Tech Com 2
Tech Com 2
GENERALIZATION
Achieving clarity and conciseness in technical writing is an important job that a technical writer should
consider. He or she should plan and write carefully to avoid any miscommunication through the language style.
A vague and a wordy technical writing is expensive. Imagine how unclear instructions on how to operate
machinery would damage the product itself and the image of the company. Please remember that clear
understanding is an important factor in technical writing. When you write something that your reader
misunderstands, you fail as a writer.
A clear writing is the result of clear thinking. As future technical writers, you should never forget that your
aim in technical writing is to write an easy-to-read informative material. You should concern yourselves more
about that.
The essence of good writing is to be concise — shaving everything down to its bare essentials. Conciseness
is not the opposite of long; it is the opposite of wordy. If information does not add value, leave it out. Often, the
less you say, the more impact it has.
For us to succeed in delivering our technical message, we need to keep our readers’ attention to read
through the sentences and paragraphs. They should effortlessly read them because they may lose interest and
patience if your writing is too difficult to follow. Avoiding lengthy sentences and wordy expressions/phrases is
one of the ways to achieve that.
Nominalizations and expletives weaken the readability of your document. They cast shadows and hide the
direct meaning of the technical message. If you want to make sure that your readers have understood the
information you presented, then you should avoid using nominalizations and expletives. Remember, technical
writing is about clear communication.
Your writing is ink and paper only, until someone picks it up and reads it. Then, it becomes only meaningful
if they used or applied your information. So, you cannot afford being fancy in your writing just to appear
impressive.
Successful technical writing should help the reader understand the text,
not present challenges to understanding.