Create a plain language policy or charter 

Temps de lecture : 2 min

Goal: Guide organisations in creating a plain language policy or charter that defines principles, sets responsibilities, and provides practical support to ensure clear, consistent communication.

A plain language policy or charter formalises your commitment and gives staff a clear framework to follow. 

What to include

  • Definition of plain language. Explain what you mean by plain language — not just “simplified language,” but language that is clear, purposeful, and audience-focused. 
  • Why it matters. Describe the benefits: clearer communication, better understanding, stronger relationships, improved outcomes. 
  • Key principles. List guiding principles like using everyday words, keeping sentences short, using active voice, and structuring information logically. 
  • Responsibilities. Identify who is responsible for writing, reviewing, and approving documents. 
  • Examples. Provide good and bad examples to make the policy practical and relatable. 
  • Ongoing support. Explain where staff can find help, such as style guides, templates, or training. 

Benefits

  • Everyone in the organisation understands what’s expected. 
  • Staff have a reference point when in doubt. 
  • It helps maintain consistency across departments. 

Practical tip

Write the policy itself in plain language — it should be a model of what you’re promoting. 

Reflection prompt 

  • What key elements should be included in a plain language policy or charter to make it clear and useful for staff?
  • How does having a plain language policy benefit an organisation and its communication practices?