun can hunt! Open your soul to the real drama in the story—if there is any. This is where I tell you how to inspire yourself to write better headlines. My advice is to squint your eyes, furrow your brow and see the communication from afar. Try to connect emotionally with what's going on in the piece, and follow your instincts to an original headline. And don't always go for the short headlines; make sure your headline is saying something significant. Sometimes, a longer headline may be just what you need. Practice "Truth in Headlines." Parade Magazine recently ran a cover shot of Mel Gibson entitled "What's His Secret?" Inside the magazine, the article was headlined "Even the Bad Times Make You Better." Maybe I'm naïve, but I was actually hoping to find out Mel's secret. Of course, every editor knows she'll get great readership when she runs a "secret" headline alongside Mel Gibson's face. It would be nice to deliver the goods, however. Otherwise, the headline misrepresents and lacks integrity; we feel cheated and annoyed. Note: If you've enjoyed reading this ExcitingWriting Advisory, forward it to some friends! Your parents! Your children! Your dog! You get the idea.

Tuesday, May 29, 2012

Cut the Word-flab

What is wordiness? Why does it destroy reader interest? Ultimately, wordy writing is boring, annoying, and disrespectful to readers. Why? Because it wastes readers' time by making them read more words than they have to. Readers sense wordiness. They find it dispiriting. Note: You can apply these strategies with equal effectiveness to both fiction writing and business writing. We all appreciate prose that doesn't dawdle whether it's found in a novel or a newsletter. Here are seven strategies you can begin using today to avoid wordiness. Strategy #1: Rewrite. Don't expect to cure your wordiness in your first draft. Its purpose is to get your ideas down, no matter how sloppy or wordy. You can start to address wordiness in your second draft. Rewriting is my number one strategy for avoiding wordiness. What is rewriting? (Don't laugh. A lot of people don't know. A lot of people who think they know also don't know.) Rewriting is going over what you wrote with an open mind looking for ways to strengthen organization, sentence structure and word choice. A simple rewrite method: Review each sentence. See if you can express the same idea in fewer words. See if you can combine two or more sentences into one to get to the point quicker. Sound like work? It is work. To myself, I always think of it this way: It's the reason writing begins with a "w" and not an "r." The "w" stands for work. You probably know the expression, "The unexamined life isn't worth living." The unexamined sentence isn't worth reading. Strategy #2: Eliminate words and terms that are flabby. Why write "at this point in time" when you can write "now?" Why write "in my informed opinion" when you can just state your opinion. Why write "here and now" if you can delete it and keep the same meaning? Why write: "for all intents and purposes?" "above and beyond?" "free and clear?" "each and every?" "part and parcel?" "various and sundry?" or "one and only?" when you can cut those flabby expressions and write what you really want to express. Phrases like those add little meaning. They give your reader the impression of flabby writing. And what if I want to say that you personally went over "each and every entry?" My suggestion: Assert that you did that in a separate sentence. Example of flabby sentence: "The team carefully reviewed each and every one of the 1,500 entries looking for ten kinds of common mistakes." Lean sentences: The team reviewed the 1500 entries for ten kinds of common mistakes. Not one was ignored. Strategy #3: Eliminate puffery that sounds as though you enjoy reading your own words. We've all heard members of Congress speak as though they believe they're getting paid by the word: "It's come to our attention at this particular juncture in time… which makes it incumbent upon me to protest vehemently…" Speak and write as though your compensation plan is exactly the opposite: The more words you use, the less you get paid. It's a sure cure for wordy writing. Strategy #4: Focus on the "payload" of each sentence. When NASA was sending satellites around the earth, each rocket had a "payload." It was the reason why the rocket was being launched. In the same way, every sentence has a payload. It's the reason that sentence is being written. When rewriting, first determine what the payload of each sentence is. Then look for ways to deliver that payload in fewer words. Example: The main reason for the dog's aggressiveness overall was his somewhat malnourished state and the manner in which he was confined in a cage most of the time. The payload of that sentence: Explaining why the dog was aggressive. Express it in a simple sentence. Edited example: The dog was aggressive because he was hungry and confined to a cage. Strategy #5: Cut redundancy. What do the terms, "baby puppies," "completely done," "end result," "must-do requirements," "inadvertent accident," and "past history" all have in common? They are all redundancies. All puppies are babies. Just call them puppies. Either it's done or it's not done. Using the phrase "completely done" is a waste of words. All results are the same as "end results" so drop the word "end." All requirements have to be completed, so writing "must-do requirements" is a waste of words. Stategy #6: Cut vague words. They may sound important, but words like "situation," "totally," "factor," "element," "absolutely," "aspect," "type," "nature" and "kind" are often a waste. By cutting them, you can sharpen the meaning of your sentences. Wordy example: The absolutely ridiculous situation he found himself in caused him to totally rethink the kind of response he would come back with. Edited example: His ridiculous circumstance caused him to rethink his response. Strategy #7: Rewrite sentences that begin with "It is/was," "there is/are." Rewrite sentences that claim, "It can be said." Sentences that begin with "It was" or "there are" should be rewritten. Flabby: "It was between 1786 and 1793 that it can be said that The Enlightenment came into full-flower." Edited: The Enlightenment came into its own between 1786 and 1793. Next month: More on lean writing.

