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what should you do if you observe unethical behavior in the workplace

ask questions that challenge the rationalization of the behavior

Team mistakes: Know the common mistakes teams typically make when presenting together

assign information gathering at beginning of the process then work independently until the presentation

Messages: directions and expectations—similarities and differences

both set overall goal and end with good will but directions walks through step by step and expectations lays out responsibilities

Inquiries: Format for responses

bullets, numbered lists, or special formatting

Formal versus casual modes of communication

casual: all lowercase, nonstandard spelling, excessive formatting, all caps, humor, sarcasm, emojis, typos formal: standard spelling, punctuation, and grammar, use greetings and names

Causes of long paragraphs and how to solve the problem of lengthy paragraphs

cause: placing more than one main idea or topic in the paragraph solution: process of unifying

Social responsibility

companies give back, serve, and meet the social interests of their communities

Delivery: Describe how presentation delivery impacts your credibility

competence: know and provide valuable content; caring: responsive to the expectations of the audience; character: display complete openness and honestly

Construct effective and responsible public relations messages

components include a headline, dateline, PR story, boilerplate, contact information, call to action

Directness vs. evasiveness when delivering bad news

direct; bad news first then rationale indirect: vise versa

Effects of providing too much information

distract readers and weigh down your document

Interpreting texts

evaluate the meta message of the text

Audience interests

focus on others to gain one component of credibility (caring)

Explain the principles of team communication in high-performing teams

focus on performance, go through natural stages, build team culture, meet often, focus on psychological safety, avoid groupthink, embrace diversity, go through divergence and convergence, provide feedback, common sense of purpose

Methods to diffuse angry emails

focus on task related facts and issues in your reply, focus on shared objectives and agreements, express interest in arranging a time to meet in person

Action verbs

focuses on the goal of coordinating action ex. have a meeting becomes meet

Work culture surrounding texting

for short, simple business messages; less formal

Dress for success. Know what various types of business attire mean and what to wear when presenting.

formal business attire= authority and competence; high-level business casual= productivity and trustworthiness; low-level business casual= creativity and friendliness; you should generally dress slightly more formal than your audience and decide what to wear based on the message u are trying to send

Sentence length

routine messages: 15 words or fewer; complex ideas and needs: 20 or more words

Language (accusatory, polite, flame, pompous) and routine business messages

straightforward and rarely sensitive

indirect

support first (often for bad news)

inductive

support first (often for bad news)

Relationship between long-term business success, honesty, and delivering bad news

the better you are at appropriately delivery bad news and be honest, the more likely you will be successful in your long term business career

One possible negative effect of texting and other forms of instant messaging is

the brevity of messages can make them sound unfeeling

Control

the degree to which communications can be planned and recorded, thus allowing strategic message development

Controllability

the degree to which the bad-news message receiver can alter the outcome

Priorities

the goals, tasks, values, and activities that you judge to be more important than others

why are companies less able to generate predictable media exposure in the Social Age

the increasingly fragmented media landscape

The primary purpose of crisis communication is

to help victims and other stakeholders

Apply the AIM planning process to public relations messages

trailer your message to the specific stakeholder group, accurate reliable information about your what company has done, have major components of a PR message

Ethics and Ethical Behavior in Business Communication

transparency has become a dominant business ethic recently

Accuracy

true, correct, exact information

Handouts: when and when not to use them or hand them out.

try to give hand outs at the end so they do not distract from presentation

what is the advantage of front loading a routine message

it makes it easier to get the reader's attention

Mum effect

occurs when the chain of messages within an organization is filtered at each level to leave out or inaccurately state the bad news

One-to-one messages versus one-to-many messages

one on one: phone calls both: email, messaging,

Characteristics of excellent business thinking

one that involves examining, developing, and refining business ideas in a way that provides business value to your audience

Amount of detail in routine business messages

provide detail in paragraphs of 20 to 80 words

a business message is complete if it

provides all the information necessary to meet the intended purpose.

three strategies of completeness

providing all the relevant information, being accurate, and being specific

Which aspect of writing business reports relates to the component of credibility known as competence?

providing facts that help decision makers

Synchronous communication

communication that occurs in real time

Active incivility

direct forms of disrespect

Clarity

(n.) clearness, accuracy

The FAIR approach

- Facts: How factual is your communication? - Access: How accessible or transparent are your motives, reasoning, and information? - Impacts: How does your communication impact stakeholders? - Respect: How respectful is your communication?

