Starting a business changes how you…write?

by Kristen Carney, http://www.cubitplanning.com

My co-founder once described my writing as having the density of a dictionary but with none of the brevity.  In my defense, my previous job was to write and review technical documents.

But lately, I have been reading Paul Graham, Jason Fried and the master of get-to-the-point, Seth Godin.  Yesterday, I started on a 2,500 word article for the American Planning Association’s Planning magazine.  And I noticed that my writing has lost some of its density and now uses bullet points and questions.

I figured starting a business would change how I eat and sleep.  But I didn’t occur to me that it would change how I write.

If you enjoyed this blog post, you should check out Cubit--my web application that helps you get cut-and-paste ready planning data in seconds for your projects.

One comment

  1. Good for you. Too often we assume that weighty ideas require weighty expression. The better rule of thumb is that *good* ideas deserve *clear* expression.

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