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Wordnerdery Sue Horner’s monthly tips on words and ways to reach readers – January 2023

Issue 119 – January 2023

Before & After: Be kind and translate your Terms of use

One of the fastest ways to streamline sentences is to use a period more often. See how that translates and transforms these Terms of Use.

This may be a new year, but you can count on finding the same old wordy, baffling language in any Standard Terms of Use.

I like to think of making something easier to read as being kind. And some companies do appear kind, sending updates they suggest are making the terms easier to read. But are they?

Let’s look at the terms governing my relationship with Mailchimp, which sends my newsletter. Actually, we’ll just look at the definitions, presented in typical legal style: Full Term, duly capitalized (“Short Term,” in quotes and capitalized).

Mailchimp starts off kindly enough with a caution: “Please read these Standard Terms of Use (“Terms”) carefully.” And you *do* need to read them carefully, as shown by the pinky-red colour highlighting the very-hard-to-read sentences that follow:

Where did they go wrong?

  • Running the terms through the Hemingway app says Mailchimp wrote this section at a “post graduate” level, typical of dense academic papers. Only about 4.5% of adults can comfortably read at this level. “Poor,” the app says. “Aim for 14.”
  • Of eight sentences, four are very hard to read.
  • The definitions are summed up in sentences averaging 34 words each. An average of nine to 14 words in a sentence results in 90–99% understanding. Over 33 is about 30-39%.

One of the fastest ways to streamline sentences, according to writing coach Ann Wylie, is to use a period more often. Taking this tactic with the “before,” I started breaking up sentences on the Hemingway page. I could watch the complexity level drop to Grade 11 as I worked, with the encouragement “try for 9.”

Of course, I also simplified, removed repetition and took out lawyerspeak like "without limitation." And I turned the complicated section about who Contacts are into a bulleted list and removed the “in other words.” If you need to use that phrase, you need to simplify what came before it.

Here’s the after:

Results:

  • Running the revised terms through the Hemingway app says the section is now at a Grade 9 level considered “Good.”
  • Hitting the period more often turned eight sentences into 18. None are very hard to read.
  • The sentences now average 11.9 words each, easily within the best length to support understanding.

As I said, making something easier to read is being kind. It respects your reader’s time and helps them get to the point faster. Will the lawyers have a fit? Probably. Tell them to keep the full legal mumbo jumbo elsewhere and include a (plain language) footnote explaining that.

Have you seen a “Before” in desperate need of an “After”? Please share! I’m always looking for good (bad) examples.

Related reading:

The famous Hemingway app

Ann Wylie’s three ways to streamline sentences

Recently in the Red Jacket Diaries:

Writing tips you might have missed, December edition

Gaslighting and goblin mode among the 2022 words of the year

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