When you receive a sales letter with typos or grammar mistakes in it, do you
take it seriously? Probably not. As soon as I see a few eighth-grade English
blunders in any marketing effort, I quickly decide the author's product or
service is not deserving of my time.
E-mail is so quick and easy to write and send, that we don't give it the
same attention as we would a printed letter. It's VERY important to make
sure any communication you send to clients, customers, and prospects
represents you only in the best light.
Now, if good grammar isn't your strength, no worries! I write and edit
for a living, so this stuff is my bag. My point is that you should *check
and double-check* all communications you send out, or you risk blowing your
credibility.
Here are the five most common (and embarrassing) grammar mistakes I see
in sales letters every day. And they're all for words that sound alike, as
you'll see.
- IT'S and ITS.
it's — contraction for "it is."
"It's really beautiful outside today."
its — possessive, something belongs to "it."
"Our company credits its new CEO for this year's successes."
TIP: One of my grade school teachers taught me to remember that
an "it" can't own anything, so it doesn't deserve an apostrophe as the
possessive.
- AFFECT and EFFECT.
affect — to influence (always a VERB)
"Your tardiness has affected the whole team!"
effect — to bring about or execute (VERB), result (NOUN)
"We'd like to effect this policy immediately." (verb)
"Those legwarmers definitely lend your outfit an '80s effect." (noun)
TIP: I relate the "a" in "affect" to the "a" in "action."
- WHO'S and WHOSE.
who's — contraction for "who is"
"Jeff's the guy who's giving us a ride."
whose — the possessive of "who." Something belongs to someone.
" Whose notes are these?"
TIP: Again, you're only using the apostrophe with the
*contraction* (like in "it's").
- YOU'RE and YOUR.
you're — contraction for "you are"
'You're really asking for a raise?'
your — the possessive of "you." Something belongs to someone.
"Mrs. Henley, your dog is digging in our yard again."
TIP: And yet again, you're only using the apostrophe with the
*contraction* (like in "it's").
- THERE, THEIR and THEY'RE.
there — use this spelling when you're talking about a place (literal or
figurative).
" Sit over there." "Stop right there." "I absolutely agree with you
there."
their — the possessive of "they." Something belongs to them.
"She thinks the Joneses are so cool because of their new BMW."
they're — contraction for "they are"
"They're ready to quit their corporate jobs and go retire in Maine."
TIP: And, once more folks, you're only using the apostrophe with
the *contraction.* (See the pattern here?)
Okay, Got All That? : )
Now, if you can't memorize all these right away, don't worry! The idea is
to realize what you DON'T know well, and have the sense to look it up when
you're not sure.
In fact, why not print this e-mail and keep it handy?
(c) 2002 Alexandria K. Brown
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Alexandria K. Brown, "The E-zine Queen," is author of the award-winning
manual, "Boost Business With Your Own E-zine." To learn more about her book
and sign up for more FREE tips like these, visit her site at
http://EzineQueenTutorial.com/
Article Source:
http://EzineArticles.com/ |