The web content space is occupied by two kinds of writers:

Web Content Writers – Those who are pragmatic in their approach, focusing on “plain language” and “soundbite” sentences, who are hyper-aware of website visitors as “users” with physiological parameters that define the interaction they have with words, as elements, published on a technology-based platform.

Their content is often written at the expense of the descriptive fluff that causes emotional responses in readers – tears …laughter …shivers.

Web Copywriters – Those whose words are used to influence, persuade, and sell. Their aim is to connect with target audiences on an emotional level using familiar vocabulary that is not only engaging but purposeful to a website’s page rank and statistics.

Their content is often written at the expense of the brevity and simplicity required to keep visitors from clicking the back button out of frustration.

Who’s Right?

The reason behind the distinct web content factions is simple – web content as a discipline is roughly 5 years old with its claim staked by two disparate groups: those from the User Experience/Library Science/Web discipline and those from Marketing/Communications.

To be fair, both have borrowed and adopted some of the practices from the other to create web content that is not only easy to read, but also supportive of the business objectives or purpose of the website.

But for some reason the plain language camp is more vocal …more militant about the need for bulleted lists over verbose discourse. Perhaps the Marketing/Communications side is so used to being beaten up for haughty language and superfluous diction that they have come to ignore the purists.

After all, this debate is not a new one amongst writers. Journalists are cut and slash editors extraordinaire, while Advertising Copywriters can play with the nuance of language for hours at a time.

“The great enemy of clear language is insincerity. When there is a gap between one’s real and one’s declared aims, one turns as it were instinctively to long words and exhausted idioms, like a cuttlefish spurting out ink.”

~ George Orwell, Politics and the English Language, 1946

I believe the answer lies in a careful balance between practicality and artistry. Where we acknowledge the humanity of the “user” by creating a fundamental connection through the power of the written word to evoke emotion.

In fact, the universal objective of most websites is to spurn action – click, download, comment, call. By engaging viscerally through the abstract beauty of language, the written word becomes more than a call to ACTION …but one that inspires REACTION.

Plain language advocates can espouse the F-Pattern, Fleisch-Kincaid Readability scores, and content scanning in response to the physiological and educational requirements of a reader but, in my opinion, hard scores will never trump the connection you can make with a reader through carefully crafted prose.

Constructing language to fit on a web page is left-brain. Deconstructing language to derive meaning for a website is not. Right-brain thinking drives perception and emotion – two critical elements websites must have to build customer relationships and make sales.

“Do not all charms fly at the mere touch of cold philosophy? There was an awful rainbow once in heaven: We know her woof, her texture; She is given in the dull catalogue of common things. Philosophy will clip an angel’s wings, Conquer all mysteries by rule and line, Empty to haunted air, and gnomed mine – unweave a rainbow…”

~ John Keats, Lamia, 1819

If Color and Flavour Names Affect Choice in consumers, why should web content writers focus merely on the steak without adding a little sizzle?

Bulleted-lists won’t entice me to stay at your resort, but a descriptive paragraph that causes me to imagine the feel of sand beneath my feet, the taste of pineapple on my lips, and the serenity of peace on earth away from the hectic bustle of life…. Sign me up!

Information Architect and User Experience professional, Jeff Parks, recently talked about the need to balance our data obsessed corporate culture with an equal amount of creativity, compassion, and understanding of the processes others value to bring back humanity in the digital age.

Being Human is NOT Quantifiable from Jeff Parks on Vimeo.

In his presentation, Being Human Is Not Quantifiable, he talks about how web professionals tend to connect with “users” first and “people” second. In doing so, we are in essence talking to people with the left side of our brain, creating an imbalance impervious to making eye-to-eye contact with the very people we want to engage with.

In the end, the style and tone of web content comes down to the purpose of your website. Less is more. However, less at the expense of creative expression can as much detract from a website’s purpose as it can bolster it.

Words are as expressive and descriptive as images, so depending on the topic it might just make sense to stretch the 150 word-count limit, leave in the first paragraph, and freely use descriptive nouns and adjectives even if it means losing a reader or two.

Otherwise, our society might as well revert back to the sole use of iconography to convey meaning …and our humanity.