English, asked by Shivanithakur5557, 11 months ago

When you attempt any piece of writing what are the key questions you should ask yourself

Answers

Answered by JOANNAACHUGEORGE
19

Answer:

  1. What are we writing about
  2. Why are we writing this
  3. To whom are we writing this
  4. Where are we writing this
  5. When are we writing this

Hope this helped you!!

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Answered by smartbrainz
8

Effective writing is when the reader encounters a distinct, person and suitable voice. The reader encounters a person who shares important aspects of his/her lives, feelings and experiences with him/her. The writer shows through his words his/her personality, his/her experience, his/her feelings. Effective writing hits the very heart. The reader is influenced by good prose. The strong writing persists for a while in the reader.

Good writing makes the reader feel richer when reading. Effective writing offers the reader more. The strong text tells the reader something different. Effective writing adds value. Effective writing is neither short, nor too. Effective writing is when no word is missing. Good writing is when the reader feels at home in the text, looks for more and is excited and happy.

Explanation:

  • There are two ways you can write. Anything you think is amazing, and you can write for yourself. Or you can write something for your readers that is intended to support them. Always prefer option 2, that is, write to your readers all the time. One error, which many writers, particularly new ones, is to write something that is good that they think. A rant or other post will be posted, just to make themselves smart. Yet this does nothing but make them feel smart.  All good content must give readers a positive impression of your brand. If the subject is good but you have concentrated more on writing, go through and edit it, what you think would be in a good post. Ask yourself frequently, "How can I describe this to my reader?"The exact meaning your material brings to your readers you should be able to express.
  • The days are over where you can write something that you want. Many people are skeptical these days. After reading so many lies and listening to false claims, you have to be persuaded to take action.  . One of the key words in this question is' credible.' If a reader clicks through to your source and doesn’t trust it, you’re back where you started. The good thumb rule for credible source is journal articles, data analysis posts,  Government sites, highly respected sites, posts written by extremely well-known authors
  • Add images. One benefit of using many images is that they break up text, so that readers can read it easily. But if the images in your content are the only thing, then that is an issue. Images give you a unique chance to explain difficult concepts, provide additional perspectives and present knowledge which you can't find in text, so that most readers appreciate it. However, this is not the end-you can take your post from bad to good or from good to excellent with the right pictures
  • You need to know what you're up against before you post, and even before you write. Typically, this means to go to Google and add some keywords in which your content is represented. See them and evaluate their weaknesses and strengths. Then compare your own strengths. If in certain fields the content is bad, it must be changed before it is written. If it's worse than the old one, no one moves to the new one. You will seek to establish a monopoly on the quality of the topic you write about, if possible.
  • Your title can have a 40 per cent impact on your conversion rate and play an important role. It is the section that most people read before they determine if they want to read the post. For each piece of writing you make at least 20 separate titles should be written. It takes time to understand a major title, but ultimately what you want to do is put yourself in the readers' shoes and ask questions.
  • When the title has been decided, proceed to the start: your first 100-200 words. It is your second most important component. Many will read the opening after the title and then decide if they want to read the rest. Have the same question again. You have to answer a question to which you want an response, or a story to know the end, to push them to read on.
  • It is important to include elements that stand out and allow readers to be more alert. It's usually the subheadings because they're bigger and sometimes darker than the rest of the document. The readers will determine the title of your whole post and the subheading of every section. You don't spend as much time on them as you do on the title of the post, but you don't just think about the first subheading. The fundamentals of readability must be taken into account. If all of it is a huge block of text, none can read a text

Thus, the key questions as described from the above are

  1. Who are the intended audience/readers?
  2. What is the relevance of this subjec/topic to your intended audience/reader?
  3. How will readers benefit from what you're going to write?
  4. Has the topic/subject already been covered?
  5. Have you identified a fresh approach to the topic?
  6. What do you want readers to do next?
  7. How do you intend to benefit from writing this project?

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