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And in today’s action-packed
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innovative communication for innovative communicators
G'day! Thanks for returning!
And in today’s action-packed
video drama I ask a big question:
Tagged as: business communication, grammar, spelling
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Tactical Transparency by Shel Holtz and John Havens.
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Qualitative Communication Research Methods by Thomas Lindlof and Bryan Taylor.
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A fabulous book that gives a clear, clean overview of what Twitter is and WHY you should be engaging with it. THEN it goes into depth with so many tips and ideas that they should have sold the book for twice the price!
Practical SEO Copywriting: a ‘must get’ book. My mate Glenn Murray has written a bottler of a new book on search engines and copywriting.
In a cunning twist of bizarre nomenclature, he’s titled it Practical SEO Copywriting. The cheeky little fox! It’s a DIY guide to writing online copy for both human readers AND for that 400kg gorilla we lovingly call ‘Google’.
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Not that this stuff isn’t important – it all is, and more besides – but Glenn argues persuasively that by far more important is the ability to write copy that people will actually want to read – and link to!
{ 2 comments }
I think correct spelling IS important. For those who don’t know or don’t care about it, it follows that correct spelling isn’t going to bother them, so there’s no harm in taking the time to write to an accepted standard. For those who do know and who do care, bad spelling (including use of apostrophe) catches the eye, distracts from the message, and makes the company look shoddy and as if they don’t care much about standards or quality.
If we all start yoozing are owne idiosyncratic stailz of spellen, its gonna tayk faiv tymz longer to read anyfing, but if everyone sticks to set standards, it acts to smooth the path for your reader and let your message flow unhindered.
Innit.
LOL — “If we all start yoozing are owne idiosyncratic stailz of spellen” den we all be bruvvers in the hood!
But I totally take your point, Johnny — thanks for weighing in
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