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The Hidden Costs of Poor Writing in the Workplace

Poor writing isn’t just annoying; it’s expensive. Studies show subpar writing drains U.S. businesses of more than a trillion dollars every year. That’s time wasted, projects stalled, and customers lost.

Fran Trelease
3 min read
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The Hidden Costs of Poor Writing in the Workplace

Why Companies Can’t Afford to Ignore Writing Training

Poor writing isn’t just annoying; it’s expensive. Studies show subpar writing drains U.S. businesses of more than a trillion dollars every year. That’s time wasted, projects stalled, and customers lost.

Sometimes we hear executives dismiss writing as a “soft skill.” But when unclear emails, reports, or audit notes lead to mistakes, the costs are very real. But there’s good news - training staff to write clearly is one of the simplest, most cost‑effective ways to protect the bottom line.

Financial Errors and Wasted Resources

A key take-away buried at the bottom of a memo. A vague summary. These types of slips can ripple through budgets and operations. According a recent The Harris Poll, poor communication costs companies about $15,000… per employee each year.

Clear writing helps prevent that. When reports and summaries are precise, leaders act on solid information. That means fewer costly mistakes and more confident decisions.

Legal Exposure and Compliance Risks

Ambiguity in contracts or compliance reports is dangerous. It leaves room for disputes and penalties. That’s a risk no company can afford.

One example: the U.S. Navy saved tens of millions annually simply by rewriting memos for clarity, according to a recent government study. That’s proof that sharper communication protects organizations from legal and regulatory fallout.

Auditing Inconsistencies and Credibility Loss

Let’s take one industry as an example. Auditors depend on written explanations to verify records. If that written documentation is inconsistent or unclear, it slows audits and raises red flags. Credibility takes a hit.

FedEx once saved $400,000 a year by rewriting its operations manual to be clearer. For auditing firms, credibility is everything. Clear, standardized writing ensures documentation supports the data.

 

Productivity Drain and Employee Frustration

Poor writing wastes time. Staff in almost industries spend hours deciphering unclear emails or instructions. That kind of miscommunication can eat up more than 25 hours a week per employee. That’s nearly a third of their productivity. Gone.

But clear writing helps to flip the script. Staff spend less time guessing and more time producing. Morale improves, turnover drops, and teams run smoother.

The WriteRight Solution: Risk Management Through Communication

The WriteRight Method tackles these hidden costs head‑on. It teaches employees to:

•          Cut the jargon so messages are easy to follow.

•          Use active voice for direct, engaging writing.

•          Shorten sentences to keep attention.

•          Focus on the reader’s needs, not just the writer’s.

•          Add the human touch to build trust.

With these habits, everyday communication becomes a safeguard. Emails, reports, and summaries stop being liabilities and start working for – not against - the company.

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