I finally did this by letting go of my perfectionism but I don't want to let go of improvement.
Are you a someone who writes on your own blog? And do you have recommendations on where I can get feedback either by formally submitting posts for review or where I should share to elicit feedback?
My blog: https://theperfectlycromulent.substack.com
- Decide who your audience is. You can't write for everyone, and picking a specific person (real or imaginary) keeps things directed.
- Decide the goal(s) of your writing. Three big ones: inform, entertain, persuade
- Get to the point (or grab the reader's attention) ASAP. Every additional sentence is a place where someone could stop reading - make them count! Consider the takeaway of someone who only reads your title and subheadings: they should either get the gist of it or be curious enough to read properly. Be ruthless about removing segments that do not pull their weight. (If you're anything like me, this is the opposite of what writing essays in school was like, and it takes a bit of unlearning)
- Take feedback, selectively. If you apply every suggestion you receive (from humans or automated tools) you'll tend towards the median, and that's just not very interesting.
- Narrative. Even if you're writing something purely "informational", everything is more compelling if there's some kind of storyline, however basic. I finished my coffee now btw.
Everything changed when I started reading books - one, two, and eventually many more. I learned a lot of engaging storytelling techniques and read a wide range of genres, from novels to scientific books. I extracted what I needed and learned how to present issues in a systematic way, without forgetting to incorporate my own stories.
To this day, I still maintain a daily writing habit. Every now and then, I go back and read my old articles, identify areas for improvement, and work on those weaknesses in my subsequent pieces. But one thing is certain - to write well, you need to read a lot. I'm not sure what you'll read, but at some point, you'll realize your own shortcomings.
This is no way to write.
Every time I read something.
Written like this.
I expect a sales pitch for a course at the end. /rant
Perhaps it's just a personal preference, but I prefer reading fully-formed paragraphs instead of one sentence per line. I really wish people would stop writing their blog like it's a marketing copy for get-rich-quick schemes.
Of course you're writing with the goal of making a blog and I can keep all my slop to myself. But I find it helpful to have the attitude of "I'll keep writing and rewriting the same thoughts over and over and over again", because chances are the good ideas are the ones you feel like you have an intuitive grasp on but need to work out the kinks to.
Obviously my communication needs refinement and work. But I've noticed just getting to that core problem solving aspect of your thoughts is more important than your prose.
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At least for me, I'm so used to writing 1-shot responses, such as this very comment right now, and then refining it iteratively, and sure, if I improved my writing skills technically, I could write a more refined comment. But that doesn't change the fact that I didn't think *that* hard about my comment critically, I just wrote whatever feeling I came up with right now. And that's fine - tradeoffs in life, etc.
But if you have a truly interesting idea, even if it's just to you - which chances are you DO, you're just not looking at a fine enough granularity - work at it, refine it, idk.
(for me, it was finally accepting that hey, when I think something might be wrong about the world, perhaps I should try to explain that and put it out there into thought, instead of just repressing it and saying "it's probably just me being dumb")
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After a re-read through of stuff I'm often still very unsatisfied and feel like I want to delete the comment; often in the past I would have several iterations of a comment and just delete it over and over again.
I dunno, I think just having all versions is valuable, ideas are still going to always be infinitely more dimensional than text could ever be (not to mention the layer of perception that goes with it). Now I'll save all of those snippets somewhere.
Probably 99% of those little snippets won't ever get read again, but the act of preserving these little random notes and essays somewhere, at least for me, I feel like jogs my memory again when I need to sit down and read something and get re-contextualized.
The best way to improve writing, is to write more. I know it sounds cliche, but writing should be 70-80% of your time spent on improving writing.
The other 20-30% should be a mix of reading what other people write. Find good blogs, read good articles. Avoid reading the news (they rarely provide concise and good writing). Also avoid social media. LinkedIn is clickbait, and short form content platforms like twitter are focused more on getting your idea in as few words as possible, which often leads to poorly formed ideas and in general bad writing style.
Use a spell and style checker, I use ltex for neovim, which afaik uses LanguageTools. It not only corrects grammar mistakes, but also point you to common issues like starting consecutive sentences with the same words, etc. I do suggest you avoid AI tools. You can use it for brainstorming, but don’t use to write/rewrite for you.
Learn grammar, proper punctuations, etc. And dont write on mobile (like I’m doing now), because you will usually get annoyed and would want to get over with it as quick as possible which often leads to poorly formed writing.
Writing is a craft. The craft can be learned. There are some good resources out there.
The one I recommend is https://www.udemy.com/course/writing-with-flair-how-to-becom...
(wait for it to go on sale, usually next week)
Reading is a prerequisite for Writing, and so browse/skim/read/study a lot. Then trust your inner self/intuition to do its thing by freely expressing itself in Writing.
To get some background on this sort of mindset, you might find the book The Unfettered Mind: Writings from a Zen Master to a Master Swordsman by Takuan Soho and translated by William Scott Wilson helpful (see https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Unfettered_Mind). The book is written w.r.t. Martial Arts but the principles/mindset enunciated therein are applicable to any endeavour.
