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You are here: Home / Articles / These 5 Writing Tips Make Reliability Reports ‘Easier to Read’

by JD Solomon Leave a Comment

These 5 Writing Tips Make Reliability Reports ‘Easier to Read’

These 5 Writing Tips Make Reliability Reports ‘Easier to Read’

The “Easier to Read’ series on writing tips helps reliability professionals make their reports easier to understand. The series heps technical professionals gain an understanding of how social media has impacted traditional writing. In some cases, the shift is obviously toward shorter, direct styles. In other cases, the shift returns to good practices that we have simply forgotten. Either way, the shift is real and impacts all of our reliability reports and other forms of technical communication.

What Inspired the “Easier to Read’ Series

Most of my inspiration comes from the people and projects we encounter through our consulting practice, JD Solomon Solutions. Such was the case here.

A few months ago, one of the technical professionals on a reliability assessment project commented that I posted a lot of articles on social media. He asked what I got out of it, and I replied that one of the things was improved writing. I suggested he give it a try. The idea for the series came when he asked me to give him some tips on how to get started.

The Approach Is FINESSE

FINESSE is a cause-and-effect approach for communicating effectively to senior management on big decisions. Writing tips fall primarily under the first S in FINESSE, which is Structure.

Remember, tips are ineffective without understanding the context and having an overarching approach.

The Content of This Series

The source of the series is social media, so that is the first article. Making writing easier to skim and making writing more accessible are linked in several ways. Both underpin good writing for social media. Finally, those pesky readability scores are now part of just about every software we use. The final two articles discuss how to use readability scores and what is behind the formula.

Writing Tips within the Writing Tips

Providing sub-tips or attributes for each writing tip makes them more practical and easier to implement.

For example, six ways to improve business writing are subheadings, two-sentence paragraphs, shorter sentences, fewer uncommon words, keyword-rich paragraphs, and informal tones.

The 5 Articles in the “Easier to Read’ Series

  1. Six Ways Social Media Writing Improves Business Writing
  2. Five Writing Tips That Make Your Business Reports Easy to Skim
  3. What’s in a Heading? Five Writing Tips to Make Your Text More Accessible
  4. How Does a Readability Formula Help My Business Writing?
  5. Use Caution When Using Readability Formulas like Flesch Reading Ease

Writing with FINESSE

Check out the articles on writing tips in the “Easier to Read” series. Reliability professionals will gain an understanding of how social media has impacted traditional writing. In some cases, the shift is obviously toward shorter, direct styles. In other cases, the shift returns to good practices that we have simply forgotten. Either way, the shift is real and impacts all of our reliability reports and other technical communication.


Communicating with FINESSE is a not-for-profit community of technical professionals dedicated to being highly effective communicators and facilitators. Learn more about our publications, webinars, and workshops. Join the community for free.

JD Solomon is the author of Communicating Reliability, Risk & Resiliency to Decision Makers: How to Get Your Boss’s Boss to Understand and Facilitating with FINESSE: A Guide to Successful Business Solutions.

Filed Under: Articles, Communicating with FINESSE, on Systems Thinking Tagged With: Technical writing

About JD Solomon

JD Solomon, PE, CRE, CMRP provides facilitation, business case evaluation, root cause analysis, and risk management. His roles as a senior leader in two Fortune 500 companies, as a town manager, and as chairman of a state regulatory board provide him with a first-hand perspective of how senior decision-makers think. His technical expertise in systems engineering and risk & uncertainty analysis using Monte Carlo simulation provides him practical perspectives on the strengths and limitations of advanced technical approaches.  In practice, JD works with front-line staff and executive leaders to create workable solutions for facilities, infrastructure, and business processes.

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