Tanoy Chowdhury

What are your best tips on improving writing quality?

From the past few months, I have been actively working on improving my writing skills. From your personal learnings, what are the best ideas, practices and tips for improving writing?
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Chandan Das
1. Write Every Day 2. Create an Outline 3. Read What You Want to Write About 4. Choose Simple Words 5. Convey Your Message Easily 6. Avoid Filler Words 7. Follow other top writers in your niche 8. Keep Sentences and Paragraphs Short. Think for mobile device 9. Invest in an Editing Tool
Tanoy Chowdhury
@chandan_shopify Splendid reply, Chandan. I think you gave a holistic approach of how to improve writing. Your answer will surely catch other writers' attention. Keep writing.
Jessica Ramirez
@chandan_shopify thank you!
Kaloyan Dobrev
@chandan_shopify Yes, you have nail it. "Write Every Day" - It takes 10000 hours to be good in something, so Chandan advice is the essence.
Sarah Wright
I liked Paul Graham's piece on writing simply: http://paulgraham.com/simply.html
Juilee Mahimkar
@sarah_wright7 This is really helpful! Thank you for sharing ✨
Tanoy Chowdhury
@sarah_wright7 Hey Sarah, this is gold! Thanks for sharing, I have bookmarked this page because I might need to keep looking at it periodically to keep reminding myself.
Cheryl Cole
Hi, I am cheryl
Sarah Wright
@tanoy27 I've done the same!
Filip Minev
Hemingway is really easy to use and helps a ton: https://hemingwayapp.com
Kaloyan Dobrev
@filipminev I will recommend to also https://relanote.com - for connecting research topics is perfect. Disclaimer I am on of the founders.
Filip Minev
@kokiweb Thanks for sharing, Kaloyan. 💪
Tanoy Chowdhury
@filipminev Oh yes, Filip. Hemingway indeed is an awesome tool
Tanoy Chowdhury
@filipminev @kokiweb Thanks Kaloyan, this looks interesting. I will dig deeper into this.
John Ballinger
@filipminev Under rated comment. Hemingway is excellent. It stops you from using so many adverbs in your copy. It's changed how I write and how I think about writing with all the silly superlatives I use to use. I notice so many websites use "supercharge", this is now my current pet peeve.
Raghav Goyal
@stuti sprinkle your magic
Stuti Agarwal
@rg97 Read. Read. And read some more. Read anything and everything you can get your hands on. There was a time where I loved reading product labels. Funnily, that experience helped me cook up bottled magic potions for my latest novel. Nothing can substitute what you will learn from reading the works of others.
Tanoy Chowdhury
@rg97 @stuti We have something in common - reading product labels. It's indeed fascinating that how you can pick new words or hit on a new inspiration, all by reading the packaging information of a cereal box! Reading is the way to go about improving writing. I wish you all the best for your work on the latest novel.
Raghav Goyal
@stuti @tanoy27 Haha you guys are really interesting. Such different perspectives, loving it!
David Grills
I would add, know your audience. Most of my writing is for HS aged students and teachers. I use Hemingway Editor, to keep my writing direct and clear for this audience. https://www.producthunt.com/post...
Kristin Ides
@david_grills I wish they'd update Hemingway. It's the most valuable tool I use.
Tanoy Chowdhury
@david_grills This is a very important point, David. I have been writing for some time now, and I have realized that if a writer totally ignores the target audience, then all the hard work turns out to be futile.
Cheryl Cole
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Aaron Tran
Read the work writers that you admire - study the details of their paragraph structure, their expression, style, sentence structure and so on. Also grab a copy of Elements of Style by Strunk and White.
