Twitter Can Make You A Better Writer

Sunday, April 12th, 2009

It is one of the pardoxes of art that structure, form and convention liberate the artist – Stephen Fry (@stephenfry).

Yes, yes, I know that those of us who care about the English language are supposed to be outraged by technology-induced social-speak, supposedly the death of civilised discourse.

And yes, I too hate the lazy abbreviations that so often accompany texts or micro-blogging: the LOLs and BFNs,  the “u” for “you”, and “r” for “are”, and all the rest.  

But…

I contend that you don’t have to go along with this lazy man’s way.  And that, with the right effort and approach, micro-blogs, status updates and texts can actually make you a better writer.

My favourite such application is Twitter, which gives you only 140 characters in which to express your message, a limitation that, as far as I can see, enhanced the wit, insight and observation of those who do it well.

Here are ten things writers need to do that are fostered by the constraints of Twitter.  

  1. Frame a good sentence.  It’s not 140 words—or even 140 letters— but 140 characters, including letters, numbers, punctuation, symbols and spaces.  Even less if you want your message to be retweeted (picked up and passed on). So one sentence has to say it all. 
  2. Be concise. As you compose, Twitter tells you how many characters you’ve used and when you’ve gone over the limit and by how much.  In working out which words (not characters) to remove/alter to make your message fit, you get a writing tutorial.
  3. Get clear.  What exactly are you saying?  Twitter won’t tolerate faff or imprecision.
  4. Stretch vocabulary.  Twitter makes you dig deep into your vocabulary to find the word that says exactly what you mean.
  5. Choose “weighty” words.  You need the shortest, most descriptive words — in essence, words that carry maximum weight in a sentence.   
  6. Evaluate yourself as a writer.  Who are you?  What topics interest you? What do you want to express – in this tweet and over time?  Short regular communiques demand that you have answers to such questions — or come up with them as you go along.
  7. Make style reflect content.  What writing style comes naturally to you — informing, snarky, amusing, inspirational? What style best suits your writing aims?  Do they match?  
  8. Evaluate your  audience.  Who are you trying to reach and why?  What do they want to read?  How can you give it to them.  Although some writers write purely for artistic expression, most want readers.  Microblogging is a crash course in reaching out.
  9. Respond appropriately to feedback.  On Twitter, the feedback loop is instant and unforgiving.  If you’re not making sense or adding value, you die a death.
  10. Play with words.  Twitter works best for you as a writer if you treat is as a challenging game – like a crossword or Scrabble.  The challenge is to use those 140-characters to  get your point across in a way that inspires your followers to take an action, to click on your link or to retweet your tweet.

So if you haven’t yet joined in the fun, why not come on down and learn a thing or two.

4 Comments in “Twitter Can Make You A Better Writer”

  1. June 15th, 2009 at 6:30 pm
    Sally Evans Says:

    I use twitter in a different way from facebook, more relaxed and homely, but it is fun to try and fit ones thoughts to the length of message

  2. April 14th, 2009 at 10:55 pm
    Steve (Honest Abe) Manning Says:

    I’m not much on Twitter, but I appreciate your underlying message.

    Chains That Free

    More paradox as poets improve their line,
    find metaphor to tell some grand design.
    Is it strange then that many epic poems
    are long? Weighty words sustain these tomes
    through highly crafted phrase that gives them strength
    and gains them honor while forgiving length.

    Steve

  3. April 13th, 2009 at 9:39 pm
    Karen Lotter Says:

    And if I may add, from an SEO point of view – because Twitter is searchable it is good to use keywords or keyphrases that you would lead to you being found.

    What I mean is that if you want to attract a following of writers and literary types, don’t keep posting about the weather in your city or the lousy state of the economy.

    Make sure that you tweet literary and book-stuff, because those are keywords that others will type into their search goodies to find like minded people to follow.

    (You can tweet other things too, just watch out for the followers…)

  4. April 12th, 2009 at 9:03 pm
    Siobhan Says:

    The Twitter bug hasn’t bitten as yet, but I like the logic. Much of it applies at 100words.com. This comment is 26 words and 140 characters.


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