How to Find Your Writing Voice and Stand Out as a Writer
- Apr 22
- 2 min read
Why does some writing instantly feel original while other pieces are easy to forget?
It often comes down to one thing: voice.
If you are trying to improve your writing or finally start your book, learning how to develop your writing voice is one of the most important steps. Without it, even a strong idea can fall flat. With it, even a simple story can stay with someone long after they read it.
In this week’s Wednesday Writer Tip, we are breaking down three practical ways to help your writing stand out and feel more like you.

Avoid clichés to make your writing feel original
If your writing sounds like something you have heard before, your reader will feel it too.
Clichés are one of the fastest ways to lose originality. They are familiar, predictable, and easy to skim past. This does not mean your ideas are not strong. It just means they are being expressed in a way that blends in.
Instead of using common phrases, pause and ask yourself how you would naturally describe that moment. The more specific and personal your wording is, the more your writing stands out.
Use active sentences to create stronger storytelling
If your writing feels distant or less engaging than you expected, your sentence structure may be the reason.
Active sentences make your writing clearer and more direct. They help the reader feel like they are inside the scene instead of observing it from the outside.
For example:
Passive: The door was opened by her.
Active: She opened the door.
That small shift makes your writing easier to follow and more engaging to read.
Use your own words to develop your writing voice
Your writing voice is not something you need to create. It is something you need to allow.
Many writers hold back because they think they need to sound more polished or more professional. In reality, trying to sound like someone else is what weakens your voice.
When you describe scenes, ideas, or emotions in a way that feels natural to you, your writing becomes more authentic. Readers connect with that honesty. That is what makes your work memorable.
Why your writing voice matters
Your voice is what separates your story from everyone else’s.
You can have the same idea as another writer, but your perspective, your wording, and your way of explaining things will always be different. That difference is what draws people in.
If your writing has been feeling off or not as strong as you want it to be, it may not be your idea.
It may just be how you are expressing it.
Start writing in a way that feels like you
The more you focus on avoiding overused language, writing with clarity, and trusting your natural way of communicating, the stronger your writing will become.
You do not need to overthink it. You need to start writing in a way that feels honest.




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