Wednesday Writing Tip — Stylebooks, Part 7:
Admiring MailChimp
MailChimp, the e-mail marketing service, has a goofy name and the most sensible stylebook The Artisanal Grammarian has yet encountered.
The MailChimp Content Style Guide says everything the company publishes should empower, respect, educate, guide, and speak truth. To those ends, it says, all content should be clear, useful, friendly, and appropriate.
Seems simple, doesn’t it?
That simplicity is the style guide's strength. It focuses on broad principles rather than a maze of shalts and shalt nots. “Write like a human,” it counsels. “Don’t be afraid to break a few rules if it makes your writing more relatable. All of our content, from splashy homepage copy to system alerts, should be warm and human.”
The “Commas” section of the style guide specifies the use of the serial comma (a comma before the coordinating conjunction in a series of three or more items, as in “red, white, and blue”).
“Otherwise,” the section continues, “use common sense. If you’re unsure, read the sentence out loud. Where you find yourself taking a breath, use a comma.”
The Artisanal Grammarian wouldn’t streamline comma usage rules quite that drastically. But, well, one could do a lot worse.
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Illustration of chimpanzee typing (presumably in a clear, useful, friendly, and appropriate manner) by New York Zoological Society, via Wikimedia Commons