Thursday, June 29, 2006

Food for thought...

As someone who makes her living writing, I guess it's natural that I often find profound meaning in clever turns of a phrase.

I just heard a saying that I feel compelled to share -- Susan Saint James said someone gave her a plaque with this on it after the death of her son:

We are not human beings having a spiritual experience, we are spirits having a human experience.

A play on words that says oh so much...

Wednesday, June 21, 2006

Footnotes versus endnotes

I gave a writing seminar yesterday to a group of professionals. I've given this half-day seminar before and the question of whether to use footnotes or endnotes came up for the second time, so it seems to be a topic of interest to many business writers.

There's no definitive rule regarding using footnotes (which are the kind that appear on the bottom of each page) versus endnotes (the kind that appear at the end of the document). Of course, sometimes the decision is made for you, for example, when a publication you're writing for has a policy about which to use. (This is often the case if you're writing an article for a professional journal, or if you're writing a paper for a conference and the conference organizer has formal writer's guidelines.)

But, outside of the few situations where someone else is dictating which you should use, it's up to you to decide whether to go with footnotes or endnotes. There are pluses and minuses to each, so the best thing to do is weigh the factors for yourself and make a reasoned decision.

Pros and Cons of Endnotes
Here are some of the pros and cons I see related to using endnotes:

  • Endnotes are less distracting to the reader because they're out-of-sight.
  • If a reader wants to look at the text of a particular endnote, the reader has to flip to the end of the text to find the information -- this can be annoying. Also, depending on how they're created (continuous numbering or numbers that start over for each chapter), the reader may have to remember the chapter number as well as the endnote number in order to find the correct one.
  • Endnotes don't clutter up the page.
  • Depending on the nature of the document (for example, a contract or an offer of some kind), readers may have a negative reaction to endnotes (much like the proverbial "fine print" or hidden disclaimers that make an offer too good to be true) and may feel the writer is trying to hide something by burying it in a hard-to-find endnote.
Pros and Cons of Footnotes
Here are some pros and cons I see related to using footnotes:
  • People interested in reading the footnote can just glance down to find what they're looking for.
  • Footnotes can clutter up the page and can negatively impact the overall look of the page. (Depending on the layout of the page, for example, if there are multiple columns, you'll have to decide where the footnotes should appear. In other words, page design issues may come into play.)
  • If the footnotes are lengthy, there's a risk they could dominate the page, which isn't a good thing. (And of course, complicating this is the fact that some pages may be footnote-light, while others are footnote-heavy -- and usually you don't know this until the entire document is complete. But, thanks to advances in technology, with a bit of extra effort, footnotes can be converted to endnotes (and visa versa) at a fairly late stage of production, if necessary.)
Whether to use any kind of "note"
Of course, before choosing between footnotes or endnotes, I'm assuming you've made a reasoned decision about using any kind of "note". (I'll leave discussion of this issue to another blog entry, as this is getting rather long already.)

My thoughts...
On balance, I prefer footnotes because I like making it easy for the interested reader to find the information quickly. But, the impact footnotes will have on the layout, design or look of the page can easily outweigh my general preference -- so I'd make the decision on a document-by-document basis.

Monday, June 05, 2006

Nice saying about gratitude...

I've said it before -- given the name of my business and my blog -- it seems appropriate to celebrate the well-turned phrase from time-to-time. So ...

Many of you probably heard this -- Katie Couric said it on her last day on NBC's Today Show (May 31, 2006). I think the sentiment's nice and it's well put, so I think it's worth repeating (well, possibly paraphrasing, as I'm going by memory):

Unexpressed gratitude is like wrapping a present for someone and not giving it.

Nice, eh?

Hats off to Ms. Couric (who admitted she heard something along these lines somewhere -- so I don't think it was her idea originally, but that's ok...).