Stop using acronyms. No one knows what you're referring to when you do that. If you need to be that concise then you need to spend more time crafting a better thread title.
Yeah, you're right. So many people in my Twitter feed have been spamming about 'THE CONTINUING RESOLUTION' that I thought everyone must know. But I think it works pretty well even without knowing what it is, as the more relevant word is 'vote'.
It's a sore spot for me. Many years ago when I took my first job as a federal contractor I tried to maintain a notebook to keep track of all the acronyms I kept coming across. After completely filling that notebook I gave up and developed an intense hatred for acronyms. Exceptions are allowed for things that have where the acronym has supplanted the actual phrase it represents, like IP address or DNS, but if it isn't at that level then you really should just spell things out rather than assuming people know what you're referencing.
My shop writing guide included instruction to spell it out once, then list the acronym, and use the acronym (or initialism) afterwards. I don't know if it was something the Department of Defense (DoD), the United States Marine Corps (USMC), or something specific to how our customers wanted our product presented, but it seemed like a good system. You never have to leave the document you're reading to find out what an acronym stands for, and you still get most of the space savings.
Oh, and if you were going to use a term once, don't bother with the acronym at all (broken for illustrative purposes above).
Stop using acronyms. No one knows what you're referring to when you do that. If you need to be that concise then you need to spend more time crafting a better thread title.
Yeah, you're right. So many people in my Twitter feed have been spamming about 'THE CONTINUING RESOLUTION' that I thought everyone must know. But I think it works pretty well even without knowing what it is, as the more relevant word is 'vote'.
It's a sore spot for me. Many years ago when I took my first job as a federal contractor I tried to maintain a notebook to keep track of all the acronyms I kept coming across. After completely filling that notebook I gave up and developed an intense hatred for acronyms. Exceptions are allowed for things that have where the acronym has supplanted the actual phrase it represents, like IP address or DNS, but if it isn't at that level then you really should just spell things out rather than assuming people know what you're referencing.
My shop writing guide included instruction to spell it out once, then list the acronym, and use the acronym (or initialism) afterwards. I don't know if it was something the Department of Defense (DoD), the United States Marine Corps (USMC), or something specific to how our customers wanted our product presented, but it seemed like a good system. You never have to leave the document you're reading to find out what an acronym stands for, and you still get most of the space savings.
Oh, and if you were going to use a term once, don't bother with the acronym at all (broken for illustrative purposes above).