Writeboost

Writeboost WriteBOOSTng @ selar.co/23v5 provides insights to support writing & media communication endeavours.

WriteBOOSTng is powered by INNATE COMMUNICATIONS as a capacity-building platform providing insights to support diverse and specific writing & media communication endeavours. In providing cross-cutting solutions for various writing and media communication tasks and interests, WriteBOOSTng applies a specialised approach in crafting the text of messaging in the most appropriate format to ensure that

the best means is used to communicate the best message, through the correct channels, to the right people, and using an inclusive interactive feedback process to achieve set goals and objectives. The capacity-building sessions of WriteBOOSTng @ https://selar.co/WriteBOOST entails undertaking literary development initiatives to enhance literary skills, writing interests, publishing flairs and media communication skills of a range of persons, including but not limited to:
• Aspiring writers/authors;
• Freelance writers and Independent authors;
• Enterprise inclined and independent/freelance journalists;
• Self-publishers and media inclined individuals;
• Student journalists/Mass communication students;
• Prospective communication entrepreneurs/consultants;
• NGOs and related publicity communications units;
• Budding online writers/bloggers;
• Media/Communication enthusiasts and related professionals;
• Literary enthusiasts and other individuals with some experience but who desire to enhance and explore new areas of writing, publishing and media communication initiatives, etc. The sessions of WriteBOOSTng capacity-building training spans writing skills development for Creative Writing, Freelancing/Writing for the media, audience-focused writing and publishing operations including special writing/publishing sessions, seminars, workshop and short course tailored to meet specific writing, publishing and media communication skills applicable for individuals, publication units of faith-based organisations, NGOs, private, corporate organisations and public agencies on a range of writing, publishing and strategic media communication methodologies and operations.

18/06/2025

The author of 'Timeless Lessons from African Proverbs', Mr. Sanmi Falobi, expressed his delight at an interactive and book donation summit held at NIJ tagged...

04/04/2025

Interactive session on personal productivity for career, professional & vocational advancement with Prof Rotimi Oladele & Mr Lekan OtufodunrinSpecial featur...

WriteBOOSTng presents special capacity building & interactive course on Proposal Writing & Strategic Communications Skil...
13/01/2025

WriteBOOSTng presents special capacity building & interactive course on Proposal Writing & Strategic Communications Skills.

THE COURSE STRUCTURE
The course shall commence with a 2-weeks exploratory session which shall then be followed by a MAIN SESSION paced over a 8-10 weeks period.

The sessions shall be virtual (WhatsAPP/ZOOM/Google Meet) with focus to provide insights from the known to the unknown that will included general and specific concerns about the process and issues associated with writing and having a winning grant proposal, and effective communication dynamics.
Additional details @ https://selar.co/writeboostng

COURSE START DATE:
The course is scheduled to commence on Friday January 17, 2025 with a pre-course, exploratory session for all registered participants.

REGISTRATION/PARTICIPATION FEE:
Registration fee is NGN1000 only. (This gives access to the exploratory sessions over a two-week period).
HOWEVER, after the 2 weeks exploratory session, interested participants may proceed to SIGN UP for the MAIN COURSE session thereafter for an additional period of between 8-10 weeks.

The sessions shall be predominantly virtual (WhatsAPP and ZOOM/google meet) but with possibility for one-on-one interface, by special arrangement.

Additional details @ https://selar.co/writeboostng

Do you need any clarification? 👇👇👇👇

Kindly send a WhatsApp text: to: 08079078162

The Rules of Writing Which Nobody Can Agree onBy JEFF GOINSThis is a comprehensive list, except for when I decide to cha...
30/03/2024

The Rules of Writing Which Nobody Can Agree on
By JEFF GOINS

This is a comprehensive list, except for when I decide to change it (which I will have already done a few times by the time you read it):

1. Start small. Always smaller than you think. It can’t be a book if it hasn’t first tried to be an article, a paragraph, even just a sentence. Say it as succinctly as possible, and if two hundred pages is the most condensed version, so be it. Use as few words as possible, but make sure you use enough. Brevity matters, but not at the cost of clarity.

2. Never let the passive voice be used, except only sometimes, and that is when it sounds better than the other way around. All rules are meant to be broken, except for this one.

3. What matters is how the words sound, not—strictly speaking—what they mean. Meaning evolves based on usage and how much we humans like using it. If it sounds good, we will eventually make it mean something (see, for example, the 1700 words invented by Shakespeare).

