1.2 Conventions and Characteristics

Every genre of writing has unique characteristics and rules, called conventions, that help readers classify a document as belonging to a particular genre. This also applies to film and music. Think about the last movie you saw. What type of movie was it? What was it about that movie that gave you that impression? Did the characters wear Stetson hats, ride horses, and carry guns? Did they fly in space ships, encounter alien beings, and use futuristic technology? Those elements are typical conventions of Western and science fiction genres.

Non-fiction is a category that can be broken into various genres. The main genres that are relevant to us are journalism (newspaper writing), academic writing (written by scholars and published in peer-reviewed academic journals or books), technical writing, and writing for business purposes. Before we get into the specific conventions that characterize business writing, take a moment to think back to your academic writing course and list some conventions typical of journalism (popular press) and academic writing in Table 1.1.1.

Table 1.1.1 Identify the conventions for journalistic and academic writing
Criteria Journalistic Academic
Purpose
Audience
Writing Style
Tone
Structure
Format/Formatting
Other Features

Like journalism and scholarly writing, business writing also has distinct features in addition to a professional tone and style that readers expect to see in documents that fall within this genre. These include (a) use of headings to organize information into coherent sections, (b) use of lists to present information concisely, (c) use of figures and tables to present data and information visually, and (d) use of visual design to enhance readability (all of these topics are covered in Chapter 4: Document Design). These conventions signal the main purposes of business writing, which include communicating the following:

 

• requests, approvals, confirmations, refusals, adjustments
• analyses relating to compliance, findings, observations
• proposed solutions, projects, and recommendations to solve problems
• information that advances the goals of the company or organization, overall

Business documentation is intended to communicate information to the people who need it in a way that is clear and easy to read, and conveyed at the right time to help make decisions, support productivity, and sustain relationships. Designing business communication is like designing any other product for an intended user: the ultimate goal is to make it “reader-friendly.”

Keywords here are accessible, usable, clear, goal-oriented, effective, and reader-centered.  The characteristics of business writing support these goals and concepts.

Image providing the principles of a well written technical documents, including audience, structure, layout, purpose and content
Figure 1.1.1 An overview of the elements of any well-written technical document (Shea, 2019).

If we filled in Table 1.1.1 with typical characteristics of business writing, it might look something like Table 1.1.2:

Table 1.1.2 Conventions of business writing
Criteria Business Writing
Purpose To communicate information in a clear, accessible, readable manner to people who need to use it to make decisions, perform tasks, or support company goals.
Audience Varied, but can include fellow employees such as subordinates, colleagues, managers, and executives, as well as clients and other stakeholders, the general public, and even readers within the legal system.
Writing Style Concise, clear, plain, and direct language; may include specialized terminology; typically uses short sentences and paragraphs; uses the active voice; makes purpose immediately clear.
Tone Professional in tone, which falls between formal and informal; may use first person or second person if appropriate; courteous and constructive.
Structure Highly structured; short paragraphs; clear transitions and structural cues (headings and sub-headings) that highlight document organization.
Format/Formatting Can be in electronic, visual, or printed formats; may be long (reports) or short (emails, letters, memos); often created with the use of style guides to plan formatting features; uses headings, lists, figures and tables.
Other Features Typically objective and neutral; ideas are evidence and data-driven; descriptors are precise and quantitative whenever possible.

 

Knowledge Check

 

References

Shea Writing and Training Solutions. (2019). Principles of Technical Writing.  https://www.sheaws.com/basic-principles-of-technical-writing/.

License

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Communication Essentials for Business Copyright © 2019 by Suzan Last (Original Author) Robin L. Potter (Adapter) Tricia Nicola Hylton (H5P) is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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