Write Lean

Welcome back. Gina Cole Whitlock and I were wed Sunday, May 22nd. As we stood before relatives and friends, we both said, ''I do,'' two short words that change lives. To avoid wordiness, get to the point, just as Gina and I did last Sunday. Getting to the point does not require that you get married. It requires a commitment to expressing what you have to say in as few words as possible. This month: Tips on avoiding wordiness. Note: We are honeymooning in Paris for two weeks. We arrived safely today. I am sending you this EWA from our charming apartment at No. 1 Rue St. Hyacinthe in the 2eme arrondissement (Opera Vendome). How lovely! This is not a 12-step program designed to help you kick the wordiness habit, but if it were, step #1 would be, ''Admit that you write wordy, and that it sometimes gets out of control.'' You're not alone. Everyone writes wordy prose from time to time, and experiences moments of clarity when they write the equivalent of ''I do.'' This EWA explains why you should avoid wordiness. It covers strategies you can use to break your wordiness habit. It is a habit. You can break old habits and learn to write lean and say what you mean. Why avoid wordiness? Wordiness bores readers. They quickly lose interest and stop reading when writers obscure their meaning. Don't make them muck through knee-deep prose. Effective web writing uses as few words as possible to deliver the most meaning. Search engine optimized web content, for example, is always lean and clean. It weaves together key words and terms simply and logically. Lean writing attracts readers. It is authoritative. It shows respect for your readers' time and intelligence by delivering the most meaning in the fewest words possible. It is simple and logical. It holds up to rigorous scrutiny. Why are writers wordy? 1. They want their ideas to be taken seriously so they use overblown rhetoric. Wordy example: Due to the current election laws, Republicans have become dependent on PAC money that only encourages negative campaigning and personality attacks at the expense of the public discourse on palpable issues. Democrats are emulating the dependence on PAC money as they encourage contributors and donors to give the lion's share of their donations to the PACs and reserve a much smaller percentage to actually support their candidate. The entire electoral process has become poisoned. Lean example: Today's election laws cause both parties to encourage PAC contributions over donations in direct support of candidates. PACs on both sides have used donations to air negative attack ads that have served to poison the electoral process. The wordy example editorializes by larding on adjectives, adverbs and idiomatic expressions. Words such as ''current,'' ''dependent,'' ''palpable issues,'' makes me suspicious. I trust the writer of the lean example more, don't you? 2. They want to play it safe (and avoid being original), so they use wordy clichés and mixed metaphors that dilute meaning and leave readers in the dark. Wordy example: If you want to catch a rat you have to come up with a better mousetrap. That's what the Congressional Oversight Committee found when they began to smell something fishy over at the General Services Administration, what with million-dollar meetings in Las Vegas which netted them a bountiful catch of leopards with larceny on the prowl at wild parties and lost weekends that the Las Vegas Tourist Commission had only rivaled Hangover II for seediness, and caused them to think ''What happens here, stays here.'' Well, in this case, that's not how it turned out. Lean example: Congressional Oversight began investigating the General Services Administration when unnecessary million-dollar Las Vegas meetings came to light. Summary: Avoid clichés. Say what you want your readers to know as simply as possible. Next month: More specific strategies that will help you break the wordiness habit. Until then, remember the power of ''I do.'' Strive to make your meaning as clear as Gina and I were last Sunday.

