Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byPenelope Blake Modified over 9 years ago
1
Chapter Six Improving Readability with Style and Design McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2014 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
2
6-2 Learning Objectives LO6.1 Describe and apply the following principles of writing style that improve ease of reading: completeness, conciseness, and natural processing LO6.2 Explain and use navigational design to improve ease of reading. LO6.3 Describe and apply the components of the reviewing stage, including a FAIR test, proofreading, and feedback.
3
6-3 Improving Ease of Reading with Completeness You can achieve completeness with three basic strategies: 1. providing all relevant information; 2. being accurate 3. being specific
4
6-4 Provide All Relevant Information The key to providing all but only relevant information is to plan, write, and review your message strategically Repeatedly asking yourself what information is necessary for the purpose of your message will help you accomplish this.
5
6-5 Be Accurate Accuracy, like specificity, strongly impacts your readers’ perceptions of your credibility Just one inaccurate statement can lead readers to dismiss your entire message and lower their trust in your future communications as well.
6
6-6 Be Specific The more specific you are, the more likely your readers are to have their questions answered If you are not specific, your readers may become impatient and begin scanning and skimming for the information they want
7
6-7 Improving Ease of Reading with Conciseness Conciseness implies omitting needless words so that readers can rapidly process your main ideas
8
6-8 Comprehension Rate and Sentence Length Figure 6.2
9
6-9 Avoid Wordy Prepositional Phrases Eliminating extra words allows you to get your ideas across as efficiently as possible. You will often find that you can reduce word count by 30 to 40 percent simply by converting many of your prepositional phrases into single-word verbs.
10
6-10 Use Action Verbs When Possible First, find nouns that you can convert to action verbs Second, find forms of the verb to be (e.g., be verbs such as is, are, am) and convert them into action verbs
11
6-11 Use Active Voice
12
6-12 Use Active Voice The doer-action-object allows for faster processing because most people’s natural thinking occurs in this way It also emphasizes the business orientation of action Most important, it specifies the doer
13
6-13 Use Short and Familiar Words and Phrases Whenever possible, choose short, conversational, and familiar words Using longer, less common ones slows processing and can distract from your message.
14
6-14 Use Parallel Language Using parallel language means that you apply a consistent grammatical pattern across a sentence or paragraph. Parallelism is most important when you use series or lists.
15
6-15 Using Highlight Key Words and Phrases When you want to highlight ideas or phrases, consider using bold, italics, or underlining to draw and keep your readers’ attention If you use too much special formatting, your main ideas will not stand out
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.