Colleen Trolove & Miraka Shelly Davies Writing Training

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How to be concise – strip out the fluff!

Being wordy is only good if you’re a dictionary.

We have to learn to strip out the fluff!

The writer switch

If there’s one thing we know about the text, it’s that messages get weaker as the word count grows.  

But, flick our writer switch, and what happens?  The more concerned we are with getting our point across, the more words we use!

Doh!

We’re worried people won’t get it.  We’re worried they might miss something.  So we say the same thing over and over again, in slightly different ways, trying to cover all our bases. 

All the “just in case”s.  Every eventuality.

Do you know what that gets us?  Really badly written legalese.

Brief = strong

The best business writing is stripped back to just what’s needed to make your points and achieve your outcomes.

So how do we strip our writing back, but still be comprehensive enough to get the job done?

Here are a few quick approaches.

1. Strip out fluffy, wordy phrases

It’s easy when we’re trying to put our most professional foot forward, to take on an unnaturally wordy voice.  Because we want to be taken seriously, we try to sound a bit more formal.

Resist!

Use. Instead of

to. in order to

can. be able to

because. as a consequence of

consider. give consideration to

2. Write less formally and more conversationally

We think a conversational voice is waffly, and that’s true in one respect – we speak in very long, run-on sentences with lots of “and”s.

But if we use conversational to mean the active voice, and everyday words, the result will be less wordy than a traditional formal voice.

3. Use headings and bullets

A well-written heading speaks directly to your reader.  It engages them. The following approach forces you to think first, write second, and do that in a very focused way.

  1. Separate your thinking into key points

  2. Turn those into statement headings

  3. Then list supporting info as bullet lists beneath them

And no, before you ask, I’m not suggesting that you then flesh out each of those bullets into a paragraph.  The bullets are enough!  Use them as often as you can (but keep each list short – no more than 7 bullets).

Stay concise and outcomes-focused and your business readers will love you for it!