4.2 Good Business Writing
[Author removed at request of original publisher] and Linda Macdonald
Learning Objectives
By the end of this chapter, you should be able to
- Identify six basic qualities that characterize good business writing.
What is “good” business writing? To be effective, you can employ strategies that make your writing more powerful and aligned more closely with your purpose, audience, context, and channel. This chapter presents six qualities of good writing and three rhetorical elements to help you develop your strategy.
Six Qualities of Good Writing
Edward P. Bailey offers several key points to remember: Good business writing follows the rules, is easy to read, and attracts the reader’s attention. Good writing also meets the reader’s expectations, is clear and concise, and is efficient and effective.
Good Writing Follows the Rules
Bailey’s first quality generates some debate. What are the rules? Do “the rules” depend on audience expectations, industry standards or what your English teacher taught you? Or are they reflected in the writing of authors you might point to as positive examples? The answer is “all of the above,” with a point of clarification. You may find it necessary to balance audience expectations with industry standards for a document and may need to find a balance or compromise. Bailey points to common sense as one basic criterion of good writing, but common sense is a product of experience. When searching for balance, reader understanding is the deciding factor.
When we say that good writing follows the rules, we don’t mean that a writer cannot be creative. Just as an art student needs to know how to draw a scene in correct perspective before they can “break the rules” by “bending” perspective, so too does a writer need to know the rules of language. Being well versed in how to use words correctly, form sentences with proper grammar, and build logical paragraphs are skills the writer can use no matter what the assignment. Even though some business settings may call for conservative writing, there are other areas where creativity is not only allowed but mandated. Imagine working for an advertising agency or a software development firm; in such situations, success comes from expressing new, untried ideas. By following the rules of language and correct writing, a writer can express those creative ideas in a form that comes through clearly and promotes understanding.
Good Writing is Easily Read
Writing that is easily read is writing that adjusts to audience’s needs and desires within a particular context. What is easy to read? For a young audience, you may want to use straightforward, simple terms but incorporate references and language that they can relate to. An example referring to Billie Eilish may work with one reading audience and fail to connect with another. Good writing uses language appropriate for your profiled audience.
Profession-specific terms can serve a valuable purpose as we write about precise concepts, but not everyone will understand all the terms in a profession. If your audience is largely literate in the terms of the field, using industry terms will help you establish a relationship with your readers. If you are writing a report for your supervisor, a financial analyst, on the stock performance of companies in the consumer cyclical industry, you would not need to define “consumer cyclical”, but if you are writing for a client, you may need to explain that the category includes companies that are subject to economic fluctuations, companies in the real estate, retail, housing, and automobile markets, for example.
The truly excellent writer is one who can explain complex ideas in a way that the reader can understand. Sometimes ease of reading can come from the writer’s choice of a brilliant illustrative example to get a point across. In other situations, it can be the writer’s incorporation of definitions into the text so that the meaning of unfamiliar words is clear. It may also be a matter of choosing dynamic, specific verbs that make it clear what is happening and who is carrying out the action.
Good Writing Attracts the Reader’s Attention
Bailey’s third point concerns attracting the reader’s attention. Will they want to read it? This question should guide much of what you write. We increasingly gain information from our environment through visual, auditory, and multimedia channels, from YouTube to streaming audio, and from watching the news online. Some argue that this has led to a decreased attention span for reading, meaning that writers need to appeal to readers with short, punchy sentences and catchy phrases. However, there are still plenty of people who love to immerse themselves in reading an interesting article, proposal, or marketing piece.
Perhaps the most universally useful strategy in capturing your reader’s attention is to state how your writing can meet the reader’s needs. If your document provides information to answer a question, solve a problem, or explain how to increase profits or cut costs, you may want to state this in the beginning. By opening with a “what’s in it for me” strategy, you give your audience a reason to be interested in what you’ve written.
Good Writing Meets the Reader’s Expectations
In addition, good writing meets the audience’s needs. To meet the reader’s expectations, the writer needs to understand who the intended reader is. In some business situations, you are writing just to one person: your boss, a coworker in another department, or an individual customer or vendor. If you know the person well, it may be as easy for you to write to them as it is to write a note to your parent or roommate. If you don’t know the person, you can at least make some reasonable assumptions about their expectations based on the position they hold and its relation to your job.
