Title: Plain Talk Basics
1Plain Talk Basics
- How to get your message across to your readers
2What is Plain Talk?
- Clear communication that answers the readers
questions - Concise communication that considers the readers
time - Well designed documents that guide the readers to
key points and required action
3JOB 1
- As a writer, your one and only job is to be
understood by your audience
4Rule 1
- So, Plain Talk rule 1 is know your audience
5Your message should answer the following
questions
- What information do you have that they need to
know? - Why do they need to know it?
- Do they need to do something with it?
- When do they need to do it?
6Some Plain Talk Basics
- Make sure you and your reader are speaking the
same language
7- Avoid acronyms and jargon
- Use active voice
- Use pronouns
- Use common, everyday words
- Keep sentences and paragraphs short
- Use logical organization
- Use headlines and bulleted lists as guideposts
8What is jargon?
- Jargon is shorthand that we use to communicate
with each other.
This is the RFP for the new TPA at UMP. I have to
drop it off at OFM before PEBBs FSA meeting
today.
I have to go to a meeting on BHP recert
procedures, but I can meet you for lunch if we
can get back in time for FABs GMAP presentation
at 1 oclock.
9- We know jargon when we hear it, but we may not
recognize it when we use it.
10- Here are some terms we use that our customers may
not understand - COC (Certificate of Coverage)
- PEBB (Public Employee Benefits Board)
- Recertification
- Cost-share
- Out-of-pocket limit
- Deductible
- Beneficiary
- Coinsurance
- WAC (Washington Administrative Code)
- RCW (Revised Code of Washington)
-
11- If you must use a term that is not commonly known
to most readers, or one that has more than one
meaning
What is a certificate of coverage?
12Oh, OKit says right herea COC is the booklet
that gives me the details of my plans coverage.
13What is active voice?
- In sentences written in active voice, the subject
performs the action expressed in the verb. The
subject acts. - Its simply saying who does what to whom, in that
order. Here is an example The dog bit the boy. - In passive voice, the boy would have been bitten
by the dog The boy was bitten by the dog.
14So what?
- Either way, the boy has a bite
- and the dog is in trouble. Right?
15- Right, but it takes the reader less time and
effort to get the message when you use active
voice. - Sentences in active voice are
- Generally clearer and more direct
- More concise because fewer words are required to
express action
16Here are some more examples
- Passive Your application was rejected for lack
of complete information. - Active We rejected your application because you
did not give us all of the information we
requested. - Passive Your enrollment will be canceled if your
payment is not received by the due date. - Active We will cancel your enrollment if we do
not receive your payment by the due date. - Passive Your students dependent coverage will
no longer be in effect because eligibility rules
were not met. - Active We have canceled your students dependent
coverage because he no longer qualifies as a
dependent under PEBB rules.
17Use pronouns to make clear who is responsible for
what actions
- If you dont pay your bill on time we will cancel
your enrollment. - We will send you a new card as soon as you send
in your completed application. - If you do not choose a new health plan during
open enrollment, we will enroll you in the
Uniform Medical Plan.
18- Please dont ever say Mistakes were made.
- If we made a mistake, we will fix it. If you
make a mistake, we will ask you to fix it.
19Use common, everyday words
- I love words but I don't like strange ones. You
don't understand them and they don't understand
you. Old words is like old friends, you know 'em
the minute you see 'em. Will Rogers -
Most readers feel the same way as Americas
cowboy poet felt. Your customers shouldnt have
to use a dictionary to be able to understand you.
20Important Announcement
- National Talk-Like-A-Bureaucrat Month has been
canceled. - The new rule speak your customers language.
-
- With this
- you
- aid, help
- begin, start
- carry out, start
- by, following, per, under
- for, so
- for
- Replace this
- addressees
- assist, assistance
- commence
- implement
- in accordance with
- in order that
- in the amount of
21And the list goes on
- With this
- if
- issue, publish
- about
- give, send
- next
- end, stop
- use
- Replace this
- in the event of
- promulgate (lawyers love this)
- regarding
- submit
- subsequent
- terminate
- utilize, utilization
For many more simple word suggestions and other
Plain Language tips, go to http//www.plainlangua
ge.gov/
22Some good advice for writers from some really
smart people
- The most valuable of talents is never using two
words when one will do." Thomas Jefferson (Hes
the second one from the left.)
23- If you can't explain it simply, you don't
understand it well enough. Albert Einstein (Hes
the one with the big hair.)
24- Short, sweet, and to the point. Clear writing,
and therefore clear commands, comes from clear
thinking. Think simple. Timothy Ferriss (Hes the
one who wrote The 4-Hour Workweek.)
25Why use short sentences?
- Clear writing is as much about organization as it
is about using the right words. - Short sentences and single-idea paragraphs give
readers information in bite-size pieces that are
easy to digest.
26What do you mean by logical organization?
- Its anticipating the readers questions and
answering them in the order they occur.
What will they think of
next?
27Give your readers a road map
28- Use headlines to break up material and make it
easy for readers to skim until they find the
information they need.
29Use bulleted or numbered lists to draw attention
to Choices Multiple requirements
Steps in a process.
30The bitter truth?
- Its not about you.
- Its all about themthe reader.
- So, leave your ego and your college vocabulary at
the door. - You work for the people, and you need to speak
their language. Use words that work, not words
meant to impress.
31- Use familiar wordswords that your readers will
understand, and not words they will have to look
up. No advice is more elementary, and no advice
is more difficult to accept. When we feel an
impulse to use a marvelously exotic word, let us
lie down until the impulse goes away. James J.
KilpatrickJournalist, author, and syndicated
columnist -
32In summary
- Plain talk is not rocket science.
33And its not literature.
34Its communicating.
35Giving people information
36Speaking their language
37Anticipating their questions
38The best way to test your messages?
- Try them out on a coworker or family member.
- Ask them to read your document and tell you what
they think it says. - You will probably be surprisedand not in a good
way.
39A final word
- One should aim
- not at being possible to understand,
- but at being impossible to misunderstand.
- Quintilian, Roman teacher of rhetoric
and oratory
40Some excellent onlinePlain Talk resources
- Governor Gregoires Web site
- Plain Language.gov