To Say Me Is To Know Me

“There is a lot happening out there, seeming as if it’s everything, everywhere, all at once. The events are relentless, but so is the pace with which language adapts to the changes—with new and newly prominent ways of referring to a wild variety of very specific things,” Nick Norlen, Senior Editor of Dictionary.com writes. “The most recent additions to Dictionary.com come from just about everywhere, spanning the multiverse-like complexity of modern life.”

Norlen explains several of these new nouns:

  • Digital nomad (person who works remotely while traveling for leisure)
  • Nearlywed (person who lives with another in a life partnership with no wedding planned)
  • Rage farming (the tactic of intentionally provoking a political opponent)
  • Heritage language (a language used at home and spoken natively by the adults in a family, but not fully acquired by the next generation)
  • Deadass (adverb meaning extremely or completely)
  • Superdodger (Person who remains uninfected or asymptomatic even after exposure to a contagious virus)

Then, at our quarterly meeting of the Financial Planning Association of Greater Indiana, one of the speakers discussed the difference between the terms “phishing (fraudulent e-mails and websites) and “smishing” (fraudulent text messages), not to mention “vishing” (fraudulent phone calls).

Plain language matters in marketing, LinkedIn advises. Users – “Whether you want to inform, persuade, or engage your audience, you need to use language that they can easily comprehend,”

There’s another way to look at terminology, I remind content creators at Say It For You. Once we’ve established common ground, reinforcing to online visitors that they’ve come to the right place, it’s actually a good idea to add lesser-known bits of information on our subject. Doing that might take the form of arming readers with terminology that is new to them, adding value to the visit, but also giving those visitors a sense of being “in the know”.

Psychologically speaking, content writers can introduce industry “jargon”, then allude to those new words later on the content, giving an impression of “collusion” with the reader, smoothing the way towards a call to action.

New words and phrases emerge as a direct response to new concepts, the Macmillan Dictionary explains. Creative combinations of words stick “because they fill lexical gaps.” As content writers, we can help prospects “know” our clients by giving them the words to express what those business owners and professionals do.

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