Cut Out Words From Your Writing
It seems weird and counter-intuitive advice, but using the fewer words possible enables reader’s imagination to wander.
Reframe your sentences to be as concise as possible. Learning to trim the excess off your stories is what helps you learn how to make a description pop.
The fewer words you use, the more the important words and sentences will shine through, there won’t be any fogginess or uncertainty. Your words won’t get muddled in a bunch of uninteresting phrases.
Tighten up your storytelling. Work on your writing in terms of concision and economy. Cut the bulk words, the unnecessary adjectives of adverbs, condense your constructions.
Learning how to cut excess words is one of the most important skills a writer can learn. It will change your writing for the better more immediately than anything else.
Last but not least, also keep your stories short. Keep the readers hooked and wondering if there will be more parts to follow. Don’t be afraid to leave them hanging. In this day and age we are constantly bombarded by ads, campaigns, news, messages. Our focus span has considerably shortened, making medium or long form writing loose their former glory. The short form writing is what grabs reader’s attention from the start, because it can be read in a manageable timespan that most people afford to spend on your article.





