33 Ways
audiobook
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33 Ways Not to Screw Up Your Business Emails
by Anne Janzer
read by Anne Janzer
Part of the 33 Ways series
Business runs on emails, yet we rarely give them enough thought. Too often, our messages are misunderstood, misfiled, or ignored.
In a world filled with remote collaboration and virtual teams, people who master email writing rise above the noise. You can be one of those people.
Learn how to make your emails work for you rather than against you with this short, practical guide. Topics include:
• Crafting effective subject lines
• Writing emails that people respond to
• Protecting yourself from accidental misfires
Whether you're just starting in your career or are adjusting to a newly remote and virtual workplace, you'll find valuable advice and tips you can put into practice right away.
audiobook
(0)
33 Ways Not to Screw Up Your Journalism
by Chip Scanlan
read by Chip Scanlan
Part of the 33 Ways series
33 Ways Not to Screw Up Your Journalism is a succinct, authoritative and encouraging handbook of practical and inspiring tools, techniques and values that journalists, whether they're students or newsroom veterans, need more than ever in our fractured and fact-tossed democracy.
"Excellent for journalists of all ages and experience," says broadcast legend Dan Rather. Written by award-winning journalist and writing teacher and coach Chip Scanlan, former writing program director at The Poynter Institute, the book is a survival manual for journalists at a time when the news industry is in free fall and their profession is under assault.
Journalists are often thrown into their craft with the most rudimentary understanding of what it means to be a journalist in a democracy. Its short, fact-packed chapters remedy that. It can be consulted at your desk or slim enough to fit in a jacket pocket or purse, when you face a particularly thorny problem in the field. Its subjects range from treating sources with respect, being aware of your biases, plagiarism, fabrication, and ethical decision-making to letting fear stop you, combatting writer's block, and step-by-step guides to the writing process, interviewing and revision and the importance of multimedia and data journalism. Journalism is in trouble, but it's not too late to save it-or yourself-by mastering, sharing and implementing the most critical skills any reporter can have: the basics. Based on extensive research, personal experience and interviews with reporters, editors and publishers, 33 Ways Not to Screw Up Your Journalism is the essential companion for journalists and their professors and coaches.
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