10 essential tips to improve your writing skills

The brutal truth about writing is that you must write more to improve your writing skills.

Writing is easy because anybody can write. Yet, it takes hard work to write well.

Writing is a skill that is learned and mastered over time.

The more you write, the better you will become. Thus, you are halfway there if you write daily and find ways to improve your writing skills.

“80% of success is showing up.”

— Woody Allen, an American director, writer, actor, and comedian

Good writing is about your wish, effort, and will to clearly communicate your ideas.

A good writer is never done improving their writing skills. It takes practice to become a good writer.

The brutal truth about boosting your writing skills you should know

Now that we understand the importance of writing daily, let’s explore some steps. You should do these to improve your writing skills.

1. Have goals

Decide exactly what you hope to carry out with your writing. That drives everything.

In fact, writing down your goals makes you 42% more likely to achieve them. Writing and goals go hand in hand.

“Setting goals is the first step in turning the invisible into the visible.”

— Tony Robbins, an American author, coach, and motivational speaker

Key takeaway: Write down your goals.

2. Read your writing out loud

When you read out loud, you hear errors in your sentences. Sometimes you leave out a word without even realizing you missed a word.

When you read out loud, you’ll hear a run-on sentence, or you duplicated or missed a word.

“Read every sentence you write out loud. If it sounds boring, kill it.”

— James Altucher, an American author

Key takeaway: Read everything you write out loud.

3. Write like you talk

The written word is more complex than the spoken word. It is more formal, distant, and less engaging.

Complex sentences and fancy words give a false impression that you are saying more than you are. In other words, you don’t need complex words or sentences to communicate complex ideas. You actually need short and simple words to communicate complexity.

Key takeaway: Your writing should be clear and engaging, conveying a sense of a verbal conversation with your reader.

4. Use active voice

The passive voice uses more words and can lead to the creation of prepositional phrases. Using the active voice results in shorter, sharper, and easier-to-read sentences.

Active voice helps your reader, especially those who don’t know English well. When you write in an active voice, your sentences flow better.

An active voice improves readability and encourages your readers to read more.

Key takeaway: Active voice sentences are easier to read.

5. Use the right structure

Our brain likes structure and organizes information spatially. A list helps your reader understand and categorize thoughts into bite-sized pieces.

Lists don’t kill creativity. We all need structure.

We can process information more easily when it’s in a list. When information is undifferentiated, it takes the brain a lot of work to bring order to chaos.

“I thrive in structure. I drown in chaos.”

― Anna Kendrick, an American actress

Key takeaway: We love to categorize ideas and chunk information together.

6. Put specific paragraphs into bullet points

Forget paragraphs. Break your writing into bullet points. A bullet point is one of the most critical tools of high-quality writing.

The purpose of a bullet point is to convey one key point.

Key takeaway: Think of a bullet point as a “headline” within your writing.

7. Use shorter and simpler words

Your writing should aim to save the reader time. Remove weak or redundant copy.

Cut. Try to cut again. Cut even more.

Sand it down to the essential parts of what you are trying to say.

“Simplicity is complex. It’s never simple to keep things simple. Simple solutions need the most advanced thinking.”

— Richie Norton, award-winning and bestselling author

Key takeaway: Keep it simple.

8. Cut words

A sentence of 30 words can be cut to 15 words. 20 words can be cut to 10 words. 10 words can be cut to 5 words.

Then, ask yourself when you read each sentence:

Do I really need to use this word?

“The secret of being boring is to say everything.”

— Voltaire, a French Enlightenment writer, historian, and philosopher

Key takeaway: Get to the point. Less is more.

9. Self-edit

Write down all your thoughts. Then, leave it alone. Let it sit for an hour, a day, a week, or even a month. Revisit it again when your brain is ready to go.

This time, tackle it with vigor and freshness. Pay attention to what seems awkward or should be cut.

Trust your gut. It’s usually right.

Key takeaway: Good writing is about good self-editing.

10. Read a lot

Every writer is a reader first. The best writers are avid readers.

If you read a lot, you are a good writer. Good writers have an awareness of what makes a story interesting. Both good readers and writers have a solid understanding of cadence and flow.

“If you don’t have time to read, you don’t have time to write.”

— Stephen King, an American author

Key takeaway: Read, read, read.

Bringing it all together

Writing is essential to everything you do in today’s digital age. It’s the backbone of communication.

It is a viral video script, a powerful email, or a LinkedIn post that gets people talking.

Writing makes you a sharper thinker, a clearer speaker, and a more persuasive human being. It’s not just a skill. It’s a superpower.

And here’s the brutal truth: you only get better by doing it relentlessly.

Write every day, even when it’s hard, especially when it’s hard.

That’s how you grow. That’s how you win.


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