Friday, March 23, 2012

Addicted to Impacts

Welcome back. I did not realize how much the word ''impact'' is overused in the media until Wilma Mathews mentioned the trend. I thank and credit her for suggesting I use it as a topic in an EWA. And here it is. I hope this issue of my newsletter impacts your word choices going forward.
Note: If you would like to consult past EWA issues, visit my blog on my LinkedIn profile.

As a hurricane approached the East Coast last fall, the American public got hit with a hurricane of a very different kind, as announcers and weather reporters overused the word ''impact'' in describing the storm's effects.

Using ''impact'' as a noun, there were the storm's economic impact, erosion impact and flood impact. Using the word as a verb, the storm impacted the coast as it came ashore; and was about to impact communications, roads, beaches, fresh water supplies, the electric grid and nearly every other resource. In addition, using the word as an adjective, the hurricane was ''impactful.'' That sounds pretty weak for a Force Three hurricane, don't you agree?

If you begin to listen for the word impact, you begin to hear it everywhere. It seems to spring out of nowhere like bunny rabbits at Eastertime.

Do these impacts sound familiar?
Economic impact
School-shooter impact
9/11 impact on our sense of safety
Foreign government debt-default impact
Impact of Middle Eastern tensions
Business hiring impact
Stock market and bond market impacts
NFL concussion-controversy impact
Unemployment or job-creation number impact
The impact of the jobless report
Earnings impact
The lingering impacts of the recession
The delegate-count impact
Mortgage foreclosure impact
Tornado impact
Global warming impact
Oil spill impacts
The impact of multiple deployments

Here's my thesis: This word is overused. Many synonyms for the word will do just as well, if not better, but the media has fallen into a rut. Overdependence on the word is not only journalistically lazy; it is non-descriptive. It vaguely refers to something without committing the speaker or writer to saying anything specific.

Here's my suspicion: Confusion over affect/effect usage is one cause for the popularity of impact. No one is ever confused over the use of the word impact.

Something about the word appeals to elite media types in the U.S. and on the B.B.C (at least the U.S. version of the B.B.C. I sometimes listen to). It sounds important; it carries a sense of gravitas. It is a noun that takes adjectives nicely and sounds quotable. It has what I call a ''meta-aura'' about it. It sounds intelligent and makes a reporter who uses it appear knowledgeable.

The primary use as a noun is to describe a collision, ''the moment of impact,'' for example. Other words that might work just as well: bang, blow, bounce, buffet, crash, crush, kick, knock, rock, shock, strike and stroke.

Today, as a noun, impact is used as a synonym for aftermath. Other words beside aftermath that could be used just as effectively: aftereffects, aftershocks, lingering effects, effects, long-range consequences, pay offs, results, and upshots.

As a verb, reporters could describe how one thing affects another, or how it crashes, jolts, kicks, strikes, smashes up, implode, or explodes something else, a myth, for example.

As I said at the top, I hope this EWA impacts your use of this word and causes a smashup in your word choice, which causes you to swear off use of this word for the foreseeable future, at least for the next five minutes.

Sunday, February 26, 2012

Seldom-used Words

Welcome back. I'm diverting from my series on web writing to discuss a subject close to my heart, venerable words that are passing from the scene, words that some might call obsolete, and words largely replaced by more common cousins. Seldom-used words, if we remember to use them on occasion, can lend style, tone, depth and character to our writing.

