Six Principles of Good Writing vs. Amazon’s Memo StrategyDiscussion TopicI’m Done Your response to this discussion is due by
Six Principles of Good Writing vs. Amazon's Memo StrategyDiscussion TopicI'm Done
Your response to this discussion is due by this week Friday before midnight Eastern Standard Time (EST).
You are also asked to respond to at least one other student in the class on his or her response.
Your response to your fellow student is due by this week Sunday before midnight Eastern Standard Time (EST).
Please note that you will not be able to see other students' responses to this discussion topic until you post your response.
In the Content for week 2, you are reading a section titled “Good Writing.” In that section, Edward Bailey’s six points of good writing are listed.
Please take note of Bailey’s six points of good writing. Then access the following message from Jeff Bezos to shareholders at Amazon.com:
Read: Message from Jeff Bezos to Amazon Shareholders
Please read only the section of this message titled, "Six-Page Narratives." You don't have to read the whole message.
Answer the following questions related to this reading. Then post your answers as your response to this discussion topic.
- In banning PowerPoint and asking for six-page memos, is Jeff Bezos violating any of Bailey’s six principles? If so, which ones does he seem to violate, and why do you make the case that he violates them? If not, explain why his strategy does not violate any of the six principles.
- Why might Bezos prefer a six-page memo read silently for 30 minutes at the beginning of a meeting to a PowerPoint presentation? What advantage might such a memo have over a PowerPoint presentation?
Please feel free to conduct your own searches on this issue. Various articles have been written about Amazon’s ban of PowerPoint in its internal meetings, and these articles have additional quotes from Bezos
Good Writing
One common concern is to simply address the question, what is good writing? As we progress
through our study of written business communication, we’ll try to answer it. But recognize that while
the question may be simple, the answer is complex. Edward P. Bailey (2008) offered several key
points to remember.
Good business writing
follows the rules,
is easy to read, and
attracts the reader.
Let’s examine these qualities in more depth.
Bailey’s first point is one that generates a fair amount of debate. What are the rules? Do “the rules”
depend on audience expectations or industry standards, what your English teacher taught you, or
are they reflected in the amazing writing of authors you might point to as positive examples? The
answer is “all of the above,” with a point of clarification. You may find it necessary to balance
audience expectations with industry standards for a document and may need to find a balance or
compromise. Bailey (2008) pointed to common sense as one basic criterion of good writing, but
common sense is a product of experience. When searching for balance, reader understanding is the
deciding factor. The correct use of a semicolon may not be what is needed to make a sentence work.
Your reading audience should carry extra attention in everything you write because, without them,
you won’t have many more writing assignments.
When we say that good writing follows the rules, we don’t mean that a writer cannot be creative.
Just as an art student needs to know how to draw a scene in correct perspective before he or she
can “break the rules” by “bending” perspective, a writer needs to know the rules of language. Being
well versed in how to use words correctly, form sentences with proper grammar, and build logical
paragraphs are skills the writer can use no matter what the assignment. Even though some business
settings may call for conservative writing, there are other areas where creativity is not only allowed
but also mandated. Imagine working for an advertising agency or a software development firm; in
such situations success comes from expressing new, untried ideas. By following the rules of language
and correct writing, a writer can express those creative ideas in a form that comes through clearly
and promotes understanding.
Learning Resource
Similarly, writing that is easy to read is not the same as “dumbed down” or simplistic writing. What is
easy to read? For a young audience, you may need to use straightforward, simple terms, but to
ignore their use of the language is to create an artificial and unnecessary barrier. An example
referring to Miley Cyrus may work with one reading audience and fall flat with another. Profession-
specific terms can serve a valuable purpose as we write about precise concepts. Not everyone will
understand all the terms in a profession, but if your audience is largely literate in the terms of the
field, using industry terms will help you establish a relationship with your readers.
The truly excellent writer is one who can explain complex ideas in a way that the reader can
understand. Sometimes ease of reading can come from the writer’s choice of a brilliant illustrative
example to get a point across. In other situations, it can be the writer’s incorporation of definitions
into the text so that the meaning of unfamiliar words is clear. It may also be a matter of choosing
dynamic, specific verbs that make it clear what is happening and who is carrying out the action.
Bailey’s third point concerns the interest of the reader. Will they want to read it? This question
should guide much of what you write. We increasingly gain information from our environment
through visual, auditory, and multimedia channels, from YouTube to streaming audio, and to watching
the news online. Some argue that this has led to a decreased attention span for reading, meaning
that writers need to appeal to readers with short, punchy sentences and catchy phrases. However,
there are still plenty of people who love to immerse themselves in reading an interesting article,
proposal, or marketing piece.
Perhaps the most universally useful strategy in capturing your reader’s attention is to state how your
writing can meet the reader’s needs. If your document provides information to answer a question,
solve a problem, or explain how to increase profits or cut costs, you may want to state this in the
beginning. By opening with a “what’s in it for me” strategy, you give your audience a reason to be
interested in what you’ve written.
More Qualities of Good Writing
To the above list from Bailey, let’s add some additional qualities that define good writing. Good
writing
meets the reader’s expectations,
is clear and concise, and
is efficient and effective.
To meet the reader’s expectations, the writer needs to understand who the intended reader is. In
some business situations, you are writing just to one person: your boss, a coworker in another
department, or an individual customer or vendor. If you know the person well, it may be as easy for
you to write to him or her as it is to write a note to your parent or roommate. If you don’t know the
person, you can at least make some reasonable assumptions about his or her expectations, based on
the position he or she holds and its relation to your job.
