How to write lovely bullet points

6th May 2025

I received an unusual compliment last week…

       “Andy, I love the way you write bullet points”

(Yep – I hadn’t heard this sentence before, either)

The bullet points she referred to included:

  1. Brilliant first impressions – how to grab attention immediately and impressively
  2. Proving our valueadd – how to persuasively articulate our value-add, so we impress everyone we speak with
  3. Differentiating ourselves – how to ensure we stand-out as different to – and better than – the competition

I asked her why she liked them. A summary of her feedback (in bullet points, of course!) was:

  1. Key point upfront – each bullet’s short summary upfront meant she could skim-read them first. That gave a good overview. She then read the detail of the bullet(s) she was most interested in
  2. Punchy writing – there were enough words, so it made sense.  But not too many – or the Bullet Point would have been a Bullet Rant
  3. It’s unusual, so it stands out – she said: “I haven’t seen bullets written like this before. So it stood out as different. And how often do we see things that are different? Sadly, not often”
  4. Minimal bullets – every point was relevant. She asked if I’d considered including others, and chosen not to. Which was very astute – that’s exactly what I’d done

I wasn’t expecting to do a Tuesday Tip on bullet points.

Who would?

But I thought the feedback was insightful and useful. I hope you do too!  Please let me know…

Action Point

If you like this way of doing bullet points… use it.

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