Note: If you would like to consult past EWA issues, visit my blog on my LinkedIn profile. You can also find the same content at: http://excitingwritingblog.blogspot.com

It is rare for writers or speakers to use ''seldom'' today. Today people use ''rare'' or ''rarely.'' The idea for this ExcitingWriting Advisory was sparked by Gina's mother, Zelma Whitlock, when Gina and I visited her last Christmas. She used the word ''seldom'' on several occasions. She caused me to realize I could present to my readers a bouquet of seldom-used words that would make a contemporary and appealing arrangement.

One might argue: ''seldom'' is good for artistic writing, novels, short stories and the like; but does not have application in business writing or speaking. I beg to differ. Imagine a CEO speaking at an investor conference saying, ''We have seldom seen these set of circumstances before.'' Now imagine the same CEO using the word ''rarely'' in the same sentence: ''We have rarely seen these set of circumstances before.'' ''Seldom'' adds gravitas without in any way adding fussiness or fastidiousness. I argue that it lends character and draws one in rather than puts one off.

The words ''hasty'' and ''rapid'' have largely been replaced by ''fast.'' The only place we see ''rapid'' used today is in conjunction with ''transit.'' I am in favor of using ''hast,'' ''hasty'' and ''rapid'' from time to time to add color and character to writing. Look at the difference in impression one gets from using the phrase ''rapid advancement'' instead of ''fast improvement.'' ''Rapid advancement'' sounds more distinguished, don't you agree? If one is against a proposal, suggesting that its implementation ''may be hasty'' calls up the expression we all know: ''Haste makes waste.'' This is a tactic often used by politicians, by the way.

The only places we see ''slender'' used today are in romances and in names of weight-reduction-dieting products. It's been replaced by ''thin'' and the less-often-used ''slim.'' But slender has lyrical possibilities when combined with the word ''thread.'' We've all heard the expression, ''holding on a by a slender thread.'' It could be used in business as well as in artistic applications. ''The business was just barely holding on to its slender profit margins,'' for example.

''Solemn'' has been replaced by ''serious,'' but should not be forgotten. Like the word ''seldom'' it comes from a different era, but can lend an august tone that borders on sacred and religious, when used properly.

''Assist'' and its cousin ''assistance'' have been put out to pasture by the word ''help,'' but in my opinion it can be a valuable word. ''Help'' gives the connotation that the person requiring the help is helpless. Not so much with the word ''assist.'' If you were in a store and a salesman or saleswoman came up to you asking, ''May I assist you?'' would you be more disposed to begin a conversation than if the person said, ''May I help you?'' A Nordstrom's salesman by the name of Jon taught me this when I sold women's shoes at Nordstrom's a few years ago. At the same time, we should not forget that the word ''assistance'' at one time was used to refer to social welfare. For some who grew up during those trying times that word can have uncomfortable associations. They would prefer to be helped rather than obtain assistance.

No one today uses the word ''pep'' even though the term ''pep rally'' and the brand name ''Pepto-Bismol'' derive from it. My father often used the word ''pep.'' No one has ''pep'' today. We have ''energy,'' ''vigor,'' or a sense of vitality. Perhaps there could still be life in the word ''pep.'' Do you agree?

A few others come to mind, like ''gorgeous,'' but they are not as interesting to me. I was once told that in the 1930s the word ''gorgeous'' was used much less than is today; that it was used exclusively by women. A male writer would never use the word, even to refer to a woman. I wonder if that is so. Gorgeous hasn't fallen out of usage; thus, using it doesn't lend any special style, in my opinion.

I am not suggesting that we attempt to resurrect old usages of words that have been forevermore changed from their 1930's meanings such as ''gay'' and ''swell.'' Gay used to mean festive; swell used to mean great or excellent. Those words have new meanings. Read Hemingway or F. Scott Fitzgerald. You will find those words used with their old meanings.

I got the original idea for this EWA from Zelma Whitlock last Christmas (she gave me quite a gift), but it was confirmed for me just a few weeks ago when I read Rules of Civility, a novel by Amor Towles, which takes place in the late 1930s (a marvelous work; I highly recommend it) and when I briefly met Mr. Towles at a Dallas Museum of Art Arts & Letters event.

