Building Plain Language From the Ground Up
Part I -- The Plain Language Process
By Cheryl Stephens
Plain language process directs every
plain language project. Yet, for something so concrete, the
concept can be illusive. This and the next four articles will
provide a blueprint for building a plain language document from
the ground up.
Here are the key phases:

|
Foundation:
Get to know your audience -- who they are, what you want them to
learn or do, and why you are writing to them. |

|
The frame:
Organize your information in a way that is logical to your
readers. |

|
Ground level:
Draft and edit the text using plain language guidelines. |

|
Second level:
Test the text for readability and suitability for the
audience. |

|
Exterior design:
Design the document using plain language design criteria on
everything from typeface to whitespace, from color to stock. |
This series will cover all these phases, while this article
will describe the best practice for building your foundation.
The Foundation
Start by getting a clear picture of who is your reading
audience, why you are writing to them and what outcome you want.
Once you have this critical information in place, you are ready
to begin construction.
The cornerstones of your foundation are the who,
why, and what. If each of these
cornerstones is carefully laid out, you'll be successful in
reaching your readers. If any one of them is weak, it can erode
your base and bring the project down with it. These questions are
the key to achieving plain language.
The Who
It's important to know who you're writing for. Plain
language process demands a detailed blueprint of your
audience.
Measuring your audience with assumptions is as dangerous as
guessing the amount of cement needed for a foundation. The
special tools used in the plain language field to measure your
audience include: surveys, statistical data (social and
economic), interviews or on-site visits, and personal or expert
observation and knowledge.
Try to gather the following information:

|
General:
What is the typical reader's age, sex, race, ethnicity,
language, education, training, lifestyle, work style? |

|
Topic-related:
What is the reader's knowledge or familiarity with your
topic, need for or relationship to the information, patterns of
use? |

|
Document-related:
When will the reader use it? Where? How? For how long? What are
their preferences for style, size? What restrictions are imposed
by deadlines, formats, laws? |
The Why
If you can clearly articulate why you are writing something,
chances are better that your audience will clearly understand why
they are reading it. This may sound simple; but it becomes a
stumbling block for many writers. When your writing project seems
out of control, go back to the foundations and check to make sure
your concept and purpose are solid.
Build a strong base for this step by asking: Is my purpose
here to inform? Educate? Advise? Promote? Train? Inspire and
mobilize? Make a record? Sell?
The why is a framework. It suggests the appropriate structure.
It sets limits. Doubts about what information to keep or discard
can always be clarified by going back to the purpose.
The What
What outcome do you want? What do you expect your reader to
do? What picture do you have of the result? Just as an architect
knows whether he's building an office tower or a funhouse,
you should know what your audience will do: take action, change
habits, improve performance, feel better.
With a clear understanding of your audience and the needs of
the project as your foundation, you can proceed with
construction. You can now put up the framework of the document.
Our next article will look at ways to organize you information
for ease of use and greatest effect.
Next page.
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