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  • In this knowledge economy, writing is the chief value-producing activity. But you may not be writing as well as you could. That may be because you think writing requires a special talent.

    In fact, writing is a process that can be managed, like any other business process. If you can manage people, money, or time—then you can manage your writing.

    And you can profit from the result.

    —Kenneth W. Davis

Kenneth W. Davis

  • Dr. Ken Davis is professor and former chair of English at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis and president of Komei, Inc., a global training and consulting firm. His clients have included the Abu Dhabi National Oil Company, the Republic of Botswana, IBM, and the International Monetary fund.

    With more than 30 years experience as a business writer, editor, and trainer, Ken has served as director at large of the Association for Business Communication and is immediate past president of the Association of Professional Communication Consultants. He lives in Indianapolis with his wife and business partner, Bette Davis.

    Through speaking, training, and executive coaching, Ken helps people and organizations improve their chief value-producing activity: writing. Thousands of knowledge workers have profited from Ken's unique Manage Your Writing® method. This method is the basis for Ken's latest book, The McGraw-Hill 36-Hour Course in Business Writing and Communication.

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  • Manage Your Writing, 8910 Purdue Road, Suite 480, Indianapolis, IN 46268, USA

    Phone:1.317.616.1810; Toll-free: 1.866.887.3397; Fax: 1.317.616.1811

    Manage Your Writing® is a program of Komei, Inc.

    Copyright © 2006 by Komei, Inc.

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Web sites for managing your writing

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15 May 2007

Don't get attached

Don't create an emotional attachment to your business writing.

Revision needs to be objective, sometimes even brutal. One strategy: pretend that someone else drafted the document you're working on, someone you don't even know. Then do whatever it takes to make the document as effective as possible.

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Training and coaching

  • Manage Your Writing® training and coaching has been delivered on three continents, and to thousands of people in hundreds of organizations large and small.

    To explore how Manage Your Writing® speaking, training, or coaching can help you, contact Kenneth W. Davis, ken@ManageYourWriting.com

    We subscribe to the Standards of Ethical Conduct of the Association of Professional Communication Consultants.

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Books for managing your writing: general

Dictionaries

Thesauruses

Usage guides

Writing guides

Other books

  • David  Allen: Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity

    David Allen: Getting Things Done: The Art of Stress-Free Productivity
    Two other books, though not directly focused on writing, present two of the most useful sets of tools I use as a business writer. As I discuss in the Introduction to the McGraw-Hill 36-Hour Guide, this first book has been invaluable in helping me learn to manage my writing—and much of the rest of my life.

  • Tony  Buzan: The Mind Map Book

    Tony Buzan: The Mind Map Book
    Written by the great popularizer of mind-mapping, this beautifully illustrated book is still the best introduction to the subject.