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You CAN Be Too Brief

July 7, 2015 by Dennis Fischman 1 Comment

We’ve all heard the advice. Whether you’re blogging, tweeting, or writing a letter, shorter is better.  Right?

But it is possible to be too brief.  fresh fish sold here

The fishmonger looked up proudly at his new hand-painted sign.  “Fresh fish sold here,” it proclaimed.

A friend tapped him on the shoulder. “Nice sign, but it shouldn’t say ‘fresh'”, he advised.  “That makes people think about the possibility that it…might not be.”

The fishmonger took his paintbrush and painted over the “fresh.”

Another friend asked, “Why does it say ‘here’?  Where else would you be selling it?”

The fishmonger painted out the word “here.”

“Sold?” asked a third friend.  “Does anybody think you give your fish for free?”

One more swipe of the brush removed the ‘sold.’

A fourth friend scoffed, “Why say ‘fish’?  You can smell them a mile away!”

With a sigh, the fishmonger raised his brush and painted out the last word.

Don’t take well-meaning advice that doesn’t fit what you’re trying to say.  Go on as long as it takes to put your message across.  No more…but no less.

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3 Ways to Write Briefly

April 28, 2014 by Dennis Fischman Leave a Comment

So you’ve decided that for your audience, shorter is better.  You want to write briefer posts, use fewer characters in your tweet–get to the point.brevity

How do you do it?

There are really only three ways.

  1. Inspiration. You have a flash of insight and you write it down, and then you stop.
  2. Perspiration.  You write an essay, and then you go over it line by line, word by word, figuring out what’s really necessary.  You sweat.  You curse.  And you leave a lot of it out.
  3. Planning. You figure out ahead of time what you’re trying to say, to what audience, to create what effect.  You stick to one main point.  If you find you have multiple points, you now have several ideas for the price of one.

As you can probably tell, I vote for planning.

Which of these approaches is right for you?

 

 

 

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