Everyday words and phrases work best for clear and persuasive writing. Here are some helpful tips for avoiding bizspeak and telling it like it is.
You could be losing influence, time and money if your emails, proposals and marketing content fail to win people over. Worse, you could even be repelling readers with two much bizspeak and jargon.
With so much complexity already swirling around us, it’s more important than ever to remove buzzwords and simplify your messages. Plain writing works better because it actually sounds like how we talk to each other.
Avoiding bizspeak is covered in one of the many helpful chapters found in Bryan A. Garner’s “HBR Guide to Better Business Writing.” It’s a great source of inspiration and guidance for daily business writing which is why I keep it handy at all times.
Garner has even created the Bizspeak Blacklist. Hunt these down and get rid of them. He’s also suggested alternative phrasing in the chart below:
actionable (apart from legal action)
agreeance
as per
at the end of the day
back of the envelope
bandwidth (outside electronics)
bring our A game
client-centered
come-to-Jesus
core competency
CYA
drill down
ducks in a row
forward initiative
going forward
go rogue
guesstimate
harvesting efficiencies
hit the ground running
impact, vb.
incent
incentivize
impactful
kick the can down the road
let’s do lunch
let’s take this offline
level the playing field
leverage, vb.
liaise
mission-critical
monetize
net-net
on the same page
operationalize
optimize
out of pocket (except in reference to expenses)
paradigm shift
parameters
per
planful
push the envelope
pursuant to
putting lipstick on a pig
recontextualize
repurpose
rightsized
sacred cow
scalable
seamless integration
seismic shift (outside earthquake references)
smartsized
strategic alliance
strategic dynamism
synergize
synergy
think outside the box
throw it against the wall and see if it sticks
throw under the bus
turnkey
under the radar
utilization, utilize
value-added
verbage (the correct term is verbiage – in reference only to verbose phrasings)
where the rubber meets the road
win-win
Garner sums up his chapter very directly and simply:
Bizspeak may seem like a convenient shorthand, but it suggests to readers that you’re on autopilot, thoughtlessly using boilerplate phrases that they’ve heard over and over. Brief, readable documents, by contrast, show care and thought – and earn people’s attention.
Have a great week.
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