In other situations, you may be writing a document to be read by a group or team, an entire
department, or even a large number of total strangers. How can you anticipate their expectations
and tailor your writing accordingly? Naturally, you want to learn as much as you can about your likely
audience. How much you can learn and what kinds of information will vary with the situation. If you
are writing website content, for example, you may never meet the people who will visit the site, but
you can predict why they would be drawn to the site and what they would expect to read there.
Beyond learning about your audience, your clear understanding of the writing assignment and its
purpose will help you to meet reader expectations.
Our addition of the fifth point concerning clear and concise writing reflects the increasing tendency
in business writing to eliminate error. Errors can include those associated with production, from
writing to editing, and reader response. Your twin goals of clear and concise writing point to a
central goal across communication: fidelity. This concept involves our goal of accurately
communicating all the intended information with a minimum of signal or message breakdown or
misinterpretation. Designing your documents, including writing and presentation, to reduce message
breakdown is an important part of effective business communication.
This leads our discussion to efficiency. There are only 24 hours in a day, and we are increasingly
asked to do more with less, with shorter deadlines almost guaranteed. As a writer, how do you meet
ever-increasing expectations? Each writing assignment requires a clear understanding of the goals
and desired results, and when either of these two aspects is unclear, the efficiency of your writing
can be compromised. Rewrites require time that you may not have, but will have to make if the
assignment was not done correctly the first time.
As we have discussed previously, making a habit of reading similar documents prior to beginning
your process of writing can help establish a mental template of your desired product. If you can see
in your mind’s eye what you want to write, and have the perspective of similar documents combined
with audience’s needs, you can write more efficiently. Your written documents are products and will
be required on a schedule that impacts your coworkers and business. Your ability to produce
effective documents efficiently is a skill set that will contribute to your success.
Our sixth point reinforces this idea with an emphasis on effectiveness. What is effective writing? It
is writing that succeeds in accomplishing its purpose. Understanding the purpose, goals, and desired
results of your writing assignment will help you achieve this success. Your employer may want an
introductory sales letter to result in an increase in sales leads, or potential contacts for follow-up
leading to sales. Your audience may not see the document from that perspective, but will instead
read with the mindset of, “How does this help me solve X problem?” If you meet both goals, your
writing is approaching effectiveness. Here, effectiveness is qualified with the word “approaching” to
point out that writing is both a process and a product, and your writing will continually require effort
and attention to revision and improvement.
Rhetorical Elements and Cognate Strategies
Another approach to defining good writing is to look at how it fulfills the goals of two well-known
systems in communication. One of these systems comprises the three classical elements of rhetoric,
or the art of presenting an argument. These elements are logos (logic), ethos (ethics and credibility),
and pathos (emotional appeal), first proposed by the ancient Greek teacher Aristotle. Although
rhetoric is often applied to oral communication, especially public speaking, it is also fundamental to
good writing.
A second set of goals involves what are called cognate strategies, or ways of promoting
understanding, developed in recent decades by Kostelnick and Rogers (1998). Like rhetorical
elements, cognate strategies can be applied to public speaking, but they are also useful in developing
good writing. "Rhetorical Elements and Cognate Strategies," below, describes these goals, their
purposes, and examples of how they may be carried out in business writing.
Rhetorical Elements and Cognate Strategies
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An announcement will be made to the company later in the week, but I
wanted to tell you personally that as of the first of next month, I will be
leaving my position to accept a three-year assignment in our Singapore
office. As soon as further details about the management of your account are available, I will share them with you.
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In tomorrow’s conference call, Sean wants to introduce the new team
members, outline the schedule and budget for the project, and clarify each
person’s responsibilities in meeting our goals.
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Our department has matrix structure. We have three product development
groups, one for each category of product. We also have a manufacturing
group, a finance group, and a sales group; different group members are
assigned to each of the three product categories. Within the matrix, our structure is flat, meaning that we have no group leaders. Everyone reports
to Beth, the department manager.
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Having known and worked with Jesse for more than five years, I can highly
recommend him to take my place as your advisor. In addition to having
superb qualifications, Jesse is known for his dedication, honesty, and caring
attitude. He will always go the extra mile for his clients.
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Prices are exclusive of any federal, state, or local taxes. Payment terms are
net 30 days from date of invoice.
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According to an article in Business Week dated October 15, 2009, Doosan
is one of the largest business conglomerates in South Korea.
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I really don’t have words to express how grateful I am for all the support
you’ve extended to me and my family in this hour of need. You guys are the
best.
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It was unconscionable for a member of our organization to shout an
interruption while the president was speaking. What needs to happen now
—and let me be clear about this—is an immediate apology.
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Faithful soldiers pledge never to leave a fallen comrade on the battlefield.
Good writing is characterized by correctness, ease of reading, and attractiveness; it
also meets reader expectations and is clear, concise, efficient, and effective.
Rhetorical elements (logos, ethos, and pathos) and cognate strategies (clarity,
conciseness, arrangement, credibility, expectation, reference, tone, emphasis, and
engagement) are goals that are achieved in good business writing.
References
Bailey, E. (2008). Writing and speaking. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill.
Kostelnick, C., & Roberts, D. (1998). Designing visual language: Strategies for professional
communicators (p. 14). Needham Heights, MA: Allyn & Bacon.
Licenses and Attributions
Key Points
4.3 Good Writing (https://saylordotorg.github.io/text_business-communication-for-success/s08-03-
good-writing.html) from Business Communication for Success was adapted by Saylor Academy
and is available under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported
(https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/) license without attribution as requested by
the work's original creator or licensor. UMGC has modified this work and it is available under the
original license.
© 2022 University of Maryland Global Campus
All links to external sites were verified at the time of publication. UMGC is not responsible for the validity or integrity of information
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