Have you noticed how often we use our hands every day?
Think about it and you’ll realize that our hands are active every time we do house chores, carry items, and take care of kids or pets. In addition, our hands are also busy when we’re eating, drinking, playing games, using phones and tablets, and even while driving cars and motorbikes.
But for you as a professional writer, it doesn’t stop there.
Because you write for a living, your hands are also key business tools, since you use them to write longhand, type on the computer, and hold the mouse while writing for hours on a daily basis.
However, if care is not taken, doing all these day in and day out can lead to varying degrees of pain and discomfort, not only in your hands and wrists but also in other parts of your body. Added to that, it can also increase your risk of developing a condition known as repetitive strain injury (RSI).
RSI is the gradual damage to muscles, tendons, and nerves as a result of repetitive motions like typing, using a computer mouse, working on an assembly line, and other similar activities. Symptoms of RSI include pain, tenderness, swelling, stiffness, tingling, and numbness, and they can affect not just your hands and arms but also other parts of your body.
You can reduce the risk of developing all these and achieve your goals as a professional writer when you take care of your hands and keep them in optimal condition.
Ready to learn how?
Then keep reading to uncover five effective ways to take good care of your hands as a professional writer, increasing your productivity at the same time.
Continue readingWriting is a powerful means of communication that has become an essential part of our personal, professional, and business lives. Even though people write for different reasons and with varying degrees of experience, there is a common element: Writing is a skill you can learn, develop, and improve with time and practice.
Whether you’re a business owner doing all the writing for your business, a professional writer who writes for a living, or just someone doing a lot of writing in your current job, it’s in your best interest to constantly be improving your writing skills and making your writing better.
Once you start, you’ll enjoy benefits that can help you achieve your personal, career, and business goals faster than normal.
Continue readingDo you know that editing mistakes can make it tough for you to make a living from your writing?
Editing is a major part of the writing process because it can improve the quality of your writing to a level where you can easily attract, engage, and delight your target readers. You can self-edit your work or you can outsource this task to a professional editor or an editing agency.
For best results, you can use a combination of self-editing and outsourcing.
But there are some editing mistakes that not only waste your money, time, and energy but also defeat the main purpose of editing, making it extremely difficult for you to achieve your writing goals.
Curious to learn more so you can take proactive steps?
Then check out these six editing mistakes you need to avoid as a professional writer and entrepreneur.
Continue readingAt last, your first draft is ready. And yet, you’re not happy with it. Something is still missing even after many rounds of self-editing, and you’re wondering what to do next.
Sound familiar? Most likely, you need the assistance of a professional editor.
Before you ask, editors normally review a draft with the aim of improving it, all without changing the voice of the writer. They provide professional editing services by going through the writing in a step-by-step manner to identify and correct mistakes and errors with grammar, word usage, structure, composition, readability, flow, style, tone, and so on.
But guess what?
Different types of editing can improve your writing in specific areas. As steps in the professional editing process, they’re supposed to be carried out in a specific order, one after the other. Some types of editing may also overlap with one another.
However, your writing may not require all the various types of editing. This depends on factors such as your level of expertise and experience as a writer, the type of writing you’re creating, and where it will be published.
Continue reading