Benchmark readability against the BBC

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How does your news measure up?

The BBC covers the most serious news known to man — West Bank stabbings, friendly fire air strikes, Justin Bieber’s bad behavior — and does so in an average of 4.7-character words.

Benchmark readability against the BBC
News for you The BBC makes the most serious news easy to understand with highly readable copy. Does your organization do the same? Image by Elena Noeva

How does your copy’s readability compare to that of the world’s largest broadcast organization?

Benchmark readability

One way to find out is to benchmark readability statistics. That’s a great way to convince bosses, clients and reviewers that extremely readable copy makes sense, even for serious messages.

We used Microsoft Word’s Readability Statistics to measure how the BBC’s readability stacks up. We analyzed every story (23, including the top 10 most read) on the BBC.com home page on a single day.

Here’s what we found out … and how you can improve readability of your own pieces.

1. The BBC’s paragraphs weigh in at an average of just 24 words, or 1.4 sentences. See how easy this 21-word paragraph looks — and is — to process:

Ms. Martínez says her mother and paternal grandmother both told her at an early age that Dalí was her real father.

— “Dali’s moustache ‘intact at 10 past 10,’ exhumation finds,” BBC News

2. The BBC’s lead paragraphs average 25 words. Write first paragraphs that go down easy like this 21-word lead from the BBC:

This weekend people will celebrate Germany’s new law to allow equal marriage. But it is not necessarily “equal” for gay parents.

— “Gay Germans’ joy mixed with adoption angst,” BBC News

3. The BBC’s sentences average 19 words — a little longer than our recommended average. Model the sentences from this piece, which averaged 13.7 words per sentence:

He had often seemed awkward and clumsy. Yet he also had a gentle side.

— “Sean Spicer: My hectic six months with White House spokesman,” BBC News

4. The BBC averages 4.7 characters per word. This passage, for instance, weighs in at about 4.8 characters per word:

Cavalia was created in 2003 by one of the co-founders of Cirque de Soleil, and has been described as “equestrian ballet.” It has been performing in Beijing since April and even planned to build a permanent theatre in Hangzhou.

— “China holds Canadians ‘for smoking marijuana,’” BBC News

5. Of the 23 BBC articles we reviewed, only one had any passive voice. That gives the BBC an average .4% (that’s four-tenths of 1%) passive voice total. This passage, for instance, is free from passive voice:

It appears Wirapol tapped into this trend. He arrived in the poor North Eastern province of Sisaket in the early 2000s, establishing a monastery on donated land in the village of Ban Yang. But according to the sub-district head, Ittipol Nontha, few local people went to his temple, because they were too poor to offer the kind of donations he expected.

— “Thailand monks: Wirapol Sukphol case highlights country’s Buddhism crisis,” BBC News

6. The BBC averages 52.4 on this readability scale of 0 to 100. This passage hits 64.5 on the Flesch scale:

Luis wakes up every morning in a rickety wooden shack and spends his days, like the doctor, injecting other users. The fee is one dollar or one sixth of a heroin shot, and most people pay in heroin. Every six injections Luis can do a hit of his own. For 22 months he was clean, until his wife had a heart attack in the bath and drowned.

— “As an open-air heroin camp is closed, options narrow,” BBC News

7. The world news organization weighs in at 10.63. C’mon. You can do better. This passage, for instance, hits 6.4 on the Flesch-Kincaid scale:

In the past, your salary was published in a book. A list of everyone’s income, assets and the tax they had paid, could be found on a shelf in the public library. These days, the information is online, just a few keystrokes away.

— “Norway: The country where no salaries are secret,” BBC News

Benchmark readability

Benchmarking your copy’s readability can help you:

  • Convince approvers that — yes, even in your business — high readability is essential and achievable.
  • Set, measure and report standards for readable writing within your writing group.
  • Improve readability for your own copy.

What are you waiting for? Benchmark readability in business media, industry journals, your company communications — maybe even your competitors’.

Then, no matter how serious the material, aim for standards that will help you get the word out to the most people.

Just like the BBC does.

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