Teaser message

-Signal to recipients that an upcoming conversation or other communication may involve unpleasant news -Prepares recipients emotionally yet does not reveal specific information

advantages for written delivery

-can craft message more carefully -can document the message more easily -can provide a message that serves as a reference -can deliver message to more people effectively

Advantages of verbal delivery

-can use and observe nonverbal cues -can more easily demonstrate intentions -can more effectively clarify and explain the bad news -can respond to concerns immediately

Nervousness: Know techniques to alleviate nervousness

-engage in relaxation techniques -become aware of your breathing -practice visualization -focus on friendly faces initially -watch your food and beverage intake -get comfortable with audience members before starting your presentation

Construct effective and responsible crisis messages

-express concern -explain corrective actions -provide instructions -give an excuse/justification (for some) -provide compensation/apology (for some)

Maintaining credibility when delivering bad news

-honesty and openness are keys -although people do not like to get bad news, they expect the truth -may assume that communicating bad news to customers shakes relationships and breeds mistrust -delivering bad news the right way actually strengthen customer relationships and increase trust when conditions improve

disadvantage for in person delivery

-may hinder effective delivery, interruptions, and discussion of bad news due to strong emotions -requires more time -less able to document the bad news -less able to provide directions that bad-news recipients can reference later

Key information to include when writing routine business messages

-state primary message (10 or fewer words) -provide details in paragraphs of 20 to 80 words -restate request or key message in more specific terms -state goodwill

Relaxation techniques: Know the techniques outlined in the chapter for relaxing

-stretching -meditating -hiking -listening to music -watching the sunset

disadvantage for written delivery

-unable to demonstrate concern through nonverbal cues - unable to immediately respond to concerns -unable to work out mutual solutions -less able to control long-term impacts on working relationships

Length of primary messages in routine business messages

10 words or fewer

Movement around the room. When to do it. When not to.

5- 10 minutes move around the room, not too much movement, and don't get to close to audience

Analogy

A comparison of two different things that are similar in some way

Cause and effect

A relationship in which change in one variable causes change in another

Flexibility: Know the techniques for maintaining a flexible approach during your presentation.

Arrive early Focus on audience needs Don't panic if you get lost Always have a "Plan B" Know your key messages

AIM process for planning and developing influential messages

Audience analysis, Information gathering, Message development

Slides: Know when to start them and how to use them effectively.

Avoid turning out the lights Talk first, show slides next Speak to the audience, not the screen Interpret slides; don't read Stand to the side of the screen Use blank slides strategically

Spoken versus written messages in business

Written has high control and low richness; spoken has high richness and low control

Explain the principles of effective virtual team communication

Build trust, Meet in person if possible, Get to know one another, Use collaborative technologies, Choose an active team leader, Run effective virtual meetings

Message types used with routine business messages

Coordinate work, Maintain and improve workplace relationships, Apologies, Expressions of sympathy

Team success: Know the techniques that make teams successful when they present together

Determine clear objectives Decide who's doing what Stand together Refer to one another's points Transition effectively

Explain the importance of establishing credibility for business communications

Establishing credibility helps communicate more easily and influentially

Explain the FAIR approach to ethical business communications

FAIR test determines how well you have provided Facts; how well you have granted Access to your motives, reasoning, and information; how well you have examined Impacts on stakeholders; and how well you have shown respect

Explain how to handle external complaints and negative rumors

Gather the facts Avoid heavy-handedness or show of force Respond quickly Use the appropriate channels Rely on external advocates Respond with credentials

Effective framing

It emphasizes the message's premises. It gives focus to an important argument. It highlights support for the message's key ideas.

Focus: Know the techniques Cardon outlines to help you make your presentation about people.

