homeBee.png

The 6 principles of good business writing

Make sure your business message is being communicated clearly. Ilja van Roon shares 6 points you need to check for
PrintPrintEmailEmail

Ask yourself: can you turn yourself into a business writing expert, fix your bad writing habits and compensate for your lack of writing talent, overnight? The answer is: probably not. But applying certain principles can teach you insights that will allow you to become a better writer over time.

There are several ways to improve your business writing. You can focus on specific techniques and master a single particular genre, such as articles, press releases or case studies. You can learn so-called power words or use costly templates that others have developed for you. Perhaps this works for you. Perhaps it doesn't.

Either way,

there's another way: learning and applying the 6½ Principles of Business Writing.

Deceiveptively Simple
Principles of any kind are deceptively simple. Simple because they seem very obvious once you have understood them. Deceptive because that wrongly makes you believe they have no value or effect. The opposite is true: writing from principles is focused and powerful.

Principles share another trait: they only work if they are applied. That is why your ability to improve your writing, depends on your application of the 6½ principles. Reflect on them as you write, continuously and without regard for your own ego. Be consistent and diligent in planning, executing and evaluating your writing on the basis of these principles.

Here they are
So, what are these 6½ Principles of Business Writing? And what, in a nutshell, do they mean? Simply said, it's like this:

Focus:
Develop a blueprint of your writing before you start. Execute consistently.

Purpose:
Everything you write - be it a word, sentence, paragraph and the end result itself - should serve a purpose. If it doesn't, change it or delete it.

Meaning:
Do not write what something is, explain what it means.

Substance:
Substantiate your claims. Provide proof - preferably from an outsider - or elaborate with additional information that allows your reader to judge your claim.

Clarity:
Write succinctly and consistently. Avoid fancy words.

Structure:
Organise your text in a consistent, transparent, supportive and logical way.

These six principles all apply to the content or form of business writing. There is one additional principle that does not apply to either aspect of writing. That is why the next principle is only accorded 'half' status:

Humility:
Critically judge your writing and apply all writing principles without regard to your ego.

Total sum
These 6½ principles cannot be seen independently from one other. In practice, all 6½ are interrelated, in that they depend on and influence each other:

- Clarity cannot be achieved without Structure.
- Purpose can only be realised through Focused execution.
- Meaning depends on Purpose, which in turn requires Clarity.
- The choice for Substance depends on the Purpose.
- Humility clarifies Purpose and Substance.

Comments

Post new comment

The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
4 + 5 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.
To prevent automated spam submissions leave this field empty.