Powerplay Communications
Follow Powerplay Communications
  • Welcome
  • Front Office
  • Operations
  • Wares
  • Mail Room
  • Content Solutions Blog

Content Solutions

"Words are only postage stamps delivering the object for you to unwrap."
~George Bernard Shaw

Melissa's Portfolio

Nonsense Business Language: What's It Good For?

1/13/2015

50 Comments

 
Picture
sBy Melissa Walsh

What’s nonsense business language good for? Absolutely nothing. 

Yet we see it on many websites, especially those of technical and industrial suppliers. True, despite poor web copy, these companies manage to stay in business. The rationale is, “We’re doing fine. No need to hire a professional to communicate who we are and what services and products we provide.” So the leaders of these companies choose to continue communicating to potential business partners and customer prospects like Mr. Spock instead of humans living on planet Earth. 

Certainly, this thinking leads to lost opportunity not calculated in an annual report. 

Instead of relying on a professional writer to develop website and other promotional copy, these business thinkers task the intern, low-level sales or operations employee, or maybe even the technical writer to pull something together in the spare time of their 9-to-5 day.   

The result is business jargon strong in hyperbole and weak in information. The copy is convoluted, wordy, dry, ineffective business speak that means little to a prospect seeking to understand what the business does and what differentiates it.

Here are examples of nonsense business language:
  • “appropriately facilitate enabled markets”
  • “distinctively build competitive best-of-class data and e-commerce deliverables”
  • “seamlessly conceptualize interdependent internal or ‘organic’ sources”
  • “proactively create team-building action items and synergistic principles”
  • “collaboratively build multifunctional imperatives”
  • “seamless growth strategies for cost-effective functionality and human capital”

Businesses who do not understand the value of investing in good writing post this nonsense on their websites, and likely in other communications pieces. A website is a window into a company. Yet too many companies present robotic nerds talking nonsense business jargon in the parlor. 

Good communication, formal and informal, breathes and has a human rhythm. Words should be short. Phrases should be succinct. The message should be authentic and stick to the reader’s memory. It should awaken, alert, and inform. A business should feed a message to a reader like a pass in sports — direct, vibrant, and crisp.

In the chapter “Business Writing: Writing in Your Job,” from his book On Writing Well, William Zinsser recommends being “yourself when you write” for business. For company leaders, this means knowing your company and its branding and presenting it sensibly and like a human in your business-to-business and business-to-customer communications. “You will stand out as a real person among the robots,” Zinsser says.

When written communication isn’t a core strength of a business, that business must bring on board a professional writer or writing team who can present the company’s strengths clearly, avoiding nonsense jargon.

© 2015, Powerplay Communications
"A website is a window into a company. Yet too many companies present robotic nerds talking nonsense business jargon in the parlor." 

~
Melissa Walsh

50 Comments

    Author

    Raised in the Motor City, Melissa Walsh is a writer and editorial guru with a background in book publishing, journalism, teaching, and applied engineering. Her identity is shared as a writer, mom,  history nerd, and hockey player. She also knows how to turn a wrench and use a scantool.

    See Melissa's Work Samples.

    Picture

    RSS Feed

    CLICK HERE TO SIGNUP FOR HOSTMONSTER.COM

    Archives

    July 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    March 2016
    January 2015
    March 2014
    February 2014
    December 2013
    March 2013
    February 2013

    Categories

    All
    Advertising
    Albert Camus
    Andrew Crofts
    Automotive Aftermarket
    Automotive Industry
    Automotive Service
    Autonomous Driving
    B2b
    Blogging
    Business To Business
    Business-to-business
    Car Hacking
    Communication
    Content Management
    Content Marketing
    Content Strategy
    Controller Area Network (CAN)
    Copywriting
    Cyberattack
    DITA XML
    Ebooks
    Editing
    Electric Vehicle
    Functional Safety
    Ghostwriting
    G.K. Chesterton
    Hybrid Electric Vehicle
    Inbound Marketing
    Language
    Marketing
    Mark Twain
    Publishing
    Self Publishing
    Self-publishing
    Slang
    Social Media
    Stephen King
    Systems Engineering
    Woodrow Wilson
    Writing

    RSS Feed

    PowerplaySwag
Site powered by Weebly. Managed by Hostmonster