Our Voice

[Describe the consistent personality behind all OST communications — this stays the same regardless of audience or channel.]

OST's voice is [scholarly / warm / pastoral / authoritative — pick what fits]. We speak as an institution rooted in faith and academic excellence, communicating with clarity and intention. Our voice reflects who we are: a community dedicated to theological formation and mission.

Core Voice Traits

  • [Trait 1 — e.g. Welcoming] We greet every reader as a potential member of our community. Our language is inviting and accessible without being informal. Example: "We're glad you're here." not "Thanks for stopping by!"

  • [Trait 2 — e.g. Scholarly] We take our academic identity seriously. Our writing reflects depth and credibility without becoming inaccessible. Example: "Our faculty bring decades of theological expertise to every classroom." not "Our teachers are really smart."

  • [Trait 3 — e.g. Mission-Driven] Everything we write connects back to our mission. We don't communicate for the sake of communication — we educate, inspire, and call people forward. Example: [Client to fill in]

  • [Trait 4 — e.g. Pastoral] We recognize that many of our readers are on a journey of faith. Our tone reflects care, compassion, and respect for that journey. Example: [Client to fill in]

 

Tone

[Unlike voice, tone shifts depending on context. Describe how OST adjusts its tone across different situations.]

 
Context Tone
Admissions & prospective students Warm, encouraging, clear
Academic content & faculty communications Formal, precise, authoritative
News & announcements Informative, straightforward
Social media Conversational, engaging, approachable
Crisis or sensitive communications Calm, honest, compassionate
Events & community Celebratory, inclusive, energetic
 

Writing Guidelines

  • Be clear before being clever. Our readers include prospective students, faculty, donors, and community members. Write for all of them. Avoid jargon, acronyms, or insider language without explanation.

  • Use active voice. "OST offers a Master of Divinity program" not "A Master of Divinity program is offered by OST."

  • Be specific. "Our students serve in parishes, hospitals, and missions across 14 countries" not "Our students do impactful work."

  • Respect the reader's time. Get to the point. Long paragraphs and dense blocks of text lose readers. Break up content and lead with the most important information.

 

Words We Use

[Client to fill in — e.g. formation, mission, community, vocation, service]

 

Words We Avoid

[Client to fill in — e.g. synergy, leverage, cutting-edge, world-class]