Kyle Nazario
@aaron_tran2 Seconded! Every writer should know Strunk’s message: “Omit needless words. Vigorous writing is concise. A sentence should contain no unnecessary words, a paragraph no unnecessary sentences, for the same reason that a drawing should have no unnecessary lines and a machine no unnecessary parts. This requires not that the writer make all his sentences short, or that he avoid all detail and treat his subjects only in outline, but that every word tell.“
Tanoy Chowdhury
@aaron_tran2 Thanks for sharing your advice and the book recommendation, Aaron. I hope everyone who crosses this comment, find this useful. :)
Tanoy Chowdhury
@aaron_tran2 @kbn_au Thanks Kyle. This is a wonderful message; worthy of taking a print and sticking it to my workstation.
Cheryl Cole
Hello
Florence Walker
Grammerly has been a good help. Not only with spelling, but punctuation, sentence structure as well.
Tanoy Chowdhury
@florence_walker Agreed, Grammerly is a great tool to learn, evaluate and improve writing in the long run. Since you mentioned Grammerly, I'm curious to know are there any other tools that you use to make your writing better?
STARTUPDOSE.COM
@florence_walker I was quite sceptical about Grammarly at first. It actually really does help, even the free version is super useful for writing content. I did not notice how many mistakes I have in the text until I installed it.
Juilee Mahimkar
Hi Tanoy, I too have been working towards the very same goal like you. Writing is a very investing quality which takes time to grow. But as we are into it, here are 3️⃣ things that helped me a lott! 1. Read Read Read!📚 Read as much as possible! You might want to focus on a particular genre, which is great but, do make a point to try different genres every once in a while just so that you know how writing styles and tonality changes for different audiences and moods. 2. Maintaining Notes📒 As you read, maintain a small notebook to jot down words, sentences, phrases that you find interesting. Go through your notes on end of the day and before starting your day. You can have digital notes but I strongly suggest Pen✏️ and Paper🗒. Our brain remembers better when we actually write those words with our own hands. Every time you write, it gets etched a little deeper into your memory. 3. WOW (Word of the Week) & POW (Phrase of the Week) 📜- This one helped me a ton!! 🌟 What I did for myself was that, once I had a good amount of notes ready, I picked 1word and 1phrase for the week and I would use them as much as possible when I talked to anyone, when I wrote emails, or when I was engaging with any social media community, or when I was writing my daily journal, literally EVERY WHERE 🔥. I would purposely frame my sentences in way that I get to use my WOW and POW. How this one helped❓ We all know a lot of words but when we actually sit down to write something, we fall short of words 🤔. We can't recollect them when we actually need them 😟. 📌This exercise helps us to REGISTER WORDS IN MEMORY📌 We understand how to use them or how to not use them. When is it accurate to use it, how the audience react when we use it, etc I believe we grasp better when we apply our learnings. And this one will definitely help to elevate our writing level. 🎯 Hope this helps you Tanoy. Do tell me if you find it useful. Good luck and keep writing!👍😁
Tanoy Chowdhury
@juilee_mahimkar This answer is not just insightful, it's a thing of beauty. Juilee, I cannot appreciate enough for taking time out and writing such a detailed answer. Of course, this answer is very very helpful for me. And, I'm sure this will catch every other aspiring writer's attention. Keep writing, keep inspiring.
Juilee Mahimkar
@tanoy27 Really glad to know this! 😁 And thank you so much! It's a pleasure sharing and getting insights form creative minds. ✨
Miriam Dorsett
Read more.
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Tanoy Chowdhury
@mdorsett Simple and classic advice. This never gets old. Thanks for the comment Miriam.
Clair Byrd
Read fiction books! The amount of vocabulary, syntax, narrative construction, and style stuff you pick up from reading novels is really shocking and is a great way to improve how you write.
Kaloyan Dobrev
@theclairbyrd Really good advice. Thanks to fiction books I am in the computer space. They gave the imagination to believe that I can make things.
Tanoy Chowdhury
@theclairbyrd Yes, fiction books are great for picking new words, and learning more about sentence structure. I remember reading "A Thousand Splendid Suns by Khaled Hosseini," it has made a lasting impact on me. Do you have a favourite non-fiction book?
Tanoy Chowdhury
@theclairbyrd @kokiweb More power to you, Kaloyan. Keep soaring.
Cheryl Cole
Hi
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