Guest post written by Carol Duke.
Let’s face it: Poor writing is costing your business BIG time.
Writing is a vital skill that can be applied to many areas in our life. But how exactly does it impact the success of your business?
In this day and age, where most people are communicating in 140 characters or less, you tend to become counter-culture if you can actually write, which, by the way, is a great advantage. But this lack of formality can come at a heavy price. With frequent use of emojis and text-speak, writing skills are declining at an incredibly fast pace.
Businesses aren’t immune to this trend. Bad writing - one that’s exceedingly informal, vague, or riddled with meaningless jargon, has made its way into the workforce as well. In a business context, it’s essential to have a firm control of the way we express our message.
What is the cost of poor writing in your business?
According to an article published by the Harvard Business Review, bad business writing is “a hidden source of friction that is slowing your company down”.
For the first three months of 2016, the survey targeted businesspersons who wrote at least 2 hours per week, including writing emails. These individuals spent an average of 25.5 hours a week reading for work - about a third of which was email.
Of the 547 businesspersons surveyed, 81% agreed that poorly written content wastes a lot of their time. Many admit that what they read is often ineffective because it’s too long, very poorly organized, unclear and imprecise, and filled with technical jargon.
Instead of speeding up communication, a poorly written email, business proposal or instruction memo slows down productivity, and confuses the content of the message. In turn, the time spent to work out the true meaning of a badly written message means:
- Additional expenses
- Unfinished/incomplete work
- Missed due dates
- Additional costs that are mostly avoidable