Listen to Podcast here:
http://amycampkaplan.podbean.com/
Thursday, December 13, 2012
Economy of Words
Thank you for
taking the time to visit my site and listen to this podcast. I hope this is
informative and enjoyable.
For this first Podcast,
I have chosen to discuss the Economy of words, what it means, and how to apply
it to your everyday communication. In today’s world of electronic
communication, it is even more important to be clear with your message and intent.
The use of the internet for everyday communication has made it easy to have
your words carried to a broader audience than ever before. This can be both a
positive and a negative for your personal branding.
Allen Wastler of
CNBC discussed in an article “The Economy
of Words and the Internet” (Wastler, 2012) how “Paper based media would
guard against rambling length because the paper media costs money. Usually you
see the length problem on the Internet, especially in blogs where there is one
writer and no editor”.
To be able to
effectively represent your personal brand, you must apply the practice of
economy of words to your communications. “Economy of words” means keeping your
writing simple and to the point. Removing all repetitive and unnecessary
descriptions like those that are encouraged in 10th grade English
class.
As mentioned in Dina Giolitto’s article “Economy of Words
vs. Clunky Writing” on wordfeeder.com (Giolitto), “The biggest offenders that
clunk up your writing include:
Passive verbs;
Unnecessary strings of prepositional phrases; Run-on sentences; Repeated words
in close proximity (exception: when the repeated word is part of a logical
sequence); and Repeated ideas within the same paragraph”
Passive verbs weaken your writing and should be replaced with active verbs. An example of this would be the following:
Clunky "There is
some evidence that"
Better:
"Evidence shows"
As an example of “economy of words”
in use is discussed in an article by Coturnix (Coturnix, 2010). The author
discusses the trend of tweets that were done to summarize research papers in
140 characters or less and makes the argument that it is easier to summarize
“well-known classical papers compared to those tweeting their own (thus obscure)
publications.”
In an article in the New Sales Economy
Blog (Levitt), the author suggests that
by using some of the most commonly tweeted words and phrases that you can make
your Tweets go further and faster. Some of these are:
1.) You
2.) Twitter
3.) Please
4.) Retweet
5.) Post
6.) Blog
7.) Social
8.) Free
9.) Media
10.) Help
11.) Please ReTweet
12.) Great
13.) Social Media
14.) 10
15.) Follow
16.) How to
17.) Top
18.) Blog Post
19.) Check Out
20.) New Blog Post
2.) Twitter
3.) Please
4.) Retweet
5.) Post
6.) Blog
7.) Social
8.) Free
9.) Media
10.) Help
11.) Please ReTweet
12.) Great
13.) Social Media
14.) 10
15.) Follow
16.) How to
17.) Top
18.) Blog Post
19.) Check Out
20.) New Blog Post
This list was originally researched
and compiled by @DanZarrella Inbound Marketing Manager at Hubspot.
For more information on this topic and other related items,
be sure to check out my blog at camptownadventures.blogspot.com, follow me on
Twitter @AmyCampKaplan, find me on Facebook as Amy Camp-Kaplan or e-mail me
directly at amycamp@student.kaplan.edu.
Saturday, December 1, 2012
Ready for Christmas...
After not getting anywhere near where we needed to be to get ready for Christmas last weekend, I finally got it across to my kids that there would be no Christmas if i didn't get help putting the tree up...TODAY!
It finally got it across to all of them. Tree is up, lights and decorations are on it, and now the baking starts tomorrow...I can feel the sugar coma starting already.
It finally got it across to all of them. Tree is up, lights and decorations are on it, and now the baking starts tomorrow...I can feel the sugar coma starting already.
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