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All previous editions of the Clear Language Club newsletter in one neat and tidy archive.

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3. Persuade the doubters Newsletter

Why plain language is for everyone, designing a style guide people will use, and the book for all budding content designers.

We're on issue three of Plain English Weekly already and there are now almost exactly 100 of you fine people subscribed. Thank you, thank you!

I promise I won't bang on about it every week, but the best way for this newsletter to grow is if you share it with other likeminded souls. If you get chance, please forward the emails and send people to the website to subscribe. I will happily give you three invisible biscuits in return. Imagine!

On to this week's links...

Iain

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I run plain English workshops that help teams of all sizes start writing content in clear language. Email iain@verymeta.com if you'd like to know more and we can have a chit-chat.

Plain Language Is for Everyone, Even Experts

One web page (and associated video) full of useful advice, information and practical things you can do to improve your writing. The thrust of the piece shows why the people who might typically argue against clear language are, in fact, wrong. You can use this to persuade the doubters you find in your own work.


How to design a style guide that people actually use

Some useful insight here from Angela Moore writing on the excellent Scroll blog. If you've ever needed a style guide or you have one and no one uses it, this is a really good place to start.

Allow me to share a tip of my own. It sounds silly, but there is one style guide of mine that got used the most. I knew it would make a huge impact if everyone embraced it, but there was low digital maturity in the team. So I printed hard copies out and put them on everyone's desks.

It worked because they could see it right there in front of them and watch each other use it as a reference document. Within a few months, they were adding new stuff to the guide themselves and gradually we all moved to the digital version, which was collectively kept up to date. Win!


GOV.UK style guide - A to Z

Of course, if you don't have a style guide for your organisation, you can always borrow some good advice from elsewhere. My freelance work is currently in the public sector on projects in local and national government, so the GOV.UK style guide is more or less my best pal at this point.


Noun vs Verb: What’s the Difference?

If you don't mind me saying so, I am pretty good at writing in clear language. But can I remember all the different types of verb, noun and any other linguistic reference without checking Google? Nope. Nope I can't.


Book: Content Design by Sarah Winters

If plain English is part of your role as a content designer, chances are this book needs no introduction. It's the authority on content design and sits on my desk next to me every day. If you write web content of any kind, I recommend you get a copy for your desk too.


"Being clear in your language is the fastest route to making someone else understand what you are trying to communicate. Nothing else."
Sarah Winters, Content Design

New reader?

Join a growing community of 100ish plain language champs and start getting advice and resources that help you write clearer, more accessible content.

2: One person at a time Newsletter

Who plain English benefits, ideal sentence length, and a tool that identifies complex writing.

2: One person at a time
Photo by nina lindgren / Unsplash

Thank you for subscribing to Plain English Weekly and welcome to the second issue ever. Share it with the world! Forward the email!

I want to be short and to the point with these intros so you can get to the good stuff quickly. But I also want to get to know you a little better, if that's okay?

Clear language works across all sectors and subjects. So, if you don't mind me asking, what do you do and how does plain English fit into your work?

You can reply to this email. If you want to go public, you can leave a comment on the web version. Just use your email to sign in.

That's it!

Iain

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Quick note to say I run exciting plain English workshops with teams from all sorts of organisations. Email iain@verymeta.com if you'd like to know more about how they work.

How to improve your writing with plain English

An absolutely smashing guide from the team at Scope, who do a brilliant job of creating accessible content. The principles here are all great and repeat much of the advice in the free guide from the Plain English Campaign. But it's the section on who plain English benefits that I really recommend.


Sentence length: why 25 words is our limit

This post on GOV.UK is from 2014 but the benefits of writing shorter sentences remain the same today. One other thing that I always emphasise when running training sessions is one idea per sentence. It forces you to think about what you are trying to say and helps get the word count down.


The joy of plain language; my Bob Ross inspired approach to content design

A good article by Jonathan Vaughan from the Royal National Institute for Deaf People. I like the section on reading age as well as the idea of thinking about and writing for one person at a time.


Principles that guide our content design and communications in Funeralcare

It's all well and good using clear language, but you still have to get the right tone and choose the right words. It's even more important when writing about difficult or sensitive topics. The Co-op team do lots of great work and this piece by lead content designer, Helen Lawson, is a fine example.


Tool: Hemingway Editor

Want robots to tell you when your writing is too complex? That's more or less what Hemingway has been doing for years. I don't use it personally, but I know a lot of people who do include it in their daily writing process.


"That's all we have, finally, the words, and they had better be the right ones."
Raymond Carver

New reader?

Join a growing community of clear language champs and start getting advice and resources that help you write clearer, more accessible content.

1. Start with principles Newsletter

Some plain English essentials, how to present numbers clearly and a handy character counter tool.

Welcome to the first edition of Plain English Weekly, an exciting new newsletter for people who love clear language. I'm Iain Broome, by the way.

The format is simple. Every week, I send you five links to the internet's best advice, tools and resources created to help you write clearer, more accessible content.

That's it! Pretty simple, right?

Subscribe for free on the Plain English Weekly website and learn a little more about the project.

If someone you work with will find these emails useful, do forward them on.

And look at that – we're up and running!

Iain


How to write in plain English

This is the magic web page I've referred to and shared with others for many years. It's a short overview of plain English from the Plain English Campaign. These are the basics and a great place to start for most people.


10 principles for writing in plain English

A few years ago, Gather Content asked me to write an article for them that outlined some of the principles of plain English. In general, I always think it's a good idea to start with principles when you're learning something new. Get the essentials down and then go from there.

Anyway, the piece proved popular and you can still read it online today – hooray for the internet! Quick disclaimer – they have added a few images and maybe made some changes to the copy. Some of it looks unfamiliar, but most of it is mine!


The Handy List of Human Words

This is a great list of complex words with some suggestions for more human – clearer – alternatives. It was put together by Deanna Horton, a content designer currently at Shopify.


Designing services for people who need help with numbers

A superb resource if you create content that includes plenty of numbers. Led by Laura Parker, this project helps you present numbers and data more clearly. It includes the thinking and evidence as well as practical advice you can use in your own work right away. Lovely stuff.


Tool: Character and word counter

Just about as simple a tool as you can get. But also very useful. Paste some text in the box. Get a character and word count. Edit the text and see the counters change in real-time. Great for when you need to edit copy down to a specific length.

Extra note: one fantastic way to get better at editing existing copy into plain English is to try and halve it. So if you have 100 words, can you get it down to 50 without losing any meaning? This tool is perfect for this exercise.


"Knowing what you're trying to say is always important. But knowing what you've actually said is critical. It's easier to tell what you're saying in a short sentence."
Verlyn Klinkenborg

First-time reader?

Plain English weekly is written and sent by Iain Broome, a freelance content designer and copywriter from the UK. Join a growing community of clear language champs and start receiving advice and resources that help you write clearer, more accessible content.