How to Use Grammarly for Professional Writing: Beyond Spell Check

writingbeginner

# How to Use Grammarly for Professional Writing: Beyond Spell Check

I've been using Grammarly for months now, and I'll be honest—when I first started, I thought it was just a fancy spell checker. I was wrong. After diving deep into its features, I've discovered it's a complete writing assistant that can transform your professional communication. Let me walk you through how I use it to elevate my writing beyond basic corrections.

## Step 1: Set Up Grammarly Across All Your Platforms

Before you can leverage Grammarly's full power, you need to install it everywhere you write. Here's my setup:

1. **Download the desktop app** for Windows or Mac—this gives you real-time suggestions in any application, from email clients to Slack.

2. **Install the browser extension** for Chrome, Firefox, or Edge. This is crucial because it works in Gmail, LinkedIn, Google Docs, and even social media platforms.

3. **Add the mobile keyboard** on iOS or Android for on-the-go writing.

**Pro Tip:** I keep the desktop app running in the background. It catches errors in programs like Microsoft Outlook and Word that the browser extension can't reach.

![Screenshot: Grammarly desktop app showing settings menu with platform integrations](images/tutorials/how-to-use-grammarly-for-professional-writing-step-1.webp)

**Common Pitfall:** Don't install Grammarly on shared or work computers without permission—some organizations have policies against third-party plugins that might access typed content.

## Step 2: Understand the Four Goal Settings

Here's where most beginners miss the magic. Grammarly isn't one-size-fits-all. Before you start writing, click the Grammarly icon in your browser or desktop app and set your **Goals**:

1. **Audience:** Choose from General, Knowledgeable, or Expert. For client emails, I use "Knowledgeable"—it assumes they understand industry terms without oversimplifying.

2. **Formality:** Slide between Informal and Formal. I keep this at 60-70% for most professional writing—too formal sounds robotic.

3. **Domain:** Pick from General, Academic, Business, Technical, Creative, or Casual. For business reports, I select "Business" which flags overly complex sentences.

4. **Tone:** Options like Neutral, Confident, Diplomatic, or Friendly. I use "Confident" for proposals and "Diplomatic" for negative feedback.

**Example:** When I'm writing a performance review for a team member, I set Audience to "Knowledgeable," Formality to 75%, Domain to "Business," and Tone to "Diplomatic." This helps me phrase constructive criticism without sounding harsh.

![Screenshot: Grammarly goals panel with audience, formality, domain, and tone dropdowns](images/tutorials/how-to-use-grammarly-for-professional-writing-step-2.webp)

**Pro Tip:** Save your most-used goal combinations. I have presets for "Client Emails," "Internal Reports," and "Social Media Posts."

## Step 3: Master the Tone Detector

This feature is a game-changer for professional writing. Grammarly's tone detector analyzes your entire message and predicts how readers will perceive it. Here's how I use it:

1. **Write your draft** as usual.

2. **Click the tone icon** (a smiley face or emoji) in the bottom-right of the Grammarly panel.

3. **Review the tone breakdown**—it shows percentages for tones like Confident, Friendly, Formal, or Critical.

**Real Example:** I once wrote an email to a client that started with "You need to provide the documents by Friday." Grammarly's tone detector flagged this as "Critical" at 80%. I revised it to "Could you please share the documents by Friday? This helps us stay on schedule." The tone shifted to "Confident" at 60% and "Friendly" at 30%.

**Common Pitfall:** The tone detector isn't perfect. It sometimes misreads sarcasm or cultural nuances. Always read your message aloud after checking the tone.

![Screenshot: Grammarly tone detector showing breakdown of tones in an email draft](images/tutorials/how-to-use-grammarly-for-professional-writing-step-3.webp)

## Step 4: Use the Full-Screen Editor for Important Documents

For critical documents like cover letters, business proposals, or client reports, don't rely on inline suggestions alone. Open Grammarly's full-screen editor:

1. **Click the Grammarly icon** in your browser or desktop app.

2. **Select "New Document"** or paste your text.

3. **Click "Open in Editor"** at the bottom of the suggestion panel.

This gives you a distraction-free workspace with all of Grammarly's features:

- **Alerts:** Red underlines for spelling, green for grammar, blue for clarity.