Make your presentation about people to gain their trust Introduce colleagues and refer to them by name during the presentation make people the subjects of your sentences

Describe and demonstrate approaches to planning, running, and following up on meetings

Plan: Determine if a meeting is necessary, Purpose? Attendees? Decide type of meeting, Coordinating meeting? Problem-solving meeting? Create and distribute an agenda. Run: Start with a story, Set expectations; follow the agenda, Encourage participation, Build consensus and an action plan, End on time with a summary, Know how to handle difficult or disruptive participants. Follow up: Distribute minutes, Ensure everyone follows through on all assignments

Typical lengths of paragraphs in business messages

Routine messages without much analysis: 20-30 words, Other paragraphs with more analysis: 40-150 words

Describe strategies for effective group writing

Start right away, Plan together, Distribute work fairly, Remain flexible and open, Meet in real time consistently, Ensure the writing reflects group views, Discuss group editing, Identify individual to do final polishing

Synchronous versus asynchronous communication

Synchronous communication- require user and sender are active at the same time (telephone conversation) Asynchronous communication- sending and receiving occur at different times (postcards, letters)

Trends in Business Communication

The public increasingly views companies with less trust and Surveys show that employees often do not trust their own business leaders

Using the You-Attitude or Viewpoint

To engender trust and beneficial solutions, speak about "our needs" or "your needs" rather than "my" needs

Exaggeration

To make an overstatement or to stretch the truth.

Natural style

Use action verbs when possible. Use active voice. Use short and familiar words and phrases. Use parallel language. Avoid buzz words and figures of speech. Avoid it is/there are.

Buzzwords

Workplace terms that become trite because of overuse Can stir negative feelings among some readers

Describe the nature of crisis management in today's organizations

Your company will face a crisis An unforeseen disruption to business operations that involve threats to public safety, major financial loss, and reputation loss.

Credibility in Business Communication

Your reputation for being trustworthy and the degree to which others believe or trust in you

Primary messages

a position or reccomendation

Making business messages more positive

a positive attitude in the workplace improves work performances, allows more creativity, provides more motivation to excel, facilitates more helpfulness between co-workers, and gains more influence on clients and customers

Buffer

a statement to establish common ground, show appreciation, state your sympathy, or otherwise express goodwill

Corporate reputation

a widely held perception of a company by the general public

Importance of accuracy and causes of inaccuracy

accuracy is a basic objective of all business communication because your readers base important decisions on your communications. Just one inaccuracies can lead readers to dismiss your entire message and lower your credibility.

Active voice vs. passive voice

active voice: identifies doer followed by the action then the object; passive voice: begins with the object proceeded by a weak verb, then a strong verb and leaves out the doer

Impacts of bad news: when and how to state them

after rational and bad news is delivered; honestly describe negative impacts

Delivering bad news and the impact on writer credibility

any perceived dishonesty or deception can damage your credibility

Bad news messages: reviewing before sending for effectiveness and fairness

apply FAIR test, get feedback, and reread

Poor, average, and excellent writers: similarities and differences on planning, drafting, and reviewing

average writers spend the most time writing overall and poor spend the least amount of time. Excellent writers spend the most time planning what they will write.

Defusing

avoiding escalation and removing tension to focus on work objectives

How readers form impressions before beginning to read

based on the amount of white space and words on your document

elon is a manager who organizes his department into teams at the beginning of September. By November, he worries because the teams are still having conflict and do not seem very productive. What would be the best advice to give elon?

be patient because the teams are in the storming stage. Give them time to reach the norming and performing stages

What is appropriate to show on the screen if you need to talk for a while without referencing your slides?

blank slides

Unsupported generalizations

blanket claim without any support or evidence to back it up

When dealing with email, many business professionals consider the use of ________ a breach of privacy.

blind carbon copies

Effects of accuracy and specificity on credibility and response

boost in credibility and response if you are more accurate and specific

FAIR test and routine business messages

checks that your information in accurate and reliable

Signature blocks and what to include in signature blocks

clear contact information

Storage methods for messages: cloud versus paper

cloud: can be edited in real time by all members

"Having presence." Know what it means.

commanding attention, garnering respect for your ideas, engaging your listeners, and inspiring your audience to action

Business Ethics

commonly accepted beliefs and principles in a business community for acceptable behavior

Planning

communication can be tightly drafted, edited and revised, rehearsed, and otherwise strategically develop before delivery

Asynchronous communication

communication such as email in which the message and the response do not occur at the same time

Reviewing business messages

conducting FAIR test, proofreading, and getting feedback

Ways to divide material for team presentations

consider who is best suited to explain certain types of information and who should open and close the presentation

Parallelism

consistent grammatical pattern across a sentence or paragraph

Mixed signals

content of the message conflicts with the tone, nonverbal communication, or other signals

strategies of concision

control paragraph length, use short sentences, avoid redundancy, avoid empty phrases, and avoid wordy prepositional phrases

Ethical responsibility

corporate activities comply with high ethical and legal standards

Situations in which to use relationship-oriented routine messages

coworkers personal loss, let coworker down, major professional milestones, appreciation

Describe how competence, caring, and character affect your credibility as a communicator

credibility is like a three legged stool. Without one of the three, you can not have a stable sense of credibility.