4. The product is not the piece; it’s the reader feeling something. Connection is the only currency that matters. So, start with what moves you, then pray it moves someone else. Keep going until you find resonance.

5. A work is never finished, only abandoned. Editing is the process of working with a piece of writing, helping it become more of what it wants to be. First, make it work; then, make it true; finally, make it pretty. Tweak it until you get sick of what you’ve written, then be brave enough to still share it.

6. Never underestimate the power of a good surprise. We don’t want to be told what we are going to be told. We want to be invited into a mystery.

7. First lines matter, they are necessary; but the last line is what people remember.

8. Writing is thinking on paper. A paragraph is a complete thought. A sentence is, too. Fragments or phrases, as well. When you feel like you’ve made your point, add the period, the semicolon, or the line break. Play with the way words come together, see the impressions they make. Use these tools to create something interesting. There is no such thing as a perfect thought, only a clear one. So it goes with writing. There’s no perfect way to do this—just keep playing.

9. Pick a fight. With an argument, a form, a convention. If it’s not worth disagreeing with, it’s not worth reading. Write to persuade, to convince, or to elaborate. Expression is the lowliest form of writing, but sometimes the only one we have. There should always be a point, and it should rarely be shared with the reader.

10. There are no rules of writing. Every rule is a suggestion, a recommendation from a server at a restaurant. It would be unwise to discount the advice, but always consider the source. Remember that taste is about learning to trust yourself. Not everyone will agree with you, but that’s why you wrote it.

Your turn: What did I miss? Leave a comment below with either a rule you would add or one you disagree with.

Which Nobody Can Agree on

15/02/2024

>By Sanmi Falobi< He is one of a rare breed. A Wanderluster, who is consumed by the desire to explore and discover new places and the thrills of the culture and norms of Africa. Ileri Babalob…

01/01/2024

There is this neighbor of mine who will never ask you for anything no matter how hungry he is. He borrows nothing and lives a very quiet life.

If you give to him, he will reject it. If you force him to collect it, it begins to look like you are trying to poison him or something suspicious is going on. That is how I feel sha. Not like it's what is going through his mind.

But he is a very friendly man.

I stopped seeing him when I moved out of the house.

During this period I returned to the family house and discovered he was still living in my compound. He had not parked yet. Same room. Same lifestyle. Always quiet and to himself.

I asked my dad what happened and why he had lost so much weight compared to the last time I had seen him. My dad told me the young man had lost his job and fallen ill. Though his rent has already expired, he allowed him to stay and hasn't asked him for rent for 5 months now because he knows his condition.

I felt pity for him.

I cooked yesterday. A very delicious meal and I felt I should give it a try again and share it with this neighbor of mine. I knew he would reject it if I gave him his separately. So I dished it in one plate, carried two drinks, and went to knock on his door.

When he opened and saw me.

I smiled.

"Uncle, I want to eat in your room."

He peeped outside. From left to right and looked at me.

"What happened to yours."

"Nothinb na. I just want to catch up na. E don tey."

He smiled and allowed me to come in.

His room was just there.

It looked like there was no sign of foodstuff in the room.

I asked him if he had a spoon and he said yes.

He gave me one.

Then I summoned courage and said to him.

"Uncle, I know you don't eat out. But today is a season of love. I want to share this food with you. That was why I brought it to your room. Biko don't say no."

He laughed.

"I expected it. I said it that this one was a setup."

He took an extra spoon.

I was happy.

I drew the food nearer to him.

He waited for me to take the first spoon of rice, then he began to eat with me. From the way he ate, I could tell he was hungry and loved the food.

So I asked him.

"How come you don't collect anything from anyone? No friends visit you. I don't see you eating out. Even when you cook you cook in here and eat in here."

He looked at me.

"You are right and very observant. My family was poisoned on Christmas day. All of us. 7 of us. They ate from the same bowl and died."

"And you survived."

"I was a baby then, waiting to suck from the tender breast of my mother. When I was told the story, of how my family died, I lost trust for humans. And I realized that the easiest way to end a man's life is through his stomach."

He took another scoop of the rice and drank water.

Then he said to me.

"In over 40 years of my life, you are the first person whose food I am eating. And it is because I am very hungry. And I know you won't try to harm me. You are good guy. But even if you will, this hunger might as well k**ll me and I will be gone anyway. So let me eat."

He laughed.

And continued eating.

Most people whose behavior we see as strange are simply brought about as a result of life lessons and bad experiences they've faced in the past. They get hurt once and guard themselves jealously.

By: Praises Chidera Obiora

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