Conciseness and Clarity
Here are some guidelines to achieve conciseness and clarity in your writing.
1. Cut Unnecessary Words
- Why? Extra words don't add meaning—they just make sentences longer.
- Example:
- Avoid: "In my opinion, I think that exercise is very good for health." (Redundant: "In my opinion" and "I think" mean the same thing.)
- Better: "Exercise improves health." (Clear and direct.)
2. Use Strong Verbs
- Why? Strong verbs make sentences sharper and more engaging.
- Example:
- Avoid: "She made a decision to go." ("Made a decision" is weak phrasing.)
- Better: "She decided to go." (Stronger and shorter.)
3. Avoid Repetition
- Why? Repeating the same idea wastes words and bores readers.
- Example:
- Avoid: "The meeting was held at 3 PM in the afternoon." ("3 PM" already means "afternoon.")
- Better: "The meeting was at 3 PM." (No extra words needed.)
4. Try to Keep Sentences Short
- Why? Long sentences are harder to follow. Short ones keep readers engaged.
- Example:
- Avoid: "Because it was raining heavily, we decided to cancel the trip, which we had planned for weeks." (Too long—two ideas in one sentence.)
- Better: "We canceled the trip due to heavy rain." (Clear and to the point.)
5. Be Direct
- Why? Indirect language (like "might be possible") makes writing sound unsure.
- Example:
- Avoid: "It might be possible that some people don't like this idea." (Weak phrasing.)
- Better: "Some people may dislike this idea." (Stronger and more confident.)
6. Remove Filler Phrases
- Why? Phrases like "the fact of the matter is" and "last but not least” add no meaning.
- Example:
- Avoid: "The fact of the matter is that success requires effort." (Unnecessary intro.)
- Better: "Success requires effort." (Straight to the point.)
7. Use Active Voice
Active voice means the subject performs the action (e.g., "The cat ate the fish"). Passive voice means the subject receives the action (e.g., "The fish was eaten by the cat"). Use active voice for clearer, stronger writing. Passive voice works when the doer is unknown or unimportant (e.g., "The window was broken"). Always prefer active unless you have a good reason for passive.
- Example:
- Avoid: "The report was written by the team." (Passive voice—who did the action is unclear.)
- Better: "The team wrote the report." (Active voice—clear who did it.)
8. Organize Ideas Logically
- Why? Jumping between ideas confuses readers. Group related thoughts together.
- Example:
- Avoid: "I like apples. They are healthy. Oranges are good too." (Scattered thoughts.)
- Better: "I like apples and oranges because they are healthy." (Combined logically.)