Let me begin by saying, that writing a new post either on technical or soft skill topics is always a challenge for me.
Why? Because I am not a native English speaker.
Looking back at the past few years, I used to be an awful writer, mainly because I have only learned English as a second language at school.
Yes, my English writing was not the best, but the desire to blog in English was huge.
If you ever asked me about the main thing that contributed to my online progress, I would not hesitate a second to say that it was my ability to write well in English.
And it took around two years of consistent work to reach “not that bad” style of writing.
I have come a long way, right?
Of course, practice is everything, you probably know it. Personally, for me, it’s impossible to learn something without implementing it in my life.
I can read English rules with examples hundred of times, however, only when I complete an actual post, the grammar will stick in my head.
At the beginning of my blogging journey, I have spent around 4-5 hours to re-read, edit and confirm the end version of the post before publishing it.
To put things into perspective, here are my tips for improving your writing skills, if you are a non-native speaker and struggling with it:
1. Read as much as possible
Especially in the styles, you want to emulate, whether it’s general writing, news or blogs, etc.
I believe that one of the best ways to perfect writing skills and grammar is to read. And read a lot.
2. Spend time re-reading and editing
Even many native speakers don’t do that, but we, non-native, can improve our writing a lot with a read-over.
The most important thing is the end result in this case.
The more time we spend on that today, the less time we spend on that tomorrow.
3. Ask native speakers for help
Don’t hesitate to do that and get them to underline and explain any mistakes or odd-sounding phrases you are using.
Perhaps, the other person can be interested to learn your native language or in teaching people in general.
Learning foreign languages is hype nowadays, and I firmly believe that it’s possible to conquer a new language up to a fluent level in 1-2 years.
Everything depends on you, and only you!
4. Learn the grammar rules of the native language
When I started learning foreign languages, I faced the big problem - I was not that strong in the morphology of my native language!
And it’s crap! Especially, if you are trying to learn a foreign language.
Any language has logical structure. To see its ‘logic’ you have to understand morphology analysis at least to build the sentences properly and conjugate words correctly.
As a result, it will simplify the foreign language learning process.
5. Follow a writing template
Try to collect or keep notes of the writing templates the most used while doing a new post.
This approach will definitely help you increase the quality of your article instantly and decrease the time spending on searching appropriate lead-in words for your post.
6. Grammar through Grammarly (not sponsored)
Grammarly is a helpful tool that can help you avoid typos when writing online.
I use the program in my everyday writing for over a year or more.
It helps find comma errors with ease, detect and correct repetitive words, and highlight the missing details during the writing. Especially useful for students who do academic writing - just choose the right mode for that.
Conclusion
Remember, that no one was born a professional and no one is perfect.
Believe in yourself and believe that one day you will be what you wish.
Don’t let fear consume you and give up.
In the beginning, probably, you will not be that good, so don’t pay attention at that point. Failure is a part of the process of success.
Don’t compare your writing with someone else. Find your own style, write it naturally and do your best.
Thanks for reading this post!
I have highlighted the main ways how to improve writing skills if you are a non-native speaker and which worked and still work for me.
If you would like to know how I learn new things during the week, check out my “What I learned…” video series on YouTube. In 2019 I decided to share my weekly achievements and learnings to track my personal and professional growth.
I also would be happy to read your tips and suggestions on how you level up your writing skills. Feel free to leave a comment and share your way with other readers and me.
Photo by Emma Matthews on Unsplash
Latest comments (41)
I enjoy the advice. Thank you very much for sharing your experience. It is something that more of us have to do to help others.
YouTube links has not been worked
Today, I read this post again. I'm still bad at writing. Sometimes I'm looking for friends to write or talk in English.
I believe this is the only way to improve my English.
Non-native english writer here as well
I can very well relate with your struggles.
Grammarly is super well-known because they have ads everywhere on the internet.
But I don't find Grammarly actually good.
It has too many false positives and bad suggestion.
According to them for example, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights is full of errors.
The funny part is that Grammarly is much worse if you pay the pro plan.
It then adds more suggestions that are also wrong.
Is there a no-nonsense alternative to Grammarly?
Ideally that would work at the macOS/Linux level
Thanks for posting this. As a non-native English writer, I can relate, a lot.
Here are some writing tips I've collected:
There is no replacement for practice. Write every day.
No one gets it right on the first draft. Be ready to edit and re-edit and re-edit.
Get someone to proofread before publishing. We are blind to our own mistakes too often.
Content is not clear unless your readers can (1) Find what they need. (2) Understand what they find. (3) Use what they find to meet their needs.
Well written prose has Clarity, Simplicity, Brevity, and Humanity.
Collect too much material, give the reader just enough.
Ruthlessly reduce your sentences. Edit until you can't eliminate or combine any more words.
Know your audience.
Don't overexplain.
Use the simplest word that maintains your meaning.
The first paragraph is crucial to catch your reader's attention. Don't waste it.
As soon as you made your point, look for the nearest exit and finish your post/chapter/section.
Readers will skim so plan accordingly.
Very relatable! I only became fluent because I spent a two years abroad in the USA. In school it was my weakest subject and failed almost all of the tests. So imagine me, someone who speaks about 3 basic sentences, being sent to a country where he knows no one and no one speaks Dutch... It was scary, but the best thing that could happen to me.
Right now with the writing aspect, you're spot on about all the points you make! Excellent post, thanks for bringing me back to the time I was still learning English, not knowing what it'd bring me in the end. 🙌
Bravo!
Thanks for this article!
I think I'm not the only non-native english writer who takes it as an incentive to keep on working, writing and improving.
God job!
Btw, the hemingwayapp has been greatly helpful to me, may it could be to you too...
Really nice app. I'm going to give it a try. Thanks for the link.
I was reading your post and trust me I would never get that you aren't a native speaker if you hadn't mentioned it yourself!
Anyway, best wishes from another not native speaker!
This great post encourages me.
I, as a non-native, will improve my English diligently and hard like you.
Thank you :)