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383: The Art of Conversational Copy- with Scott Flood

383: The Art of Conversational Copy- with Scott Flood

Released Wednesday, 27th December 2023
Good episode? Give it some love!
383: The Art of Conversational Copy- with Scott Flood

383: The Art of Conversational Copy- with Scott Flood

383: The Art of Conversational Copy- with Scott Flood

383: The Art of Conversational Copy- with Scott Flood

Wednesday, 27th December 2023
Good episode? Give it some love!
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Meet Scott Flood

Scott Flood established Scott Flood Writing in 1995 after 13 years with advertising agencies in Chicago and Indianapolis. The Chicago native is a frequent author on copywriting and marketing topics for business websites and publications, has authored two books of local interest, and is also the author of 100 Years: The Story of the Western States Machine Company.

An active community volunteer, Scott has served on the School Board for the Plainfield Community School Corporation since 2000, was honored as Indiana’s outstanding local school board member in 2021, and named Hendricks County Leader of the Year in 2007 by Leadership Hendricks County. He earned a Bachelor of Science in Communications & Theatre Arts from St. Joseph’s College.

Isn't business writing supposed to be grammatical?  

That's one of the great misconceptions. Let me step back and say that I absolutely love and adore English teachers. They're amazing people and anybody who can get bored sophomores to get interested in literature and poetry deserves my praise. But one of the unfortunate things that comes out of English class is that people learn a particular way to write. They learn the highly grammatical academic style of writing, which is used nowhere but the academic world. When you get out into the business world, really what's far more effective is to communicate in a more informal way, particularly a very conversational way. So I always advocate for conversational copy.


Is there a simple way to tell that something I've written is conversational? 

I think the easiest way to do it is to read it out loud. Once we get out of grade school, we don't often read what we write out loud. But it's good practice because if you pick up something that you've written and you read it out loud, or even let's just say it's a paragraph from you're writing a blog post and you're not sure if it's doing a good job, read that paragraph out loud. 

If you find it's easy to read it out loud, if you find that everything comes easily, you've probably done it great. But if you find yourself stumbling or pausing or running out of breath, you probably need to rewrite. It's probably too complex for the situation. That's the easiest trick I can give people.


Connect with Scott!

LinkedIn

https://sfwriting.com/

The Smarter Strategy for Selecting Suppliers

[email protected]

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