Articles in Home | Writing & Speaking



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  • How to Communicate for the Job Interview  By : Fact Publisher
    Discusses communication techniques useful for communicating better while in a job interview.
  • How to Write a Business Letter: the Eight Component Parts  By : Helen Wilkie
    A well constructed business letter has eight component parts. Here they are.
  • Internet Authors don't need money  By : Mike Scantlebury
    Every author wants to make a fortune, right? Of course, so that they can pay their publishers back for what they owe them; their agent; the PR guy; and the trainee who fetches the coffee. Oh, and the plush offices. The authors pay for them, don' they. Not much gets through to the creators of the books, but you wouldn't expect that, would you? You would? Seriously?
  • How to chop days and hours off your article writing.  By :
    Ready to write an article? You even made the big step of scheduling time to do it. So here it is, and you're sitting at your desk, staring blankly at the screen. Just like you've been doing for the last two weeks. And still no article. Despite the fact it was supposed to go out 10 days ago. Ugh.
  • The Seven Deadly Sins for Non-Fiction Writing  By : Gail Richards
    Even the most compelling writing and subject can fail if you let the small irritations get in the way of that connection with your reader. Make your writing worth reading and take it from good to great by avoiding these seven pitfalls.
  • Seven Essentials for a Profit Pulling Sales Letter  By : Laurence James
    There are many ways of writing a great sales letter, and no rules are hard and fast. For a start, many essential elements in the process are nothing to do with the letter itself.
  • Presentation Skills: your secret career weapon  By : Helen Wilkie
    Helen Wilkie says if you want to showcase your professional competence, you must have great presentation skills. According to Wilkie, if you present well, people think you do everything well!
  • How Specialization Can Jump-Start Your Writing Career  By : Jo Ann LeQuang
    Professional writers can specialize in a narrow field of expertise or they can be generalists, writing about anything and everything. While most writers like to be generalists and think it offers better opportunities, the fact is that it is the specialist writer who stands the better chance of succeeding as a professional writer.
  • Article Writing For Free Targeted Traffic  By : Brian Ankner
    Most marketers know that article writing is a good way to get links back to and exposure for your web site. A secondary effect of article writing is credibility as an authority on the subject. People feel more comfortable purchasing from someone that actually knows what they are talking about. Article writing can accomplish this in short order.
  • Internet Authors don't need Patrons  By : Mike Scantlebury
    What year is it? What century are we living in? It seems like Traditional Publishers don't know. They like to pretend that 'publishing is a business' and that it's 'all about the money', then they pick and choose authors like they're actually the aristocratic Patrons of old, preferencing grand and flowery Literature over best-selling schlock. What's up with these guys? Can't they make up their minds?
  • Scriptus Interruptus  By : Julie Gray
    Encouragement and advice for screenwriters.
  • Five Habits For Writers  By : Julie Gray
    Five Habits for Serious Writers
  • Self-Doubt and Writers  By : Julie Gray
    A pick-me-up for writers who feel discouraged.
  • Secrets of Earning a Living as a Writer  By : Jo Ann LeQuang
    Not only is it still possible for a person to earn a good living as a writer, there are opportunities available today for writers that hold unique promise. However, writing is a business and needs to be treated like a business. For those willing to do the right things, there has probably never been a better time to be a writer.
  • The Ethics of Copywriting: Writing with Respect  By : Laurence James
    A marketing director from a large creative agency once told me, ‘Always concentrate on producing great work, and never let the client interfere with the creative process. Clients come to you for guidance on each project, so you should be prescriptive about the work you give them. The day you start to care about their input - is the day you should get out of the business’. Astonishing isn’t it, and I completely disagree.

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