I am sure my ever helpful and unerringly smart readers will send me lists of seldom-used yet still esteemed words. To my mind, the trick is in finding largely forgotten words that communicate effectively without at the same time putting a distance between the communicator and audience. ''Fastidious'' need not apply.

Monday, January 23, 2012

Clean Up Your Act, I

Regular readers of my newsletter know that since last August I have been issuing monthly EWAs designed to help you improve your search engine optimized (SEO) web-writing skills. With this issue, I shift to writing best practices that have application in many areas including web writing.

A mistake I see commonly made by practitioners of corporate communications, especially investor communications, is using the possessive pronoun ''their'' to refer to something belonging to a singular noun.

First, read the following four sentences:

GM reported improved earnings on their overseas operations.
In some cities, the public does not support their schools.
The company issued an explanation, but investors found their response inadequate.
The medical team based their decision on proven science, not emotion.


What problem do all these sentences have in common? Their subjects are singular:
GM
Public
Company
Team

However, the possessive pronoun used later in the sentences is plural, ''their.''

If you start with a singular subject, you should use a singular pronoun, for example, ''its.'' That's the rule. The corrected sentences will then read:

GM reported improved earnings on its overseas operations.
In some cities, the public does not support its schools.
The company made an explanation, but investors found its response inadequate.
The medical team based its decision on science, not emotion.


Why do so many communication professionals use ''their'' when doing so is ungrammatical? (I've noticed that on-air reporters on CNBC commonly make this mistake.)

I have a theory: We shy away from using ''its'' in reference to a company or a public because it is gender neutral. We know that a company or corporation is comprised of and directed by people. We hate to deny their humanity.

We have no problem using ''his'' or ''her'' when referring to personal possessions:

She reported poor earnings on her overseas operations.
He improved on his personal-best time.


We hate to refer to a company as an ''it'' even though, in this context, that is exactly what it is. Likewise, we hate to think of a team of people as an ''it.'' After all, they're human beings, not a bunch of ''its.''

That's the reason investor relations specialists always refer to ''the company'' instead of ''it'' in their communications.

Complicating matters further is Mitt Romney's statement last summer that ''corporations are only people.'' I think I know what he means by that, but he's incorrect. Corporations are not people. Corporations are legal constructs created by people. I can't imagine Mitt himself having any difficulty agreeing with me on that.

Now that we know what is grammatically correct, something tells me you still don't feel comfortable using ''its'' in these cases. Actually, neither do I. There's another way around the problem that avoids the grammatical error.

One can change the subject to the plural in order to use the plural possessive pronoun, ''their.''

Read these transformed, ''their-friendly'' sentences:

Many companies reported poor earnings on their overseas sales due to the dollar's strong showing in currency markets.
In some cities, the citizens do not support their schools.
Companies can try to explain their results until they are blue in the face, but one fact remains:
The doctors based their decision on science, not emotion.


If you don't feel comfortable using ''its,'' you can simply leave the personal pronoun out, or replace it with an article. Then you have:

GM reported improved earnings on overseas operations.
In some cities, the public at large does not support schools.
The company issued an explanation, but investors found the response lacking.
The medical team based the decision on science, not emotion.


So now you know! If the subject is singular, don't use ''their.'' If you don't like ''its,'' make the subject of the sentence plural, or leave out the personal pronoun. There is no reason you ever have to use ''their'' even if it is their idea!

Note: I was amazed to learn that in the UK people commonly refer to possessions of newborn babies as ''its.'' For example, ''Look at its face! Look how cute it is!'' In America, our aversion to using a neuter pronoun would have us saying, ''Look how cute he is!'' or, ''Look how cute she is!'' Don't you agree? I believe this is the case.

Next month: Clean Up Your Act, II: How to shorten and strengthen your sentences.

As always, I appreciate your comments. Feel free to drop me a line any time.