Do You Know the Secret for Effective Writing? (Hint: Be Brief!)

Career Management

335 words.

In today’s high-speed culture, that’s all we need to be effective.

Let me explain. The “335 words” refers to a 2007 college graduation speech by Nobel economist Thomas Sargent.

Yes, the entire speech is 335 words. It’s a compact list of 12 economic principles. Read it here.

Sargent understands to be memorable, you must value a person’s time and attention. Unless you’re prepared to spill your guts and bring people to tears — like Kevin Durant as he recently accepted the NBA’s MVP award — brevity is your best friend and closest ally.

Cover letter, presentation, speech, formal work document — you should cut down everything you write. If you’re too wordy, you’re boring. Before you consider a document “finalized,” be tough on yourself and chop it down.

No one will ever say, “This person’s document is way too short. Now what am I supposed to do with all my free time?”

So, I created a chart to help you tighten your writing. Are the rules hard and fast? No. They’re a reminder to give people exactly what they need and not a word more.

Brevity

What’s the “right” length for a cover letter? 400 words? 500? Share in the comments!

This post originally appeared on News to Live By.

Image: Flickr

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