Boost Your Writing with ParaGraph — Tips for Fast Clarity
What it is
A short, practical guide focused on improving paragraph-level clarity and speed using the “ParaGraph” approach: a predictable structure for each paragraph that prioritizes a clear main idea, supporting details, and a concise wrap-up.
Core principles
- Main idea first: Lead with one clear sentence that states the paragraph’s purpose.
- Relevant support: Follow with 1–3 sentences that directly explain, show, or prove the main idea.
- Logical flow: Use transitions to connect sentences; keep sentence order intentional.
- Concise wrap-up: End with a brief sentence that reinforces the point or links to the next paragraph.
- Single focus: One paragraph = one idea. Split when you introduce a new idea.
- Vary sentence length: Short sentences for clarity, longer ones for nuance—mix to maintain rhythm.
Quick techniques for speed
- Outline at micro-level: For each paragraph, write a one-line topic sentence before expanding.
- Use templates: Main idea → Example → Explanation → Link.
- Edit in passes: (1) remove fluff, (2) tighten wording, (3) check flow.
- Set limits: Aim for 3–6 sentences or 50–120 words per paragraph depending on audience.
- Use active voice and strong verbs to reduce wordiness.
Common pitfalls to avoid
- Multiple competing ideas in one paragraph
- Adding irrelevant examples or tangents
- Overlong topic sentences that hide the point
- Weak transitions between paragraphs
Quick checklist before sending
- Does the first sentence state the main idea?
- Do every sentence support that idea?
- Is the paragraph length appropriate for the audience?
- Is there a clear link to the next paragraph or section?