- **Performance score:** A percentage from 0-100 that measures overall writing quality.

- **Vocabulary suggestions:** Words highlighted in purple for better alternatives.

**My Workflow:** I write a first draft in the full-screen editor, then copy it to my final destination (email, document, etc.) and do a final check with the inline tool.

**Example:** For a recent business proposal, my first draft scored 72 on the performance scale. After following Grammarly's suggestions for clearer sentence structure and more confident tone, it jumped to 94. The client signed the deal.

![Screenshot: Grammarly full-screen editor showing performance score and suggestions panel](images/tutorials/how-to-use-grammarly-for-professional-writing-step-4.webp)

**Pro Tip:** Aim for a performance score of 90+ for external communications. Internal messages can be lower, around 75-85.

## Step 5: Leverage the Plagiarism Checker (Premium Feature)

If you're writing content for your company blog, research papers, or any publication, Grammarly's plagiarism checker is invaluable. Here's how I use it:

1. **Write your content** in the Grammarly editor.

2. **Click the "Plagiarism" button** in the toolbar.

3. **Wait 30-60 seconds** while Grammarly scans billions of web pages.

**Real Example:** I was writing a blog post about remote work trends and used a statistic from a study. Grammarly flagged a sentence that was too similar to the original source. I paraphrased it and added a citation, avoiding potential copyright issues.

**Common Pitfall:** The plagiarism checker only works on the web version (grammarly.com) or the full-screen editor, not in the browser extension. Always run it before publishing.

**Pro Tip:** Even if you're not publishing, use the plagiarism checker to verify quotes and statistics. It's helped me catch accidental copy-paste errors multiple times.

## Step 6: Customize Your Personal Dictionary

Grammarly flags industry-specific terms, product names, and acronyms as misspellings. Don't ignore these—add them to your personal dictionary:

1. **Click on the flagged word** to see the suggestion.

2. **Select "Add to dictionary"** from the dropdown menu.

I've added terms like "agile," "Kanban," "SaaS," and my company's product names. Over time, Grammarly learns your vocabulary and stops flagging them.

**Example:** I work in tech and frequently write about "microservices architecture." Initially, Grammarly suggested "micro services" instead. After adding it to my dictionary, it recognizes it as correct.

**Common Pitfall:** Don't add everything to your dictionary. If Grammarly flags a misspelling that's actually an error, correct it. Only add terms you use correctly and consistently.

## Step 7: Review Weekly Writing Insights (Premium Feature)

Grammarly Premium provides a weekly email with writing insights. I check mine every Monday morning:

1. **Open your Grammarly dashboard** at grammarly.com.

2. **Click "Insights"** in the left sidebar.

3. **Review your stats:** Total words written, top mistakes, vocabulary usage, and tone trends.

**Real Example:** After three months, I noticed my top mistake was "wordy sentences." Grammarly showed I was using 20% more words than necessary. I focused on being concise, and my performance score improved by 8 points.

**Pro Tip:** Share your insights with your team. We started a friendly competition to see who could improve their writing scores the most each month. It's made everyone more conscious of their communication.

![Screenshot: Grammarly weekly insights dashboard showing writing stats and trends](images/tutorials/how-to-use-grammarly-for-professional-writing-step-7.webp)

## Conclusion: Key Takeaways

After months of using Grammarly beyond basic spell check, here's what I've learned:

1. **Set your goals first.** Audience, formality, domain, and tone settings transform Grammarly from a generic checker into a tailored writing coach.

2. **Use the tone detector religiously.** It prevents misunderstandings in professional communication, especially when delivering feedback or negotiating.

3. **Open the full-screen editor for important documents.** The performance score and comprehensive suggestions are worth the extra step.

4. **Customize your dictionary.** It saves time and reduces false flags for industry-specific language.

5. **Check plagiarism before publishing.** Even if you're writing original content, it's a safety net for accidental similarities.

6. **Review your insights weekly.** Tracking your progress helps you identify and fix recurring mistakes.

Grammarly isn't a replacement for good writing skills—it's a tool that amplifies them. Start with these steps, and you'll be writing more professional, clear, and effective content in no time.