Business Blog Readability in the Flesch?

“Readability is a critical yet often-overlooked aspect of writing – particularly online writing,” according to Jeanne Dininni of StraightNorth.com. The idea, of course, is to match your writing to your intended audience. “Some sites target a more educated demographic, some attract a population segment with specialized knowledge or expertise in a particular area, and others,” observes Dininni, “cater to more general audiences”.

Science?  Common sense? Both, actually. After all, we business blog content writers aren’t in this to entertain ourselves – we’re out to retain the clients and customers we serve and bring in new ones.

If you didn’t already know this, there are tests you can put your blog through to see how you’re doing in terms of readability – are you reaching the right people and doing it by using words and sentences to which they can relate?  Well, a Readability Index Calculator can give you the answer.

The most-used calculator is the Flesch-Kincaid.  Your scores on the Flesch indicate two things:

  1. How easy your text is to read on a scale of 0-100. (A high score, say 60 or 70 means your stuff is relatively easy to read; a low score, say 20 or even 10 means you’re getting too close to legalese territory – and who wants that??)
  2. What grade in school a person would need to have reached to be able to understand your content. (A score of 7 would mean the typical seventh grader would understand your writing, while a sixth grader might not. In fact a score of 6 or 7 would be considered optimal in journalism.)

So what, exactly, do those two Flesch-Kincaid measure to take your readability “temperature”?  Essentially, two things:

  • The average number of syllables per word
  • The average number of words per sentence.

I tested a recent blog post of mine, https://blog.sayitforyou.net/blog/ghost-blogger/dont-you-hate-it-when-blogging-for-business, with the following “verdict”:

“This page has an average grade level of about 7 and a reading ease score of 68.7. A value between 60 and 80 should be easy for a 12 to 15 year old to understand.”

You need to know – how would your business blog measure up in the Flesch?

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