Writing With Clarity

Turn corporate sludge into focused, compelling writing

About Writing Coach Ken O’Quinn

Writing Coach Ken O'Quinn

Writing Coach Ken O'Quinn

Through his Writing With Clarity workshops, writing coach Ken O’Quinn has helped thousands of business professionals worldwide to express their ideas and tell their stories in ways that capture attention and keep readers engaged.

Corporate communicators, business professionals, and executives at such companies as Chevron, Visa, Oracle, John Deere, Raytheon, Burson-Marsteller, and Fleishman Hillard have turned to Writing With Clarity for the techniques of well-crafted communication.

 

Writing has been Ken O’Quinn’s primary interest and lifelong profession. After a career in newspapers and with the Associated Press, he took his passion for the writing craft to the private sector as a corporate writing coach.   Ken is the author of Perfect Phrases for Business Letters, published by McGraw-Hill, which provides the right words and phrases that are appropriate for particular situations. The book was reprinted in Japanese because of high-volume sales in that country.

Drawing on his extensive research, his writing and editing experience, and his compassion for writers, he provides a range of business professionals with important techniques and with the encouragement to write with confidence.

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book by Ken O'Quinn, Perfect Phrases for Business Letters

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  • Writing tip: Three qualities determine sentence clarity: word simplicity, sentence structure, and punctuation. Read it aloud and listen. Us… 2012/02/21
  • Avoid using red ink when editing. It painfully reminds many adults how humiliated and discouraged they felt when trying to write in school. 2012/02/20
  • Writing tip: Employees are committed to continual improvement, not continuous, despite how you see it written. Continual means recurring; t… 2012/02/15
  • Writing tips for corp. comm. and PR folks and for all other business professionals at facebook(dot)com/WritingWithClarity. 2012/01/25
  • Comma Uncertainty: When to Use it Before "Because" 2012/01/24