Do you speak your audience’s language?
When your message offers people a relevant benefit, they need to understand what you’re saying.
Plain words reach a bigger audience
Always speak your audience’s language, so your message is easy to get. Only about 1 out of 4 marketers speaks the language of their audiences and decision-makers, according to a Forrester study, “Customer-Centered Messaging Motivates Buyers to Act.”
So, when you speak to your audience in words that are familiar to them, you leapfrog ahead of 3 out of 4 competitors.
In many fields, it’s way too easy to talk over the heads of audiences. Here are 3 traps to avoid:
If everyone in your audience gets your meaning, it’s ok to use jargon, acronyms, and initialisms.
Even newbies need to understand?
If there’s even one newbie in the room who might get confused by jargon, acronyms, and initialisms, take these steps:
Why? Because many terms carry multiple meanings, even inside one field.?For example, to most people an ATM is an?automatic teller machine. But:
When your audience is 100% doctors, yes, speak to them in medical terms. If your audience is 100% engineers, speak engineering to them.
But avoid speaking in specialized languages that some people in your audience may not know. What you say sails right over their heads. So your meaning may not land.
It’s prudent to be extra-careful?
For example, don’t speak engineering to the chief financial offer who speaks the language of finance … or vice versa.
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When members of your audience live and work outside English-speaking countries, try to speak the local language whenever possible.
If that proves impractical or unaffordable, limit your English vocabulary. When you speak global English, you can be understood by a larger global audience that includes the 375 million people who learned English as a second language.
The more limited your vocabulary, the bigger the audience who will grasp your meaning.
Simple words enlarge your audience
A limited vocabulary expands your addressable audience. Here’s how:
Limiting the size of your vocabulary has another benefit. It often improves the readability of your text – which also increases the size of your addressable audience.
Use universal analogies and avoid analogies that don’t travel well
One last tip: make sure your audience understands the analogies you use. Choose analogies that translate across cultures, such as balance, transformation, or container.
Avoid analogies that don’t cross cultural barriers. In the US, avoid cricket analogies. In Europe, avoid baseball analogies.
Even when analogies use simple words, people who don’t understand your cultural context (cricket or baseball) will not grasp your intended meaning.
Here’s more on how to expand your global audience by using?global English.
Sales leader in marketers' clothing. I help small business leaders grow faster with better margins by repairing your leaking sales/marketing funnel. #marketingstrategy #marketing #contentmarketing #video #sales
5 个月My best content has always been based on conversations with customers. When I use the customers's words, it resonates. If I try to make it up myself, it doesn't work as well. Whether it is content or an introductory email, using customer language and focusing on what is in it for them gets the job done.