The Turner Ink blog contains rants, bloopers, observations and opinions. It also has handy tips on grammar and punctuation such as colons: semicolons; and full stops. As well as some very useful ‘how tos’. Feel free to leave comments. Be nice though.

Turner Ink

Copywriting Services London

Archive for December 2008

We’ve come to the end. When to use a full stop

27th
Dec
by Sarah Turner

To finish off the year we’re looking at the full stop. Ha ha ha. I hear you chortle. If there’s one bit of punctuation I know how to use it’s the full stop. Aaaah. That may be the case but do you know when not to use it? Ok, here we go eyes down.

Use a full stop:

At the end of complete sentence.

Between words when you’re making a dramatic point: Like. Oh. My. God.

After abbreviations: Ibid. e.g. No.7.

Inside a bracket if it’s a complete sentence: She wore a red dress. (The other girl wore a blue one.)

Outside a bracket if the sentence is incomplete: She wore a red dress (and the other girl wore a blue one).

Outside quotation marks if the full stop is not part of the quote: Shakespeare wrote “now is the winter of our discontent”. (This differs from Americans who always put a full stop inside the quote marks, whether it belongs or not. Grrrrr.)

Don’t use a full stop: 

When there’s another punctuation mark there already: Hooray! Huh?

For abbreviations like Dr, Mr or St

For acronyms or abbreviations if the word is well known: BBC, NATO, UK

In titles, headings or sub-headings.

If a title or abbreviation has its own punctuation: It was in a report by Which?

Bookmark and Share

How to write a press release that gets published

21st
Dec
by Sarah Turner

Back in the olden days, newspaper and magazine editors would make paper planes from badly written press releases. Now they have the power of the delete button. It’s a tough world out there.

Here are a few tips for getting your press releases published. 

Who’s reading this?
Think about who is going to read your news and use the language of the publication. Write different releases for different publications if necessary. What’s great for the local newspaper won’t get a look in at Vogue.

Be a neutral observer
You may be tempted to shout from the rooftops that your product or service is simply the most fabulous thing ever to happen to the universe. Like…ever. Well don’t. Press releases must have a neutral voice and deal with the facts only. It’s up to your customers to decide if your product or service is totally fab.

Newsworthy, timely, unique
Make sure your news release is…well, news. The information on a release should be current, interesting and different. And bear in mind the lead times of some publications – especially monthlies. Sending details of your ‘World Cup offer’, long after the players have packed their fake tan and headed home, won’t win you any brownie points with the editors.

Headline
The headline needs to be catchy, not more than ten words and a summary of the entire story.

First Paragraph
The first paragraph should be roughly 30 words long, contain the hook of the story and answer the questions, what? why? when? how? where? and who? Say what the news is first – and then who said it.

Editor’s edit from the bottom of a press release upwards so use the inverted pyramid technique i.e. get all the juicy stuff in the first paragraph.  

Body Copy  

Fluff is what you find down the back of the sofa. Don’t use it in your press release. Remember – you’re a neutral observer so don’t use superlatives and stick to the facts.

This is where you fill in the details – colours; sizes; area of the world covered; where the product is available and who’s going to use it.

Any quotes need to be interesting, and sound like real speech – not like a sales pitch. A quote from your MD saying, “We are pleased to sign this million dollar deal” is dull and obvious. A more useable quote would be, “this new deal means we can open another factory in the North East and create 200 new jobs”. 

Contact
At the end of the release have the contact name of the person issuing the release, plus a phone number, fax number, email address and website address. Make it as easy as possible for a journalist to get hold of you.

Editor’s notes
The Editor’s notes at the bottom of the page are an opportunity to give additional background information on the company: How long has your company been in business; what the company does; who is the parent company. Don’t clog this section up with information already in the release.

Bookmark and Share

Say what?

18th
Dec
by Sarah Turner

I loathe business bull and jargonese. And it seems the readers of the Daily Telegraph feel exactly the same way if recent correspondence with the broadsheet is anything to go by.      

So here are some of the words and phrases that we love to hate. Use at your peril!

Added bonus
Co-worker
First up
Giving 110%
Going forward
Heads up
Hearts and minds
Hit the ground running
Inclusive
Ramp up
Time challenged
Singing from the same hymn sheet

Bookmark and Share

Stand and deliver

14th
Dec
by Sarah Turner

How about this little corker spotted on a sign in my local market this week: ‘99p fresh Brussel sprout storks’.

And I thought they only carried babies.

Bookmark and Share

Va va voom

6th
Dec
by Sarah Turner

I was writing some copy the other day when I realised the exact phrase I was looking for was je ne sais quoi. This got me thinking about how many words and phrases we use that come from across the Channel. 

Did you know that about 30% of the English language is derived from French? Mais non? Words like niche, blonde, souvenir, genre and chic are all French in origin. And there are beaucoup French words that are in everyday use. 

Like à la carte, hors d’oeuvre, bon voyage and après-ski. Or the rather delicious avant-garde, risqué, soirée, film noir and rendez-vous. Or the optimistic joie de vivre, c’est la vie and fait accompli. Or the luscious de rigueur and haute couture. And don’t forget faux pas, double entendre, laissez faire and carte blanche.

And what have we given in return? Le TV. Le weekend. Le football. Les hooligans. Mon Dieu.

Bookmark and Share
 

Definition of a blog: A blog or web blog is a website usually maintained by an individual with regular entries of commentary, descriptions of events, or other material such as graphics or video. (Wikipedia.com)