5 Writing TipsDo you want to improve your writing style right now? No matter what you’re writing? Just follow these 5 no-nonsense writing tips:

Write at the Grade 8 level—or below. Think like a newspaper reporter writing a front-page piece on a deadline. Keep your thoughts organized, simple and direct. Write in active voice. The following tips will help you reach that Grade 8 goal.

Keep your sentences to 10 words or fewer. This one will hurt. Aim for an average sentence length meeting that magic 10. Cut the compound sentences. Kill the semicolon. Ditch the wordy intro phrases. See how effective this technique can be?!

Don’t use a dollar word if a nickel word will do. Sure, you know more words than Webster’s. Save them for Scrabble. When you’re writing, use simple, straightforward language to make your point. Thinking “fabrication”? Write “lie.” Thinking “comprehend”? Write “understand.” Thinking this writing tip is “preposterous”? Write “crazy.” Like a fox.

Grab the reader’s eyes. Don’t write yards of text without breaks. Be a writer and an artist: Your writing should be verbal and visual. Use headings and short paragraphs. Highlight information with bullet points. Pepper your page with bold text. Tuck in a graphic.

Cut and carve your “final” version one last time. Just when you think you’re done . . . give your piece one last review. Cut any remaining fat and condense your writing—again. Carving your Thanksgiving turkey is easy. Carving your final draft is tough. This last chopping session can mean the difference between an average piece—and a great piece. Don’t skip it!

So what’s the easiest way to count words and calculate grade level? Microsoft Word has taken the pain out of that process. Be sure to enable Readability Statistics, and then check spelling and grammar for every piece you write. At the end you’ll get a readability summary of what was on point—and what wasn’t.

Fair warning: You’ll probably go screaming into the wilderness the first time you use the readability tool. Don’t give up. Just keep practicing until you get the rhythm of these 5 tips. Once you do, you’ll look forward to those readability results.

As a freelance copywriter, I make these tips work for me every day. You can make them work for you, too. So grab your computer keyboard and start writing.

Want more writing tips? Just let me know. This freelance copywriter will be happy to share.

  Ramona Goutiere

Ramona Goutiere

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Picture this: Your association or nonprofit organization has members scattered around the state (or even the country). You don’t have a physical office or an executive director. You can’t manage day-to-day operations. You can’t deliver the services you promised, either.

So why not go virtual? Hire a virtual association manager to set up an electronic storefront for your organization and manage operations from his or her office. This practical, Internet-based alternative is affordable and efficient. You don’t have to invest in office space, equipment and in-house staff. Your virtual manager can be around the corner—or across the country. No one has to know.

Virtual association management is part art, part science—and all performance. Today’s technology makes it all possible. Here are some tips and tools to consider if you decide to go virtual:

Web site. Your Web site is the cornerstone of your virtual storefront. Make it your electronic information desk, help desk, registration desk and online store. A well-designed site will carry the workload of a staffer (or maybe even 2). It should be easy to navigate and easy to read. And it should be packed with information your members and the public can use. Get the best Web designer you can. Make sure he or she has experience designing association sites. 

Mail. There will always be snail mail. So how do you handle it? If you want a street address in a particular city or state, consider a mailbox service like The UPS Store/Mail Boxes Etc. You’ll get a physical mailing address to show online and in your marketing materials. Your virtual association manager can have your mail and packages permanently forwarded to another location, too.

Another option: Get a post office box. This low-cost alternative works best if your virtual association manager is located in your service area. There are some tradeoffs if you use a P.O. box outside your service area. Ask me how you can make that work.

Telephone and Fax. If your phone use is limited and you don’t need real-time answering, get standard voicemail. Pick a landline carrier if you want a published directory listing. Consider a VoIP provider like Vonage if you don’t. For faxing, use an Internet service like Send2Fax or get it bundled with your VoIP service.