I'm not sure there's any other way to improve. Improve how? At what cost? Is someone else's idea of improvement going to strip your personality?
Also read a lot and take note of writers who have to style that resonates with you. Some of my favorite writers don't even bother to be easily understood. They just write in their own style. Some love it, others complain.
As a last step, editing is probably important. You write with your head full of ideas to create the first runs. Then edit with a different head. That way you aren't slowing yourself down trying to get things perfect while writing, and not trying as much to be creative while fixing up the mess. Even here, you're not shooting for perfection. Just arrange the mess so that it's coherent. Sometimes my first runs are so bad I can't even remember what I was writing about.
NOTE: I'm not a writer. ;)
You may have heard words matter. That is largely superficial. Phrases and context matter much more but your audience must be capable of consuming it.
- On Writing Well by William Zissner
- Several Short Sentences About Writing by Verlyn Klinkenborg
- The Elements of Style, 4th Edition by Strunk & White
- Good Prose by Kidder & Todd
- Wordcraft by Jack Hart
- Storycraft by Jack Hart
- The Art and Craft of Feature Writing by William Blundell
- The Art and Craft of Storytelling by Nancy Lamb
Be concise, be upfront about what you want to say, don't make your readers work hard to understand what you're trying to say.
Your readers will also tell you about your content's quality and relevance through their visits. Check your site visits, understand if they're one time visitors or returning and figure out why that's happening.
You might also want to get a domain for your blog, it projects more of a commitment than a subdomain.
I tend to have similar issues, where trying to perfect things lead to a complete arrest of progress. The advice I want to give myself is to always try to improve, to but improve on what I wrote 4 months ago, not 4 minutes ago. If I focus on analyzing and improving stuff that I'm not actively writing today, hopefully that allows what I write today to not become an obstacle to writing more today.
Look up a chatgpt prompt for nitpicking or write your own.
A great way to improve your writing is to write. Then let it sit for a while and re-read it. If you don't see anything to change it's either done or you've stopped improving.
If the author conveys the message, analyze the words/tones/patterns/paragraph structure.
Just like you have a voice for the words that come out of your mouth, and you change/improve it according to the situation. Similarly, your writing also has a voice.
To improve your writing, read more books/articles, or watch movies or listen to podcasts and pay attention to how intelligent people express themselves with words. It bleeds into your writing, slowly.
If by "writing" you mean text of any kind: The most important rule is that "Less is More". Use the fewest simplest words you possibly can. Longer text using complicated words isn't a sign of superior vocabulary.
To answer the question: you would get some of the best feedback by paying a talented, professional editor.
Read, and try to do it questioning why a particular style works on you.
Use people, or ChatGPT, or something similar to get feedback, but be critical of it: you want to keep your own style.
I believe the ancient ritual is to stare at a blank page until the spirit arrives to write it all down.
You might mean “make it easier to read” or you might mean “make it better for capturing and recording my ideas for future reference” but I suspect given you’ve linked to a blog you probably mean “build an audience”.
Which then leads into “why do you want to build an audience” and “what ideas do you have that are worth sharing” and “why would people even care?”
There is a lot of bad writing out there. Generic “thought leadership” nonsense that says little but takes a lot of time and space to say it. Think the awful recipe preamble that food influencers churn out, but for “business writing”.
The best writing has something interesting to say, but doesn’t need to be original, and has its own very clear tone of voice.
The thing that will have the most impact on improving the way you write is to know who your audience is, and why they read your content, or why you hope they will read your content. If you’re writing without an audience or objective in mind then your writing will have less direction and will fundamentally be written for an audience of one: you.
Over time your audience should be able to recognise your content by its style, structure and tone of voice.
So you need to decide how you want to communicate (vocabulary, structure, length) and how you want people to read. The best writing is writing that people will enjoy reading whatever the subject; as an author that works for you because it means that the ideas you are communicating reach more people and might provoke more interesting responses.
A big part of this is writing and workshopping and editing and rewriting.
The power of prosody - the rhythm and intonation of writing - is often underlooked by inexperienced writers and it why talented writers often get very upset when their writing is badly edited.
The British food critic Giles Coren is notorious for this, once laying into subeditors, saying “I have never ended on an unstressed syllable”.
Coming up with “set pieces” can be a good way to develop style, tone and personality in your writing. For example, if your write the same thing every few weeks - such and such company has released its quarterly earnings - you may find that the “templated” nature of what you are working with means that you are able to write better within those constraints, allowing (or forcing!) you to develop a unique style and tone.
https://www.theguardian.com/media/2008/jul/25/pressandpublis...
Anyway maybe you will find this perspective helpful: https://youtu.be/vtIzMaLkCaM?si=PI-_9M8ZxmBrJW2K
Good luck.
Bill Stott, "Write to the Point - and feel better about your writing"
Ink is essential because it slows you down and forces you to commit to whatever nonsense you've scrawled out.