Tone of Voice Guidelines
Tone of voice is the personality behind your words. Two articles can cover the same topic, use the same facts, and target the same keyword — but if one sounds like a textbook and the other sounds like a sharp colleague, the reader experience is completely different. Tone is not about what you say. It's about how you say it. This lesson teaches you how to define, document, and consistently apply tone across all content.
Part 1 — The 4 Dimensions of Tone
Mapping Your Voice
Every brand voice can be plotted on 4 axes:
flowchart LR
A["Formal"] --- B["Casual"]
C["Serious"] --- D["Playful"]
E["Respectful"] --- F["Irreverent"]
G["Enthusiastic"] --- H["Matter-of-fact"]
- The 4 Axes
- How to Document Tone
| Axis | Left Extreme | Right Extreme | Example Left | Example Right |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Formality | Corporate documentation | Text message to a friend | "It is recommended that users..." | "Just do this — trust me" |
| Gravity | Dead serious | Lighthearted/humorous | "Failure to comply may result in..." | "Spoiler alert: this part is fun" |
| Respect | Deferential | Irreverent / blunt | "You may wish to consider..." | "Stop doing this. Seriously" |
| Energy | Measured, calm | Excited, emphatic | "A notable improvement" | "This is a game-changer!" |
Most B2B content sits at: Semi-formal, Serious, Respectful, Matter-of-fact. Most B2C content sits further right. Define your exact position on each axis, not just "professional."
The "We are / We are not" format:
| We Are | We Are Not |
|---|---|
| Confident — we state positions clearly | Arrogant — we back claims with evidence |
| Conversational — we write like we speak | Sloppy — we maintain grammar and clarity |
| Direct — we get to the point | Rude — we respect the reader's intelligence |
| Opinionated — we recommend, we compare, we rank | Preachy — we explain our reasoning, we don't lecture |
| Specific — we use numbers, names, and examples | Vague — "many" / "some" / "various" are banned |
Part 2 — Tone by Content Type
Adapting Tone Within Brand Guidelines
| Content Type | Tone Adjustment | Example |
|---|---|---|
| How-to tutorial | Instructional, supportive, clear | "Step 1: Open your dashboard. Step 2: Click 'Reports'" |
| Thought leadership | Authoritative, opinionated, evidence-backed | "Most teams approach this wrong. Here's what the data says" |
| Product comparison | Analytical, balanced, transparent | "ConvertKit wins on ease. ActiveCampaign wins on depth. Here's how to choose" |
| Case study | Narrative, specific, results-focused | "When Acme Corp hit 8% churn, their CS lead made one change..." |
| FAQ / Support | Reassuring, clear, solution-oriented | "This happens when X. Here's how to fix it in 2 steps" |
Part 3 — Common Tone Mistakes
- Mistakes
| Mistake | What It Sounds Like | Fix |
|---|---|---|
| Inconsistent tone | Formal intro → casual body → academic conclusion | Pick a position on each axis and maintain it |
| Corporate-speak | "Leverage synergies to drive value across the organization" | Write like a human. "Combine these tools to get better results" |
| Fake enthusiasm | "We're SO excited to share this AMAZING guide!!!!" | Let the content's value create excitement. Drop the exclamation marks |
| Condescension | "As you probably already know..." (then why mention it?) | If it's obvious, skip it. If it's not, explain without patronizing |
| No personality | Emotionally flat, interchangeable with any other brand | Add opinions, specific recommendations, and conversational phrasing |
Part 4 — Bad vs. Good Examples
- ❌ No Defined Tone
- ✅ Defined Tone Applied
"In the modern business landscape, organizations are increasingly recognizing the strategic importance of content marketing. It is recommended that companies develop a content strategy that aligns with their overarching business objectives. Furthermore, the utilization of data-driven insights can significantly enhance the efficacy of content marketing initiatives."
(Corporate-speak. Passive voice. Zero personality. Could be any brand, any writer, any topic.)
Tone: Semi-casual, Confident, Direct, Matter-of-fact.
"Content marketing works. Not 'can potentially contribute to business objectives' — it works. Companies that publish consistently generate 3.5× more traffic than those that don't (HubSpot, 2024).
But here's the part most guides skip: publishing more doesn't mean publishing better. We've audited 60+ content strategies, and the teams that win aren't the ones publishing 5× weekly. They're the ones publishing 2× weekly with a clear keyword strategy and zero filler."
(Personality present. Opinionated. Backed by evidence. Consistent tone throughout.)
Part 5 — AI Collaboration Guidelines
The "Tone Enforcement" Prompt
Role: Brand voice editor Task: Rewrite this draft to match our tone of voice: Our tone: [Paste your "We are / We are not" matrix] Rules:
- Replace all passive voice with active voice
- Replace corporate jargon with plain language
- Add opinions where the text is neutral but should be opinionated
- Ensure consistent tone — no formal sections mixed with casual sections
- Every paragraph should sound like it was written by a confident colleague Input: [Paste Draft]
Part 6 — Output Checklist
- 4 axes defined: Your brand tone is plotted on Formality, Gravity, Respect, and Energy.
- "We are / We are not" documented: Your team has a shared tone reference.
- Content-type adaptation: You adjust tone subtly by content type, not randomly.
- Consistency: No tone shifts within a single article.
- Zero corporate-speak: No "leverage," "utilize," "synergize," or passive constructions.
Internal use only. Do not distribute externally. For questions or suggested updates, raise with the content lead.