Articles
9 articles on readability scoring, editorial tactics, and writing for clarity.
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Readability and Accessibility: WCAG Compliance, Screen Readers, and Readability Formulas
How readability formulas align with WCAG standards. Optimize for both human readers and screen-reader users with evidence-based techniques.
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Jargon Detection and One-Syllable Substitutes: A Practical Readability Editing System
Learn to detect jargon and replace it with one-syllable words to improve readability without losing credibility. Real examples from healthcare, legal, and SaaS.
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Readability for Government and Plain-Language Compliance: Meeting Federal and Accessibility Standards
Meet Plain Writing Act and WCAG standards. Learn which readability formulas government agencies use, target grade levels, and how to audit compliance.
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Readability for B2B SaaS Marketing: How to Balance Conversion Clarity with Brand Authority
How B2B SaaS marketers use readability scores to boost conversion without losing credibility. Grade 8–10 targeting explained.
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Sentence Length vs Reading Ease: How to Cut Words Without Losing Authority
Shorter sentences improve readability—but many professional writers fear they'll sound juvenile, tentative, or worse. Strip a 35-word sentence down to 18 words
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Which Readability Formula to Use for Which Context: A Decision Framework for Writers and Editors
Match the right readability formula to your genre: healthcare, government, SaaS, technical docs. Compare Flesch, SMOG, Gunning Fog, ARI with decision criteria.
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Readability for SEO: Does Google Care About Grade Level?
What Google actually ranks for readability, which formulas matter for SEO, and how to balance grade level with keyword authority.
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Why Coleman-Liau Works Where Flesch-Kincaid Fails: A Syllable-Free Alternative
Readability formulas feel precise—they spit out a number and promise you a grade level. But behind that number lies a measurement choice that can shift your wri
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Why a grade-level score isn't the same as a reading level
Every readability formula returns a 'grade level' — and almost everyone misreads what that number means. Here's the actual definition and what to do about it.