Featured course

Gary delivering a business-writing course

High-impact business writing with AI

Courses

Explore our range of courses, covering all topic areas of writing at work.

Choose from three formats: prescheduled trainer-led courses open to anyone, self-paced online learning and tailored in-house courses built around your needs.

Popular courses

Business report writing

$

Bid, tender and sales-proposal writing

$

Writing exceptional board reports

$

Policy and procedure writing

$

Storytelling in business

$

High-impact business writing with AI

$

View all courses

5
Greta Solomon

Rethinking creativity: a Q&A with Greta Solomon

Interview still of host J. Alex Greenwood and guest Rob Ashton, with YouTube play button

Is AI making our writing better – or worse? PR After Hours interview

More from the blog

5

Resources

Whether your next task is a report, a press release or a presentation, a little help goes a long way. Find actionable, expert guides and tips in our Knowledge Hub.

Bids and proposals

$

AI

$

Business writing essentials

$

Writing to the board

$

Writing to customers

$

Writing for marketing

$

Technical writing

$

Professional email writing

$

Business report writing

$

Corporate communications

$

View all resources

5

FAQs

You’ll find answers to the most common questions we get about our training on this page. If we haven’t answered your question, you can submit it there. 

Explore our FAQs

$

Useful information

If you’re considering our training, these pages will give you a fuller picture of what we do and how we do it – and how it can help you or your team.

Our pricing

$

Our approach

$

Our writing analysis

$

Coaching enquiry

$

AI Ready

$

Emphasis is the UK’s leading business-writing training company, offering specialist business-writing training and consultancy services to private and public sector organisations all over the world.

About us

Emphasis has been training companies and individuals in how to make their communication work for 25 years. Find out more about our story and our work below.

Our story

$

Our people

$

Our clients

$

Case studies

$

Courses

Resources

FAQs

About Us

Blog

Spaces and units: survey results

aerial view of two cars parked directly next to each other in empty car park
aerial view of two cars parked directly next to each other in empty car park

In our post on units and spaces, we asked readers to take a short survey. We’re delighted to report that 130 people did – and here are the results.

Overall, most of you were in favour of closing up the number and unit, with four fifths preferring ‘1.75cm’ to ‘1.75 cm’. However, this wasn’t the case across the board. With some units, such as kcal, more than half (57 per cent) of you preferred to include a space. This may be because we are used to seeing it with a space on food packaging.

Those who described themselves as working mainly for media (20 per cent) were far more likely to want to close up the number and unit in all instances, while those who said they wrote mainly for academia (4 per cent) were more likely to want to leave a space in all instances. Those who wrote mainly for business (80 per cent) were more mixed, but tended towards not leaving a space.

So, while there are some quite strict formatting rules within the scientific and academic communities, which say to leave a space in almost all instances, it seems that many people outside of those communities actually prefer not to.

Both styles are fine, but it’s a good idea to be consistent within your organisation, so we recommend deciding on a preference and adding it to your house style guide. If you don’t have one, you can talk to us about tailoring our style guide The Write Stuff to your organisation’s needs.

Survey responses

1. Would you write ‘the table is 1.75cm wide’ or ‘the table is 1.75 cm wide’?

  • 80 per cent said 1.75cm
  • 20 per cent said 1.75 cm

2. Would you write ‘then add 7oz of flour’ or ‘then add 7 oz of flour’?

  • 80 per cent said 7oz
  • 20 per cent said 7 oz

3. Would you write ‘the car was travelling at 80mph’ or ‘the car was travelling at 80 mph’?

  • 55 per cent said 80mph
  • 45 per cent said 80 mph

4. Would you write ‘one slice of cheese on toast contains 150kcal’ or ‘one slice of cheese on toast contains 150 kcal’?

  • 43 per cent said 150kcal
  • 57 per cent said 150 kcal

5. We asked you what kind of writing you usually do, and you answered:

  • mainly for business – 60 per cent
  • mainly for media – 20 per cent
  • mainly for pleasure – 11 per cent
  • mainly for academia – 4 per cent
  • all of the above – 5 per cent

We also asked you for your nationality, but as 89 per cent of those who answered were British, we don’t have enough data about the other nationalities (which included Indian, Swiss, Dutch, South African, American, Canadian, Irish and Australian) to draw any conclusions about national preferences.

 

Image credit: Rizky Ade Jonathan / Shutterstock

Subscribe

Expert advice to your inbox