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Quality, Service, Value, Needs: Top Dogs on Our Writing Most-Wanted List

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Having trouble viewing this message? [Click here to view it online.]( To unsubscribe or change contact details, scroll to the bottom and follow the link. [GrammarBook.com]( Your #1 Source for Grammar and Punctuation Quality, Service, Value, Needs: Top Dogs on Our Writing Most-Wanted List We began our campaign against worn-out words and phrases in 2017 with three posts on what to weed from our writing ([June]( [July]( [December](. We hope in 2018 you’ve been on guard against those verbal saboteurs that would sneak in to weaken your prose. This year we will also start to call out offenders that belong on our Writing Most-Wanted List. These words and phrases are more than worn out: They are grizzled veterans of survival despite being verbal vagrants for decades. They continue reappearing with the same vague and tired meanings, and the older they get, the more invincible they feel. Our first four outlaws are quality, service, value, and needs, particularly as they apply to communication by just about any organization ranging from auto shops to finance firms to schools to healthcare centers. Let’s look at why the words belong behind bars, at least until they’re able to offer our writing distinction and substance again. Quality Everyone promises it. No one retains it after reading it, because it is now to us only a word. Think of how often you’ve been promised a quality product or been told we offer you the highest quality. What exactly is it? When someone expresses to you that their quality separates them from (insert competitor here), are you convinced? Neither are we. Service Ours is the best. Nobody tries or works harder than we do to get the job done and ensure your satisfaction. The total, absolute, unmistakable difference between us and them is our service. Or, worse yet, we double up with quality service. Again, everyone's heard it before, and it's nearly impossible to prove in a message by reference alone. Value Many of us have said or written it: Get more value from your (or our) [insert what you offer]. It’s value-added. We move you up the value chain. In content, the word is like an egg without the yolk and white inside: It's boring to look at, and we don't even get its basic benefits upon cracking it open. Needs Although it may appear the least harmful of the bunch, it is possibly the most frequent invader, perhaps because we feel it lends a human touch. We respond to your needs. We have the resources to satisfy all of your needs. We focus on the needs of the (customer, patient, student, etc.). It can still hold a job in personal communication, but beyond being overused, it sounds mushy and meek in formal and professional writing. Once we’ve seized these miscreants and put them where they can no longer sap strength from our writing, we might wonder what to do next. After all, they’ve been reliable go-to’s for a long time. The solution is simple. Instead of depending on vacant, general labels, we provide our readers specifics that let them form their own ideas of quality, service, value, and needs. Examples Dur-a-Stop brakes are scientifically proven by three separate labs to last three times longer than the next leading competitor’s. (quality) Our hospital provides free local transport and personal waiting rooms for all immediate family members during inpatient stays. (service) Smart University’s teacher-to-student ratio ensures that on average each student receives 1.5 times more individual attention than at other regional schools with the same tuition. (value) The staff at Eddie Van Hendrix’s Musical Mecca features twelve different genre experts to assist with even obscure and highly specialized requirements. (needs within the context of service) Late-breaking news: Our international network of grammar police has spotted all four of these runaways. They are closing in on them right at this moment, and apprehension is imminent. Once we have them in custody, you can help us keep them safely away from good writing by focusing on the details that show your excellence in meeting your audience’s desire for quality, service, value, and fulfillment of needs. [View this article on our website]( Free BONUS Quiz for You! {NAME}, because you are a subscriber to the newsletter, you get access to one of the Subscribers-Only Quizzes. Click here to take a [Parentheses and Brackets Quiz]( and get your scores and explanations instantly! We will be adding many more quizzes this year to our already substantial list of quizzes. If you have suggestions for topics we have not yet covered, please send us a message at help@grammarbook.com. Hundreds of Additional Quizzes at Your Fingertips Subscribe now to receive hundreds of additional English usage quizzes not found anywhere else! For Instructors and Employers, you may assign quizzes to your students and employees and have their scores tallied and organized automatically! Let [GrammarBook.com]( take the hassle out of teaching English! "Fun to test my Skills" "The explanations really help ... thanks!" "I download the quizzes for my students who don't have computer access." [Find out more about our subscription packages]( Don't need all the quizzes? You can now purchase the same quizzes individually for ONLY 99¢ each. [Purchase yours here.]( If you think you have found an error in a quiz, please email us at help@grammarbook.com The Blue Book of Grammar and Punctuation by Jane Straus, Lester Kaufman, and Tom Stern The Authority on English Grammar! Eleventh Edition Now Available An indispensable tool for busy professionals, teachers, students, homeschool families, editors, writers, and proofreaders. Available in print AND as an e-Book! Over 2,000 copies are purchased every month! The publisher of The Blue Book, Jossey-Bass, A Wiley brand, is offering a 35 percent discount for those of you who order the book through [Wiley.com](. Shipping and tax are not included. Simply go to [bit.ly/1996hkA]( and use discount code E9X4A. Offer expires December 31, 2018. [Order Your Copy Today!]( Wordplay More fun for our lexophiles: • I did a theatrical performance about puns. It was a play on words. • I didn't like my beard at first. Then it grew on me. • Broken pencils are pointless. • What do you call a dinosaur with an extensive vocabulary? A thesaurus. • I got a job at a bakery because I kneaded dough. English In A Snap: 68 One-Minute English Usage Videos FREE Learn all about who and whom, affect and effect, subjects and verbs, adjectives and adverbs, commas, semicolons, quotation marks, and much more by just sitting back and enjoying these easy-to-follow lessons. Tell your colleagues (and boss), children, teachers, and friends. [Click here to watch](. Forward this e-newsletter to your friends and colleagues. If you received this FREE weekly e-newsletter from a friend, [click here to have it sent to you each week](. Look for more Hot Tips from [GrammarBook.com]( next week. Miss a recent newsletter? [Click here to view past editions](. Lester Kaufman, P.O. Box 472, Mill Valley, CA 94942, United States You may [unsubscribe]( or [change your contact details]( at any time. [Powered by:](

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