Concision; okay, Conciseness
This is rule three of my five gold rules of expository writing, after clear and correct (two kinds). I held off a bit waiting for some good examples of not being concise, so I could be a curmudgeon bwhahaha.
Okay, let’s get serious. When you’re concise, you use all the words that are necessary, but no more. “On a daily basis” is not concise, because “daily” means the same thing. The rule is if you can say something with fewer words, do so. A synonym, terse, means “being a little too concise, so you sound unfriendly.” We won’t get into that. Being concise means you don’t waste your reader’s time or distract your reader from your content. Here are a few bad examples, anonomized to prevent embarrassment:
The first screen you will view is the ‘My Profile’ screen which is your profile. This screen is broken down into 3 sections
Here’s concise:
The first screen is the ‘My Profile’ screen, which has 3 sections
Better, right? Here’s another:
Next, click on the ‘My Plan’ tab to view the details and/or to update your Performance Plan
The “next” isn’t necessary from the context, which I’m not showing.
Click ‘My Plan’ to view or update your Plan
Microsoft (and Apple) specify a certain amount of conciseness in their style guides. For example you should “click OK,” not “click on the OK button.” I’m writing this a couple weeks ahead of when this’ll be posted, so I’ll keep my eyes open for some more examples:
Do you live in a remote area, or otherwise have difficulty bringing your computer in for repair?
Not as colorful, but definitely more to the point:
Do you have difficulty bringing your computer in for repair?
Here’s one I ran into today. I’ll just mark out the redundancy.
Hoffman-Richter Warranty Registration is currently not available
as of this time.
Leave a Reply