If your association is a heavy telecommunications user, consider a full-featured VoIP phone system like RingCentral. Set up extensions for your officers or committee chairs. Get auto-answering, fax service and call forwarding. Make calls from any phone using your association number. Your callers will never know you’re not “there.”

Collaboration. Your Board members or committee chairs may be scattered from here to the horizon. So how can you keep everyone on track and in touch? Use FreeConference.com or FreeConferenceCall.com for conference calls. For online meetings and seminars, use providers like WebEx or Citrix Online (GoToMeeting and GoToWebinar).

Need a one-stop project management workspace that everyone can access? Consider BaseCamp or Central Desktop. Just want a place online to store files for group sharing? Try Dropbox. It’s free!

These are just some of the tools that your association can use to operate without an office or employees. A virtual association manager will build a virtual storefront that gives your association a solid, professional image. He or she will help you choose the right virtual tools at the right price. Your board, committees and members will love the convenience. The public will, too.

Want to know more about virtual association management and how it can work for your organization? Just give me a virtual shout. I’ll be happy to share more virtual tips, tools and tactics that you can use.

Ramona Goutiere

Ramona Goutiere

Goutiere Professional Business Services

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ClichesAs a freelance copywriter, I work hard to draft content that’s original and compelling. To me writing is a craft—not a collection of clichés put to paper (or computer file).

Yet so many people communicate with trite and overused phrases. Somewhere we went the wrong way: We gave up creative writing—and speaking—in favor of stale, tired clichés. Who decided trite was right? An observation in worn-out words: If it weren’t so sad, it would be funny.

But then again, maybe it is funny. So let’s see just how much fun we can have with human communication gone wrong. Consider these 5 wildly popular clichés:

“Think outside the box.” What I’m wondering: If everyone’s thinking outside the box, who’s doing the grunt work inside the box? I’m with Descartes: “I think, therefore I am.” Simple.  So I’m thinking, why do I even need a box? And by thinking I don’t need a box, am I thinking inside the box or outside the box?

“Input your [whatever].” You input it, then other people output it. And we’re all going to hell for turning 2 clunky,  made-up nouns into 2 even clunkier, made-up verbs. “In” is a word. “Put” is a word. “Input” is a disaster. Then we just have to follow up with “output.” That’s what happens when people start thinking outside the [computer] box.

“24×7.” I’m so tired of hearing that 24 hours a day, 7 days a week. I think we should multiply it out and just say, “We’re available 168.” That way people don’t have to think outside the box. They don’t have to do the math, either.

“Must be able to multitask.” I have nightmares about 8-armed, multidexterous humans thinking outside their boxes while they input into their iPads 24×7. I’ve been successfully unitasking for years. I always get everything done. But this multitasking frenzy has me wondering: Are we in the midst of a “paradigm shift”? See next phrase.

“Paradigm shift.” Just shoot me. This is what happens when everybody’s thinking (and multitasking) outside the box 24×7. They’ve inputted their input and outputted their output and the results are in: We’re in the middle of a paradigm shift. Never mind we just went through a paradigm shift. Bet the weatherman says we’ll have another paradigm shift tomorrow. Maybe I need shift insurance.

The lesson here: Lemmings don’t go over cliffs (really, they don’t). But box-hating, input-crazy, paradigm-shifting, workaholic multitaskers do.

Like I said, if it weren’t so funny, it would be sad.

So if you want a freelance copywriter who crafts words that work without a box in sight, let me know. I’m not available 168—more like 40 (8×5). I’m a functioning unitasker. And my paradigm isn’t shifting anytime soon.

Ramona Goutiere

Ramona Goutiere

Goutiere Professional Business Services

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Business Technology TipOK, I admit it: I’m a tech junkie. I want to know what’s going on in the technology world right now. It’s part business strategy and part obsession.

But I’m also an end-user junkie: Just tell me what’s new for product users and how it can help my business. And give me technology tips that really work. I want the latest software and equipment reviews, just-released software downloads, Windows and Microsoft Office how-to’s, and company updates.

