Like a vocal coach, veteran freelance writer and blogger Jennifer Brown Banks (@PENPROSPER1), today offers six tips for cultivating your writers’ voice.
Whenever I listen to the radio, I can identify distinctive voices long before the DJ announces the artist.
You know the ones, voices like Barbara Streisand, Michael Buble, Johnny Mathis, Ray Charles, Dolly Parton, Neil Diamond, Michael Bolton, and Gloria Estefan, to name a few.
Their voices are so grand. No only that, their voices are their brand.
As writers, our “voice” serves as an integral part of our brand as well.
That’s why it’s important for us, as bloggers and writers, to cultivate voice if we are to capture the attention of readers, captivate them, and stay on their “dial.” Whether your goal is to build your readership, platform, influence, or bottom line, branding plays a crucial role.
According to WPVirtuoso.com, approximately 152 million blogs existed in 2013. Honing your “voice” help you to break through the noise of all those bloggers and deliver real value to your audience.
For greater clarity, let’s take a closer look at voice. Your voice comprises the following key factors:
- Your style of expression
- Your tone
- Your language
- Your uniqueness
- Your personality
- Your core message
Voice in Practice
Consider, for example, the poet e.e. cummings. His approach to poetry was unconventional and often included intentional misspellings and lower case spelling where words should have been capitalized.
Or super star blogger Seth Godin, who is well known for his short, pithy posts.
These are examples of voice and brand.
Tips To Cultivate Your Voice
Now that we’ve established what voice is, how it relates to your branding and why it matters, here are some timely tips to help you develop your chops.
1. Blog
In addition to being a way to write a book, blogging helps writers practice their craft, develop discipline, exercise creative muscles, establish authority, and speak their own personal truths on their own terms.
Award-winning blogger Bamidele Onibalusi, offers another benefit to blogging: “Having a blog makes it easy for people to get in touch with you directly, without a middle man, and without any distractions.”
But blogging also provides the opportunity to write and publish often as you develop your voice.
2. Broaden your horizons.
I bet you’ve heard most popular singers say that they were “influenced” by the styles of other great singers, even those from former decades. Follow suit.
Study and assess the best writers and bloggers. Read outside your niche from time to time, too. If you’re a fiction writer, check out the writings of nonfiction writers. Read books by the authors that top the New York Times’ Bestseller list. If you write nonfiction, get lost in a Harlequin Romance. Add some poetry to the mix as well.
It also behooves bloggers to engage and socialize with people of different backgrounds, professions and cultures. Our differences often enrich and inform us, making us better conversationalists.
To a great extent, you blog is a conversation between you and your readers. They are the ones who will recognize your voice when they switch the dial to your station.
3.Use humor when applicable.
As part of his “brand” or voice, pastor and best-selling author Joel Osteen begins his weekly sermons with a joke. This approach is unorthodox, unexpected, and yet effective.
Humor, when used appropriately, often makes your voice more likable. Many speakers begin their talks with humor.
Use colorful anecdotes, ah-ha moments, and universal experiences to connect and show your humanity and versatility.
4. Be authentic.
Pen pieces that speak to your heart, personal passions, belief system, and leanings. In this way your voice will resonate with your readers.
As the famous 19th century author and poet Oscar Wilde once said: “Be yourself. Everyone else is taken.” And that goes for your writing and blogging voice as well.
5. Go a capella.
Blogging—and writing—is the equivalent of having the courage to sing without accompaniment. And it’s having the chutzpah to speak out on issues that go against the majority opinion.
Hot topics like racial injustice, immigration, domestic violence, or education reform an be touchy. People may not always like you, but they will often remember and respect your strong voice on a topic.
6. Get a coach!
Many times athletes and singers hire coaches to help them to reach peak levels. Why not bloggers and writers?
A coach can help to identify your strengths and weaknesses, develop a game plan for success, provide expertise, and help you to “work smarter, not harder.”
Just like a vocal coach, creativity, branding, author, blogging, or writing coaches can help you find your voice and your brand.
Follow these tips and you’ll successfully speak to the masses—or at least your audience. You’ll build a following of loyal fans that will recognize your voice quickly no matter where the “hear” it. And you will enjoy many encore performances.
Have you developed your writers’ voice?
About the Author
Jennifer Brown Banks is a veteran freelance writer, relationship columnist, ghost writer, award-winning blogger and author. Her work has appeared in various online and print publications including:.ProBlogger, Men With Pens, Write to Done, Tiny Buddha, Women on Writing and the Well-Fed Writer E-zine.
Banks is the managing editor of Coffeehouseforwriters.com, where she also teaches creative writing classes. When she’s not at the keyboard, she loves cooking, reading, “Jeopardy,” music, and shopping.
Find out more about Jennifer here: http://Penandprosper.blogspot.com/
Photo courtesy of iqoncept/123RF.com
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