In other situations, you may be writing a document to be read by a group or team, an entire department, or even a large number of total strangers. How can you anticipate their expectations and tailor your writing accordingly? Naturally you want to learn as much as you can about your potential audience. How much you can learn and what kinds of information will vary with the situation. If you are writing Web site content, for example, you may never meet the people who will visit the site, but you can predict why they would be drawn to the site and what they would expect to read there. Beyond learning about your audience, your clear understanding of the writing assignment and its purpose will help you to meet reader expectations.
Good Writing is Clear and Concise
Clear and concise writing reflects the increasing tendency in business to eliminate error. Errors can include those associated with production, from writing to editing, and reader response. Your goal to create clear and concise writing points to a central goal across communication: fidelity. This concept involves our goal of accurately communicating all the intended information with a minimum of signal or message breakdown or misinterpretation. Designing your documents, including writing and presentation, to reduce message breakdown is an important part of effective business communication.
Good Writing is Efficient and Effective
Finally, good writing is efficient and effective. There are only twenty-four hours in a day and we are increasingly asked to do more with less, with shorter deadlines almost guaranteed. As a writer, how do you meet ever-increasing expectations? Each writing assignment requires a clear understanding of the goals and desired results, and when either of these two aspects is unclear, the efficiency of your writing can be compromised. Rewrites require time that you may not have but the corrections will be necessary for the efficiency and effectivity of the assignment if it was not done correctly the first time.
As we have discussed previously, making a habit of reading similar documents prior to beginning your process of writing can help establish a mental template of your desired product. If you can see in your mind’s eye what you want to write, and have the perspective of similar documents combined with audience’s needs, you can write more efficiently. Your written documents are products and will be required on a schedule that impacts your coworkers and business. Your ability to produce effective documents efficiently is a skill set that will contribute to your success.
Our sixth point reinforces this idea with an emphasis on effectiveness. What is effective writing? It is writing that succeeds in accomplishing its purpose. Understanding the purpose, goals, and desired results of your writing assignment will help you achieve this success. Your employer may want an introductory sales letter to result in an increase in sales leads and potential contacts. Your audience may not see the document from that perspective, but will instead read with the mindset of, “How does this help me solve X problem?” If you meet both goals, your writing is approaching effectiveness. Here, effectiveness is qualified with the word “approaching” to point out that writing is both a process and a product, and your writing will continually require effort and attention to revision and improvement.
Rhetorical Elements and Cognate Strategies
Another way to define good writing is to apply the goals of Aristotle’s three elements of logos (logic), ethos (ethics and credibility), and pathos (emotional appeal). These elements (as discussed in Chapter 2.1) are essential in classical rhetoric, defined as the art of presenting an argument. Good writing appeals to all three elements to varying extents given the purpose, audience, and context.
A second set of goals involves “cognate strategies”, or ways of understanding, discussed in Chapter 2.4. Like rhetorical elements, cognate strategies can be applied to public speaking, but they are also useful in writing. The strategies of clarity, conciseness, arrangement (logos), credibility, expectation, reference (ethos), and tone, emphasis, and engagement (pathos) together create good writing. The degree to which the communication meets the goals of Aristotle’s three elements and the cognate strategies determines its effectiveness.
Exercise: The Qualities of Good Writing
1. Read the following email to employees of Toto’s Tax Prep:
Hey folks,
I’ve asked you MANY times to follow the parking lot policy. The policy clearly says that you should park only in your assigned spot, not wherever you want. Your spot was selected by a random draw. If you didn’t get the spot you wanted, DEAL WITH IT! Don’t take someone else’s spot. That’s just rude.
Some of you have also started parking over at Dorothy’s Shoe Store, and she’s not happy and has asked me to ask you to stop doing that asap. You should be treating the local businesses in the neighborhood with more respect.
I want you to read the parking policy attached to this email. You should sign it and return it to your manager. Do it by November 1. No exceptions!!! If you don’t sign, you will lose your spot. And then good luck finding a place to park in this city! haha
Signed,
Henry
Identify three of the six characteristics of good writing. Briefly explain with example how the message fails to satisfy each characteristic.
2. You will send a cover letter to potential employers in application for a co-op position or post-graduate work. This letter is an important first impression, and you will want the letter to demonstrate good writing.
Look at the cognate strategies in Chapter 2.4. Briefly explain how you can apply each strategy in creating a good cover letter.
References
Bailey, E. (2008). Writing and speaking. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill.
Kostelnick, C., & Roberts, D. (1998). Designing visual language: Strategies for professional communicators (p. 14). Needham Heights, MA: Allyn & Bacon.
Photo: “Business people giving a thumbs up” by Rawpixel Ltd is licensed under CC BY 2.0