Showing posts with label iwrite facebook. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iwrite facebook. Show all posts

Monday, April 28, 2014

LIKE Us on Facebook, Twitter, Google+, LinkedIn and Pinterest Pages


LIKE Us on Facebook, Twitter, Google+, LinkedIn and Pinterest Pages

We want to get to know you better and we believe in building an emotional connection with our clients and friends online.

Please come by and visit our social media pages and connect with us. 

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Friday, May 4, 2012

Four Ways To Properly Write A Resignation Letter

About a week ago, we asked a question on our Facebook Page, "what's a proper way of writing a resignation letter to your employer"? Resignation letters can be short, and straight to the point. And they can also be long-winded. Here's a few tips on what you should include while writing a resignation letter.

1.) Remain cohesive in your letter. There's nothing more irritating than reading a resignation letter that's "foggy", and misinterpreted. Be as clear and focus as possible, and remain on point.

2.) Use correct word usage. Beware of fragments, and misspell words.

3.) It's okay to announce how appreciative you were while being employed with the employer. Businesses want feedback. Rather its positive or negative, companies want to know how they can "retain" their workers.

4.) And lastly, say "Thank You". Thank the employer for the opportunity of employment.

How To Make Writing a Fun Activity Without Frustration and Pressure

Can writing be a fun activity? Sure it can. The article below explains why and how writing can, and should be fun. Enjoy!


Writing for fun is overlooked and under-appreciated. Writing is portrayed as a serious subject. Writers whinge and whine about the torment of their profession. It’s purveyed as a mystical process where writers wrack their hearts and souls for each precious word.

Visions of dark, lonely towers, bleary eyes and endless cups of coffee abound. Authors talk of their years struggling, alone, with snow blowing from cracked windowpanes onto their keyboards, nobody else in the world understanding their turmoil, pounding away until bolts of genius strike and a perfectly-formed story springs into existence.

This image makes sense. I’m sure you’ve experienced frustration when you’ve been trying to get a piece finished. Or polished. Or even started. Writing can be hard. Challenging. Frustrating. Because writing can be so difficult – analogies to labour are common – the presumption arises that this is the way it is meant to be. And, without a countervailing voice, that presumption becomes the status quo. Beginning writers walk into this field of shared expectations, and believe that writing is going to be difficult, arduous and draining.

Read entire article HERE

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