- State your purpose explicitly. Make your issue very clear.
- Make the topic of each section and paragraph visually prominent.
- Use headings and subheadings appropriately and correctly
- Place topic sentences in the beginning of paragraphs
- Maintain the topic in the reader’s mind by referring to it frequently
- Readers (especially with lengthy, dense material) prefer an explicit organization of topic sentences in beginning of paragraphs
- Place topic (use synonyms strategically) in beginning of sentences
- Try to anticipate the reading style of the reader (skimming)
- Use visual guides
- Use graphs or tables to explain data
- Structure the text according to the nature of the information you want your reader to pay attention to most.
- Be consistent with language
- Create a list of key terms and their synonyms, and use them to vary word choice.
- Maintain a consistent voice through word choice
- Know your reader: When writing for specialists, do not over explain.
- Rely on language/terminology of the field
- Use citations
- Keep computations, long definitions, data, derivations in the appendix