Claim language
Evidence-to-claim language matrix
A claim is often weakest at the verb. The evidence may be real, but the sentence can still imply more certainty, scale, or cause than the source trail supports.
Use this matrix when a headline, chart, vendor slide, campaign readout, survey finding, or research report needs to be rewritten before it shapes a decision. The goal is not softer language for its own sake. The goal is a sentence that tells readers what is known, what is only suggested, and what still needs a better comparison.
The matrix
Start with the evidence actually in hand. Then choose the strongest claim that keeps the denominator, comparison, and causal design visible.
| Evidence in hand | Supportable wording | Do not say yet | Next check |
|---|---|---|---|
| One source statement | "The source says..." or "The source alleges..." depending on the source role and documentation. | That the claim is established fact. | Look for the closest record, counter-source, method note, or direct evidence. |
| Public record count | "Recorded cases in this source rose, fell, or totaled X during the stated period." | That real-world prevalence changed without checking reporting rules and the eligible population. | Name record scope, missing universe, population base, and revision risk. |
| Survey or poll result | "In this sample, X% of respondents answered..." | That the public, customers, or voters broadly believe the claim. | Check sample source, weighting, subgroup base, question wording, field dates, and uncertainty. |
| Before-and-after chart | "The metric changed after the event in the shown window." | That the event caused the change. | Check seasonality, starting level, concurrent changes, and whether a comparison was chosen before the result was visible. |
| Attribution report | "The report credited these outcomes under this identity and lookback rule." | That the campaign created the credited outcomes. | Check conversion lag, prior intent, channel blind spots, match rate, and whether a holdout or matched baseline exists. |
| Protected lift test | "The test estimates incremental impact for this audience, outcome, window, and assignment design." | That the result will hold across all markets, channels, creatives, or future budgets. | Check assignment integrity, leakage, outcome capture, uncertainty, and external validity. |
| Marketing mix model | "The model estimates contribution under these controls, priors, calibration inputs, and uncertainty ranges." | That a channel has an exact causal ROI because the model fit is strong. | Check calibration evidence, response curves, sensitivity tests, omitted variables, and decision limits. |
| Brand lift study | "The respondent measure moved in the study population under the disclosed recruitment and weighting rules." | That the campaign drove sales or durable market change. | Check exposed/control balance, respondent quality, question wording, field timing, and business-outcome evidence. |
| Attention or viewability report | "The campaign delivered stronger exposure-quality signals by the reported definition." | That attention alone proves brand or sales impact. | Check measurability, invalid traffic, frequency, placement context, and whether the outcome was tested separately. |
Rewrite clinic
Original: "Complaints surged, proving the policy failed."Cleaner: "Recorded complaints rose in the shown period. To judge the policy claim, readers still need the eligible population, reporting rule changes, prior seasonal pattern, and comparable locations or periods."
Original: "The campaign generated 10,000 sales."Cleaner: "The campaign report credited 10,000 sales under its attribution rule. Incremental sales require a holdout, matched baseline, geo comparison, model counterfactual, or another design chosen before results were visible."
Original: "High-intent audiences performed twice as well."Cleaner: "The high-intent audience produced a higher observed response. The result may reflect pre-existing demand, eligibility, reachability, bid differences, or creative fit unless the comparison controlled for those differences."
Original: "The survey proves buyers want this feature."Cleaner: "In the surveyed sample, respondents preferred this feature under the given wording. Confidence depends on sample source, weighting, field dates, alternatives shown, and whether stated preference predicts behavior."
Original: "The model shows the channel is the best investment."Cleaner: "The model estimates a stronger response for the channel under its assumptions. A budget decision should inspect calibration, uncertainty, saturation, constraints, and whether recent tests agree with the modeled response curve."
Confidence verbs
Verb choice should change when the evidence changes. Do not let the strongest verb arrive before the strongest design.
| Evidence tier | Useful verbs | Reader expectation | Avoid unless stronger evidence exists |
|---|---|---|---|
| Descriptive | shows, reports, records, counts, credits | The source describes what was observed or logged. | proves, caused, drove, changed |
| Directional | suggests, is consistent with, points toward, warrants testing | The pattern is useful but incomplete. | confirms, establishes, settles |
| Comparative | outperformed, lagged, differed, ranked higher | The comparison is visible and reasonably like-for-like. | won, failed, dominated, guaranteed |
| Causal | increased, reduced, caused, generated | A protected comparison estimates what changed because of the intervention. | Use only when assignment, counterfactual, outcome, and uncertainty are visible. |
| Decision-grade | supports, justifies, limits, rules out | The evidence is strong enough for a named decision within stated boundaries. | proves forever, applies everywhere, eliminates risk |
Campaign readout language
Advertising reports often mix delivery, exposure quality, traffic, leads, matched outcomes, and modeled impact. Keep the sentence inside the strongest evidence lane the report actually contains.
| Report field | Useful sentence | Boundary |
|---|---|---|
| Impressions, reach, frequency | "The campaign delivered against the planned exposure target with this reach and frequency profile." | Delivery is not persuasion or sales impact. |
| Viewability, invalid traffic, attention | "The exposure-quality signals met or missed the stated quality threshold." | Quality signals describe opportunity to see, not business lift. |
| Clicks and engaged sessions | "The creative and context produced this observed traffic response." | Traffic response can reflect interest, targeting, placement, or offer strength. |
| Form fills or leads | "The campaign produced these recorded leads with these qualification and follow-up statuses." | Lead count is weak without quality, duplication, and sales-stage context. |
| Matched conversions | "The matchback found these outcomes among matched identities under the disclosed window." | Matched outcomes are not incremental outcomes without a comparison. |
| Holdout or geo lift result | "The designed comparison estimates this incremental effect, with these uncertainty and leakage limits." | The estimate is bounded by design quality and setting. |
Six-question edit pass
1. What sentence will readers remember?Find the headline, chart title, slide conclusion, or executive-summary line that carries the strongest interpretation.
2. What type of evidence supports it?Separate source statement, record count, survey result, descriptive dashboard, attribution report, model estimate, and designed experiment.
3. What is the denominator?Name the population, opportunity base, record universe, respondent group, campaign audience, or outcome-eligible group.
4. What comparison is being implied?Identify whether the sentence invites a prior-period, peer, holdout, market, source-role, or counterfactual comparison.
5. Does the verb match the design?Downgrade from causal to descriptive or directional language when the comparison was not designed before results were visible.
6. What would raise or lower confidence?End with the document, method note, base rate, sensitivity check, counter-source, or test design that would most change the judgment.
Use it with the rest of the library
For media claims, pair this matrix with the media claim audit worksheet, headline and source-mix checklist, denominator framing examples, public records and denominator checklist, source role and incentive map, and survey and poll claim checklist.
For advertising measurement, pair it with the campaign readout QA checklist, campaign reporting terms glossary, attribution window and conversion lag checklist, randomized lift test readout checklist, MMM readout QA checklist, and private marketplace measurement checklist.
Takeaway
Good evidence deserves precise language. Weak or incomplete evidence may still be useful, but only if the sentence stops before it turns description into proof, correlation into cause, or response into incrementality.