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Internal stylebooks sometimes suffer from a fuzziness growing out of dual purposes, meant to fix the same errors that crop up regularly, to define the words most troublesome for that publication, to provide consistency in usage and presentation. Sometimes they are little more than a compilation of the memos issued by a copy desk or news editor, reminding people about the correct names of companies or the policies on datelines, or to remind editors on acceptable headline practices.
Other times, stylebooks grow out of a sense of mission to guard the language from silliness and doublespeak while allowing the language to grow, as English does. What I didn't find in this book was the Journal's obvious ability to teach, as demonstrated in some other WSJ guides.
The Wall Street Journal Guide to Business Style and Usage (Wall Street Journal or Wilson Follett's Modern American Usage with shorter definitions and less wit . Still, style and usage guides are used less and less, no matter how good they . The Wall Street Journal Guide to Business Style and Us by Paul Martin - Here at last is the indispensable resource that has helped the writers and editors of The.
While a stylebook doesn't have to take education as a mission, once it goes public, the educational component would seem to be essential. Why else would anyone not worried about whether to capitalize executive director buy this book?
The Associated Press Stylebook Did someone mention cookbooks? Your Cart items Cart total. To feature the differences in percentage change, the same percentage scale could be used for both graphs, as shown below. Amazon Inspire Digital Educational Resources.
As an internal publication, the stylebook is useful. It sets standards and clearly tackles problem words, I'm sure fed by repeated misuses of certain words or facts by its own staff. This is no knock on the obvious effort that went into putting this book together. Virtually every editor I know flees in terror at the prospect of having to produce a stylebook for the company. But once it went public, it needed some more thought.
I'd recommend this book to anyone who likes to collect style and language manuals, or people who need more sources of information on certain business terms. But I wouldn't rush out to buy this as a first choice on either language or business. I was somewhat surprised that any publisher would consider this text a guide.
Basically, it is formatted like a dictionary with various business-related vocabulary listings and their definitions. Usage applies to the spelling and capitalization of the listings. My expectations were that this book was similar to a Chicago Manual of Style within a business writing context that includes recently created words germane to the business world. Unfortunately, it isn't useful in this regard. For example, if you want to find out how to use colloquial business language such as "leverageable", you probably won't have much luck with this text as such words appear to be absent.
Lastly, the organization leaves something to be desired as the usage topics such as Abbreviations are mixed in with the vocabulary entries, which essentially is the entire book. I really see very little value in acquiring this book See all 3 reviews. Amazon Giveaway allows you to run promotional giveaways in order to create buzz, reward your audience, and attract new followers and customers.
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See full terms and conditions and this month's choices. More Books from this Author. The indispensable resource that has helped the writers and editors of The Wall Street Journal earn a reputation for the most authoritative business writing anywhere -- now fully expanded and revised for the twenty-first century In the field of business, the words you use -- and how you use them -- can either bolster your credibility or undermine your intelligence.
For anyone who is faced with the task of writing a memo, report, proposal, press release or even an e-mail, The Wall Read more about this book. The Death of Mrs. Westaway By Ruth Ware.
Lying in Wait By Liz Nugent. The Outsider By Stephen King. As a consequence, I cannot tell whether this book might be worth buying despite its problems. The review is less useful to me than it might be. I did this because it was needed. She presents a few fairly unfamiliar guidelines that specifically apply to financial infographics, which financial journalists might find useful. Rather than wading through an entire book of mostly repetitive guidelines to find these nuggets, I would have preferred a brief monograph that focused exclusively on them.
That would have saved me and others time, and perhaps money as well. As such, the book makes a good, get to the point, reference for some. I regularly create graphs and charts with excel as I am a marketing analyst for a large Fortune firm. I would say that no one in my department, other than I, has the first clue about the best way to create useful visualizations.
Yes, we even have a chart published by another team here with a launching rocket!!! I think the cookbook analogy is appropriate.
The same is true of graphical communication. The American workforce is losing its edge in the world, in part because people are substituting the development of expertise with the acquisition of superficial rules and procedures. As a reader of the WSJ, I miss the easy on the eye; informative well-written paper published pre-Murdoch.
Today, one article that caught my eye occupied 96 sq inches of print space. The article devoted 7 percent of the print space to headlines, 18 percent to photos, and 22 per cent was one of those objects that appeared to be a graph. I have not figured out what information the object was attempting to present. There was also a bubbly chart on Marketplace with arrows and bubbles of many colors and sizes going different directions.
Apparently, 1, executives were interviewed for the champagne presentation. After reading your review, and the one on FlowingData, I picked up the book to reach my own conclusions. Even by following some of the more flawed advice in this book, these people who I refer to would still produce better visualizations than they do today.
Did someone mention cookbooks? Some of my best friends are cookbooks! But I avoid those that simply spell out the recipe with no background on why the recipe works, or how many versions were tried before the final version was put on the table. All that background makes the final product richer in my view.