Writing technical articles
is a challenge. There you sit, surrounded by reams of research,
notes and interviews. Where do you start?
Remember 5th grade English? You start with an outline.
Outlining has fallen on hard times lately. Mind mapping
and brainstorming are much more fashionable. These techniques
are great when generating ideas, but once you’ve got
your ideas germinating you’ve got to outline them.
Without an outline, your article will:
1.Be an unstructured mess.
2.Take three times as long to write.
Don’t let this happen to you – outline. If
it’s been a while since 5th grade – or if your
“progressive” school didn’t stoop to teach
you actual English skills – let me remind you why
it’s important and how to do it.
•Outlining keeps you from writing an unstructured
mess. Readers, especially American readers, prefer distinct
sections in their media. For example, look at American screenplays.
Movies invariably have three acts, and anything that doesn’t
have them is considered an art film. Effective speeches
often contain three parts, and readers like three points
because the structure makes easier to retain information.
•Outlining shrinks your writing time by a third to
a half. How do you whittle down that pile of research notes
and interviews into an article or white paper? You guess
it – outline it. By assigning sections to your notes
before you start writing, you’ll categorize, simplify
and clarify. Not bad before you’ve even written an
introduction. For example, let’s say you’re
writing an article about mirroring. You can divide such
an article into several different sections depending on
what your client wants to get across. Here are some examples
of different outlines:
o1) Explanation of mirroring 2) Differences between local
and remote mirroring, 3) Contrasting mirroring with other
forms of replication, or
o1) Define mirroring 2) List environments that require mirroring
3) Decision matrix for assigning different mirroring levels.
Once you’ve done your research it’s simple
to assign pieces to different sections. Believe me, it’ll
light a fire under your writing time. |