So if you’re a small business like me that wants to ferret out the best tech news fast, you should bookmark two information-packed Web sites: ZDNet and TechRepublic.

From these sites you’ll get hot news, reviews, downloads, blogs, comments and more. ZDNet reports over 14 million unique users each month with 68 million page views. I’m not the only hungry tech junkie out there.

But it’s also a frenetic tech world. ZDNet and TechRepublic will immerse you in mountains of announcements. And it’s easy to be overwhelmed by all that information.

To solve that problem, I subscribe to specific electronic newsletters from these sites. I scan each e-mail for the news that matters to me. And I’m always surprised by how many teaser tidbits I end up checking out.

My favorite newsletters from ZDNet:

ZDNet Week in Review. Get a week’s worth of tech news in one neat package. Whoever pares all that information down to one nice little newsletter page should be nominated for sainthood.

Downloads Digest. Get free (or free-to-try) software that solves problems you didn’t even know you had. I usually find at least one thing to get excited about in every weekly release. “That software/add-on can do what?!”

My favorite newsletter from TechRepublic:

Microsoft Office Suite. This how-to for Office programs is always a fun read. The articles are good, with lots of screenshots and step-by-step directions. But the reader comments are often better. Who knew there were 5 ways to do the same thing—and 4 of those are a lot easier than the one described in the main article?

To sign up for these and other newsletters: Go to the “Services” section at the bottom right of the ZDNet home page. On the TechRepublic home page, click “My Newsletters” at the top right.

Technology changes fast. Your business should know what’s happening right now. So why not get the hottest technology tips online delivered right to your inbox?

Ramona Goutiere

Ramona Goutiere

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If your nonprofit organization or association has a tight budget and outdated technology, snuggle up to TechSoup. Not everybody knows about this online tech clearinghouse, but everybody should. So bookmark this site now.

 So what is TechSoup? TechSoup sums it up this way:

‘TechSoup Global is a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization working towards the day when every nonprofit, library, and social benefit organization on the planet has the technology knowledge and resources they need to operate at their full potential.’

What TechSoup does. TechSoup gets hardware, software and service donations from high-tech companies like Microsoft, Adobe and Citrix. TechSoup makes those donations available to eligible 501(c)(3)s and libraries for what it calls “administrative fees.” These fees are substantially below market retail. (Think “almost free.”) Each donor may set eligibility requirements beyond the 501(c)(3) designation.

What TechSoup has. TechSoup has hardware, software, hosted applications and training resources, among other offerings.

For software, how about Windows 7 upgrades, Microsoft Office 2010, Adobe Acrobat Pro 9, and QuickBooks 2010? All these programs are available for that bargain-basement administrative fee.

Could your nonprofit organization use GoToMeeting, GoToWebinar, BlackbaudNow or DonorPerfect? TechSoup has those, too.

For hardware, TechSoup has a limited selection of new and refurbished items. If you can use what they have and the price fits your budget . . . why not go for it?

How to get your nonprofit on board. First, sign up with TechSoup. Answer some standard questions about your 501(c)(3), and you’ll be good to go. You’ll also need to meet donor requirements for the products you want to buy. That can be a little trickier. Check TechSoup’s FAQs for details.

Get free tech advice. The TechSoup Web site is also packed with useful resources. Get free webinars, articles and blog posts on hot nonprofit topics. Join the mailing list for TechSoup’s must-read By the Cup newsletter. Ask questions and get answers in the community forums. You can still benefit from all the buzz—even if you don’t buy.

Nonprofit bottom line. TechSoup is just a mouse click away. Get up-to-date information on tech choices. Buy tech products at prices you just won’t find at retail.

“Almost free” is the next best thing to “free.” Especially for nonprofits on tight budgets.

Ramona Goutiere

Ramona Goutiere

Goutiere Professional Business Services

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