Institute for Public Understanding and Bluntness

Work

IFPC''s work focuses on public understanding, plain English, clearer questions and better explanations.

This page sets out the Institute’s case work, review method and the types of public language that can be examined.

Making public language easier to understand

The IFPC looks at the point where organisational wording meets public understanding. That includes notices, replies, statements, policies, summaries and explanations.

The purpose is not to make every piece of communication shorter. The purpose is to make meaning clearer.

People reviewing public communication and documents Plain English. Better answers. Public clarity

What the Institute works on

The work is grouped around the types of wording that often cause confusion, delay, repeated questions or public mistrust.

Public statements

Reviewing statements that are intended to explain a decision, position, incident or change, but may leave the public unclear.

Official replies

Looking at replies from organisations where the wording appears complete but does not answer the substance of the question.

Public notices

Testing whether notices, service updates and public information are clear enough for the people expected to rely on them.

Policy summaries

Helping turn policy wording into clearer explanations of what is changing, who is affected and what the practical meaning is.

Complaint responses

Reviewing whether a response deals with the issue raised, or mainly describes process, procedure and organisational position.

Member communication reviews

Supporting IFPC Members with selected wording reviews and clearer public communication principles.

Case work

IFPC case work focuses on unclear wording, weak replies, confusing notices and public explanations that need to be made easier to understand.

Case file 01

The circular answer

A formal reply appears to respond to a question, but mainly restates policy, process or background information without answering the central point.

IPUB review focus What was asked, what was answered, and what remains unresolved.
Case file 02

The unclear public notice

A notice tells people something important, but the wording does not clearly explain what is happening, who is affected, when it applies or what people should do next.

IPUB review focus Whether the notice gives people enough practical information to act on it.
Case file 03

The policy summary that hides the point

A policy summary uses careful or technical language, but does not clearly state the practical effect of the decision on the people affected by it.

IFPC review focus What the policy actually changes and what the public needs to know.
Case file 04

The complaint response that explains process

A complaint response describes internal handling, review stages or procedure, but does not clearly answer whether the original issue was accepted, rejected or resolved.

IFPC review focus Whether the response deals with the issue or only describes the system around it.
Case file 05

The statement full of reassurance

A public statement uses phrases such as “we take this seriously” or “we remain committed”, but gives little detail about action, evidence, timescales or responsibility.

IPUB review focus What concrete information sits behind the reassurance.
Case file 06

The answer that needs another answer

A reply is so vague or incomplete that it immediately creates more questions, leaving the person no clearer than before.

IFPC review focus What follow-up questions are needed and how they should be framed.

Case work may be anonymised where necessary. The purpose is to show how public wording can be made clearer, more useful and easier to challenge.

How The IFPC reviews wording

The work is based on a practical reading of the wording itself, not on whether it sounds polished, official or carefully formatted.

Review method

1

Identify the central issue

What is the communication trying to explain, answer or justify?

2

Separate wording from meaning

What does the text actually say once branding, formality, reassurance and procedural language are stripped back?

3

Check what is missing

Are dates, decisions, responsibilities, evidence, next steps or plain answers absent?

4

Suggest clearer wording or better questions

Where useful, The IFPC identifies how the wording could be clearer or what should be asked next.

What the work can produce

Depending on the issue, The IFPC’s work may result in a plain English breakdown, a clearer question, or a practical communication review.

Plain English breakdown

A clearer explanation of what the wording appears to mean.

Clarity review

A review of where wording is unclear, circular, incomplete or unnecessarily complex.

Question set

Direct questions that help focus the issue and reduce room for avoidance.

Improvement note

Practical suggestions for making wording clearer and more useful.

Not every item submitted to The IFPC will be published. Some material may be used only for review, guidance or private clarification.

Submit something for review

If you have a statement, public notice, official reply, policy summary or piece of organisational wording that needs to be clearer, send it to The IFPC for consideration.

Include the wording, date, organisation, link, screenshot or background where available.

Contact The IFPC