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Business Writing: The Dance of I, You, and We

 

Business writing resembles a dance in many ways. The writer leads, and the reader follows andbusiness-writing responds. There is both grace and logic. Every time you write, you initiate. You start a new dance with your partner, the reader. There needs to be a connection between the writer and reader for a document to work. You lead, but this dance needs both of you.

Why, why, why, then, is so much business writing stilted and awkward and muddled, especially as it is generally written by very smart, engaged writers?

I asked a group of very talented consultants this question in a recent business writing course. Intuitively, they understood certain documents were uninteresting, and even disorganized. We discussed at length why they would lead with writing to clients that was unengaging and even muddled. Eventually, we cut to the heart of the issue. Fear.

"I don't want to stand out too much."

"Everyone else writes this way."

"My boss used these terms at a meeting."

"It seems what everyone else does."

"I thought if I was vague I wouldn't get too many questions."

Words can do a lot of things. However, they cannot both hide you and persuade others at the same time.

Business writing should follow a I-You-We pattern:

  1. Why I am writing this
  2. What you need to know to take action or decide or understand
  3. What I need from you and when

Take the lead and draw your reader in confidently and correctly, with steps that are your own. Parroting what is typical will not work when so much business writing is awkward.

Be the stand out.

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Comments

Dance is such a lovely simile for the writer/reader interaction. I could immediately understand the point you were making. And the image of dancers gives writers a visual prompt to remind them of the steps they need to take to ensure their partners (readers) follow them.
Posted @ Saturday, January 28, 2012 2:32 PM by Lynda McDaniel
Hi Lynda, Thanks for stopping by.  
 
I liked the visual imagery of dance, too. So often business writers issue one-way edicts, but effective business writing hinges on the reader.
Posted @ Monday, January 30, 2012 9:26 AM by Mary Cullen
Yes, the business writing "dance" is lie an awkward fox trot. Somehow everyone gets stiff about it, because you're supposed to sound professional.  
I get so many cover letters with resumes that sound like they were written by robots. Help!
Posted @ Tuesday, January 31, 2012 9:08 AM by Lois Geller
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