Voice & Style Guide
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"Integrity is strategy."
This document is for internal use. Enter your access code to continue.
"Integrity is strategy."
Reference · v1.0
KCG Internal · March 2026 · Last updated: March 28, 2026
KCG brand voice, tone by channel, writing standards, terminology, and review checklist. Use this guide for all written output — proposals, web copy, LinkedIn, Substack, client documents, and internal communications.
KCG's voice is direct, substantive, and grounded. We write for people who are navigating real complexity — leaders making hard decisions under pressure, institutions trying to function with integrity, organizations trying to close the gap between what they say and what they do.
We don't perform expertise. We demonstrate it through precision, specificity, and the willingness to name what others won't.
The voice stays consistent. The tone shifts depending on context, audience, and purpose.
| Channel | Tone | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Website copy | Confident, clear, minimal | No filler phrases. Lead with the value. Short paragraphs. |
| Client proposals | Precise, professional, warm | Acknowledge the client's context specifically. Avoid boilerplate. |
| Authoritative, accessible, direct | No motivational language. No "excited to announce." Lead with the insight. | |
| Substack | Candid, analytical, personal | First person. Cite specific examples. Willing to hold a position. |
| The Pragmatic Politico | Sharp, civic, grounded in fact | Policy-focused. Avoids both cynicism and naïveté. Names power dynamics directly. |
| Internal documents | Plain, functional, efficient | Just the facts. No performance. Clear headers and structure. |
| Client communications | Clear, responsive, professional | Confirm understanding, state next steps, no ambiguity. |
| Rule | Standard |
|---|---|
| Oxford comma | Always use. "Strategy, structure, and execution." Not "Strategy, structure and execution." |
| Em dash | Use for emphasis or interruption — not parentheses. No spaces around em dash. |
| Sentence length | Vary. Short sentences land harder. Longer sentences can carry nuance if structured cleanly. |
| Headers | Title case for H1 and H2. Sentence case for H3 and below. |
| Numbers | Spell out one through nine. Use numerals for 10 and above. Always use numerals for percentages (8%). |
| Dates | March 28, 2026 — not 3/28/26 in formal documents. |
| Capitalization | Don't capitalize for emphasis. Don't capitalize job titles unless preceding a name. |
| Bullet points | Use sparingly. Prose is preferred. Bullets should be parallel in structure. |
| Passive voice | Avoid. Active voice is clearer and more accountable. |
| Jargon | Define terms on first use. Avoid acronyms unless the audience uses them natively. |
| Term | Use | Avoid |
|---|---|---|
| Kovach Consulting Group | Full name on first reference. "KCG" thereafter. | "Kovach," "the firm," "the company" |
| Engagement | For client work. "The engagement began in January." | "Project," "job," "contract" (in client-facing docs) |
| Workstream | Internal term for a tracked initiative or project thread. | Use only in internal documents — not in client-facing materials |
| Structural clarity | KCG's core diagnostic framing — the real solution is structural, not behavioral. | Don't dilute this phrase by overusing it |
| Mission-driven | Acceptable descriptor for client types. Use specifically. | "Purpose-driven," "values-aligned" (vague) |
| Integrity is strategy | KCG's guiding principle. Use as a closing line or anchor thought — not casually. | Don't use as filler or in every piece |
Run every external piece through this checklist before it goes out.