In Business Writing,
Keep It Simple
Don't lose your
message in a sea of big words
People who speak simply and clearly often switch styles when
they must put the message in writing, resulting in long,
convoluted sentences and a message that is lost. If people have
to read your words twice, they often won’t bother. Try to make
your sentences understandable on first reading.
A major corporation had initiated a new program throughout
the organization, and was in the process of compiling a user
manual. Each department was asked to submit draft wording for
its own section of the manual. The cover memo from the Legal
Department contained this sentence:
“In conjunction with the
Internatioinal Project and the binder to be produced relating
to issues of significance on relevant matters, please find
attached for inclusion under the legal section of such binder
information relating to the headings originally provided to you
with respect to legal issues in connection therewith for
insertion into the binder.”
Phew! That was just the cover memo—imagine how the manual
section read! This sentence contains fifty-four words. The
writer could have conveyed the same message, by saying:
“Here is the proposed legal section for
the X Project binder.” That’s eleven words—we saved
forty-three words just by streamlining this single
sentence.
English is a very rich language, and if we take the trouble
to find precisely the right word, we don’t need a lot of
qualifying phrases. Keep it simple!
Feel free to use this or other articles on this site in
your in-house publication or online newsletters, so long as you
make no changes, use the entire article, and add the following
attribution at the end:
Helen Wilkie speaks at conferences and conducts
corporate training sessions on all aspects of business
communication. She is the author of Message Received
and Understood! and The Hidden Profit
Center. Contact her by phone at 416-966-5023, by
e-mail at hwilkie@mhwcom.com
or browse her main website at www.mhwcom.com
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