Business Writing: Tips for Efficient Communication

You can improve your profitability by ensuring clear and concise communication. Business writing is present at every level of any organisation and assumes many forms.

In this blog, learn 5 key tips for business writing, as well as a checklist of considerations.

 Business Writing – what is it?

Business writing is any type of writing that is used in a professional setting. It is a purposeful piece of writing that conveys relevant information to the reader. Consequently, it must be presented well. Examples of business writing include client proposals, reports, memos, emails, and notices. As such, good business writing skills improve internal as well as external communications.

Proficiency in business writing is a critical aspect of effective communication in the workplace. Poor business writing wastes time. Ultimately, this can lead to costly mistakes.

By focusing on the following five areas, you can create professional documents that are quick and easy to read and action. In doing so, you can improve your company’s efficiency.

5 Tips

1  Know the purpose of your message

The broad field of business writing can be broken down into the following four categories based on the objective.

Instructional

When your aim is to give the reader information that will help them complete a task, it’s called Instructional writing. To make the information easy to follow and instructive, you could offer a step-by-step format. This business writing style is often written with a neutral, competent tone. For example, manuals and technical use Instructional writing techniques.

Informational

Informational business writing comprises of documents essential to the core functions of the business for tracking growth, outlining plans, and complying with legal obligations. For example, the financial statements of a company, minutes of a meeting, or report writing.  Informational writing needs to be accurate. Therefore, you should consider the best way to present detail carefully. Charts and graphs can be read far more quickly than tables of figures.

 Persuasive

Persuasive writing uses words to impress the reader and convince them to listen or to act. We associate sales and marketing with persuasive writing. It includes proposals and press releases. You must be able to attract the reader quickly and focus on what’s in it for them.

Transactional

Transactional writing is writing that is part of a chain of communication. Most of our day-to-day communication at the workplace falls under the transactional business writing category. The bulk of such communication is by email, but also includes official letters, forms, and invoices. The writing style is usually brief and to the point.

For all four categories of writing, your introduction should answer these three questions from the perspective of the reader:

What is this?

Why am I getting it?

What do you want me to do?

 

2 Be clear and concise

People often misinterpret unclear and long-winded messages. Presenting the crux of the passage in the first 150 words is important. It saves the reader time and sharpens the argument.

Business executives value a document they can scan quickly. Using numbered or bulleted lists, clear headings, concise paragraphs, and the use of bold formatting to highlight keywords will enable them to do this.

 

3 Use the active voice

The active voice puts the subject or person before the action.

Active voice is a way to take control of your writing. When you sound confident, your reader or audience is more likely to trust what you have to say. Passive voice often makes the writer appear unsure. The active voice is direct, strong, and easier to read. There is a clear difference between ‘The report was submitted by Bob’ (passive) and ‘Bob submitted the report’ (active).

 

If you want to present a solid argument and influence your reader, use the active voice in your business writing.

 

4 Templates

Using templates for regular types of communication such as proposals or reports can speed up the process. Templates will also help you to create a consistent brand style. However, don’t rely on them to the point of losing originality or becoming dull and ineffective. Ensure that emails are read. Your email is not the only one which the recipient will read that day!

 

5 The Final Check

Correct grammar, spelling and punctuation speeds up the ability to read a document. In addition, the tone of the phrases you use can completely alter the message you want to deliver. Read your document through a couple of times before sending and if necessary, get a second opinion.

 

Considerations: Remember the 10 ‘Cs’ of Business Writing

  1. Complete: include the when, where, why, who, and how
  2. Concise: remove redundant words and stock phrases
  3. Clear: make sure there’s no ambiguity or doubt
  4. Conversational: write like you’re talking to someone face-to-face
  5. Correct: use the correct spelling, grammar, and information
  6. Coherent: write down your thoughts and ideas in a logical manner
  7. Credible: always check your facts and your sources
  8. Concrete: avoid using vague words and phrases such as idioms
  9. Courteous: use a positive tone and put the reader first
  10. Considerate: make your writing easy to read and scan

 

For further hints and tips, have a look at our Essential Business Writing Skills You Need to Learn piece!

How to land a great presentation from an idea

In this piece, Professional Development Trainer Karen tells us how to make sure Presentations hit the mark. From preparation to delivery, there are six crucial elements to consider. Karen shares them with us here.

In conversation with Karen from our learning solutions delivery team

Karen, we were talking about the welcome growing levels of face-to-face training we are experiencing (something we here at STL have maintained and supported throughout the last 2 years). We got onto considering that there are going to be plenty of us who may have to give our first in person presentation for quite some time and it’s only natural to feel some nerves!

What suggestions would you recommend to someone preparing for a presentation?

Preparation:  vital for great presentations

It’s important to remember that there is more to a successful presentation than simply standing in front of an audience and doing your thing. Preparation is vital and the more time and effort your commit to this, the better your chances of being successful.

What are you trying to achieve?

As a result of your presentation do you want the audience to:

      • Know something
      • Decide something
      • Do something

It could be just one of the above, a combination of or all three but it’s important to recognise exactly what you want from your audience before you begin to prepare. Turn your idea into a deeper thought.

If it’s a business presentation you should also consider if, by delivering it, you will be helping to improve:

      • Productivity
      • Efficiency
      • Profitability

If the presentation doesn’t help increase any of these things, then ask yourself whether it’s worth doing at all? If it does, then make sure the audience knows that as well.

Do your audience research.

The more you know about who your audience are, the easier it becomes to tailor your presentation to ensure it meets their needs. Ask these questions to build a profile of your audience prior to delivering your presentation to help you to frame your story. 

      • What are their roles?
      • How will your presentation benefit them?
      • What relevant knowledge/experience do they already have?
      • Is there anything in your presentation that might cause concern?
      • What are their communication preferences?

Clarity. Beginning, middle and end.

Use the beginning of your presentation to explain the purpose and context. For example, you might want to pose a question. On the other hand, you might want to make a statement or use some statistics and/or a picture that ‘hooks’ the audience. As a result, they will be eager to hear more.

The middle of your presentation is all about making sure you provide the right level of detail, delivered in the right way. Making certain your audience have understood what you want from them as a result of your delivery.

We use the end of the presentation to confirm the important points you have made, to remind the audience of what you now want them to know, decide or do.

Logistics

Don’t make the mistake of preparing a beautiful presentation on PowerPoint and then finding that there is no projector available in the room. Equally important, make sure you know many people are likely to turn up. By knowing this, you can ensure adequate space and availability of refreshments. Details like these are often overlooked when we focus solely on the presentation itself. Here is a quick checklist of things to make sure meet your needs:

      • Venue/Room – is it big enough to fit people in, and do you have space to walk around?
      • Audience invites – Are all attendees aware of the time and place of the presentation?
      • Technology – do you have a projector available? Can you connect it to your laptop?
      • Flip charts/pens – if your presentation is interactive, make sure activities have the necessary equipment.
      • Refreshments – this helps attendees feel relaxed, knowing that they have water, or tea and coffee available (and appropriate snacks! Don’t provide crisps!)

Ready yourself.

You know yourself better than anyone so make sure you prepare yourself to be successful.

      • Practice the presentation beforehand and get some feedback.
      • Get a good night’s sleep beforehand.
      • Make sure you have water available as even the most confident of presenters can get a dry mouth.
      • Visualise a successful presentation. This really works, try it!

Conclusion

In order to ensure a great presentation, start with solid preparation. As Alexander Graham Bell wisely said “Before anything else, preparation is the key to success”

Thank you, Karen for sharing these tips!

Further Reading

For even more top tips for great presentations Presentation Skills Training London Course (stl-training.co.uk)