Monday, July 11, 2011

Writing and Speaking With Industry Jargon Considered

When a writing or speaking it immediately becomes obvious very quickly that readers or listeners come from different levels of knowledge in science, industry, or regardless of subject area. Obviously, it serves no purpose to speak or write on people's heads. Similarly, students only writer or speaker, reader or viewer detracts from the point.

Well, how you talk to a wide audience, but experts are not boring, or make others fly over the head?



"Top university research teams over the past decade with the U.S. Navy UUV (unmanned underwater vehicles) have come a long way in the development."

By term or acronym quickly apparent, it allows for those in the industry, or specialists to read through it, and those who follow the industry with at least a novice, even if they are are not. In addition, the new comers to learn a new word and allows them to support them, bringing speed on industry jargon. The same technique works very well with large audiences and less, are more apt to see the blank stares peering back at you.

I usually do that, and though readers rarely react to this particular technique, I can safely say that I personally appreciate it when research papers, technical pieces, and Other authors of the articles of the industry can do the same, especially when I am reading a new topic.



It is appropriate to your audience that you do this, and frankly, you do the same for them if they are teaching a new subject would want as well. Meanwhile, as long as you keep it short the other experts or your peers in using this strategy will not delete. Actually, I hope you will consider this at all.



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