How to make your writing sound more professional
When people try to sound professional, they often reach for longer words and stiffer phrasing. It usually backfires — the message gets harder to read, not more credible. Professional writing is really about being clear, calm and easy to trust. Here is how to get there without sounding like a robot.
It is not about bigger words
Swapping "use" for "utilise" or "help" for "facilitate" does not make you sound smarter. It makes the reader work harder. Plain, precise words read as confident. Save the reader effort and you come across as more capable, not less.
Small changes that instantly sound more professional
- Lead with the point, then the detail — do not bury the ask at the bottom.
- Replace vague words ("thing", "stuff", "ASAP") with specifics ("the report", "by Friday 5pm").
- Turn complaints into requests: "This is wrong" → "Could we adjust this?"
- Keep one idea per sentence so nothing gets lost.
- End with a clear next step, not a trailing "let me know".
Cut the things that quietly undercut you
- Hedging: "I think maybe we could possibly…" → "I suggest we…"
- Over-apologising: one "sorry" is plenty.
- Exclamation marks stacked for enthusiasm — one is usually enough.
- Filler openers like "Just circling back" when a direct line works better.
Read it once more before sending
Before you hit send, read the message as if you were the person receiving it. Does it respect their time? Is the request obvious? Does it sound like a real, considered person wrote it? If yes, you are done — professional does not mean cold.
If you want a shortcut, paste your draft into iTextwise and choose the Professional tone. It keeps your meaning and every detail intact while tightening the wording so it reads clear and credible.
Put it into practice
Paste your draft into iTextwise and see it transform in real time — free and private.
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