Writing for the Web/Plain Language
What It Is
Writing for the Web is a best practice for managing your agency’s website. You should use plain language in writing your website. Plain language is words the website's typical visitor can understand.
Why It’s Important
Websites are based on words–the words you choose and the way you organize them. If your website is written poorly, you will not communicate effectively. You waste the reader's time, fail to achieve your purpose, and provide poor customer service.
Specific Legal, Policy or Other Requirements for Doing This
OMB Policies for Federal Public Websites require agencies to (#1A) “to disseminate information to the public in a timely, equitable, efficient and appropriate manner” and (#2A) “maximize the quality, objectivity, utility, and integrity of information and services provided to the public.” By using plain language, you’ll communicate with your audiences more efficiently and your content will be more useful to them.
How to Implement
- Know your audience and write for them.
- For federal public websites, assume that at least one of your audiences for your homepage and major entry points is the general public.
- When writing for multiple audiences, tailor your writing to the audience with the least expertise.
- Review your homepages, major entry points, and navigational elements to ensure they are written in plain language, for the general public.
- Use language tools, including language software, to evaluate the readability of the website's content.
- Test your writing with typical visitors.
Examples
- The National Cancer Institute provides clear navigation labels for use by the general public.
- The Centers for Disease Control provides a site for kids that has well-written and audience appropriate language.
- The National Institutes of Health offers a website appropriate for both the general public as well as for medical professionals. The information being presented is technical, but the navigation and descriptive information are appropriate for the general public.
- The National Institute of Standards and Technology provides a website for researchers that can also be understood by the general public.
Resources
- Plainlanguage.gov – The Plain Language Action and Information Network provides a collection of resources to help writers create user-friendly documents.
- Checklist for Plain Language – The Plain Language website provides a checklist to help web writers.
- "Easy to Read NYC: Guidelines for Clear and Effective Communication" – New York City Government's nine easy, practical guidelines for how to write in plain language.
- A Plain English Handbook: How to Create Clear SEC Disclosure Documents—the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission's guide to writing informative disclosure documents.
- Online training presentation on Writing for the Web – by Dr. Annetta Cheek, former Plain Language Manager at FAA.
- Plain Language in Government Communications Act of 2007 – recently passed in committee by the House; a similar bill is being considered in the Senate.
- Spanish Language Style Guide and Glossaries for federal government websites. Learn Spanish language use of capitalization, abbreviations, punctuation, diacritics, and much more. Consult glossaries on health, technology, government terminology and more.
Many federal public websites follow this best practice. This practice is part of the guidelines and best practices published by the Interagency Committee on Government Information to aid agencies' implementation of OMB Policies for Public Websites.
Page Updated or Reviewed: May 21, 2008