Aria, an executives at American Hustle Inc., wants to introduce a profit-sharing program. She needs to convince the other executives that is good idea for their company. She has considered her audience and gathered information. Next, she should

decide how to frame her primary message

Korrine manages a team of graphic designers. She distributes a document with details on each of the tasks for an upcoming project, which are then assigned to a specific member of her team. Which of the three components of setting expectations does this accomplish?

describing responsibilities

Describing responsibilities

designating tasks and work outcomes to certain employees

Handouts: Know what information is best-suited for a handout.

detailed, numerical, and other information hard to see on a screen

Describe the role of public relations messages in today's organizations

developing relationships with employees, customers, communities, the media, and other stakeholders

Steps to message development

direct and front loaded, primary message of ten or fewer words, primary message on subject line, short paragraphs with detailed info

Relationship between written communication, ease of reading, and communication type

ease of reading is more critical in emails and other digital messages

Coordination

effort and timing needed to allow all relevant people to participate in the communication

Various forms of business communication and when to use each

email: used for most written business messages; messaging: quick announcements and scheduling; social media: team and networked communication; phone calls: one on one to discuss workplace issues if in different locations; conference calls: team conversations; webinars: team meetings or sales presentations; video conference: team meetings

Primary forms of private, written business communication

emails, phone calls, face to face

Explain basic principles for handling difficult conversations

embrace difficult conversations, assume the best in others, adopt a learning stance, stay calm/ overcome noise, find common ground, disagree diplomatically, avoid exaggeration and either/or approaches

Emphasis on negative vs. positive traits

emphasize what products and services are rather than what are not

Values

enduring beliefs and ideals that an individual holds

Strategies for effective texting

evaluate the meta message, use for only simple, brief convos not important decisions, don't ask questions you can get the answers to yourself, be careful about abbreviated language, emoticons, acronyms, and emojis, avoid sarcasm and jokes in most cases, avoid rescheduling meeting times or places, turn off alerts for incoming messages, identify yourself, clearly end the exchange, avoid personal texting during work hours, avoid sending messages after work hours, establish rules for texting in meetings

Goals or aims of business communicators

express your message in ways that respect and inspire others

Permanence

extent to which the message can be stored, retrieved, and distributed to others

Nonverbal communication: Know what it is and what it means for the audience

eye contact, sit straight,

Effective interaction with the audience

fielding questions during the presentation and mingling and following up with the audience members after

Resources

financial, space, time, and other investments necessary to employ particular channels of communication

Balancing white space and text

first impression of the document; not enough white space looks daunting or clustered and too much white space may look insufficient

Improving document navigation

headings, highlighting, lists, white space, simplicity

Using headings in business documents

help readers identify key ideas and navigate the document to areas of interest

Tone for routines business messages

helpful, professional, and reader-center tone

Immediacy

how quickly someone is able to respond and give feedback

Severity

how serious or detrimental the bad news is

Steps in business problem solving

identifying the business problem, analyzing the business problem, and clarifying objectives

Explain how crisis communications and public relations messages impact organizational reputation

if the crisis response is not made in a timely matter and is appropriate it will lessen the company's reputation

Either/or logic

implies that there are only two possible outcomes or viewpoints, when in fact, there are many options between the two poles on the continuum of possibilities

Reinterpretation

involves adjusting your initial perceptions by making more objective, more fact-based, and less personal judgments and evaluations

Discussing coordination

involves providing guidelines for how employees should communicate and cooperate with one another

Effects of bad news in high-performing organizations

in high performing organizations employees often share information with one another even if its bad news; this leads to an open, honest, caring, and rich environment with higher morale

The Role of Technology in Team Communication

in past relied on, phone calls, teleconferences, and email to communicate now using video conference more. There are more collaborative technologies now and the amount of options overwhelm some employees

When to deliver bad news in person vs. when to deliver it in writing

in person: medium severity w high controllability, medium severity w low controllability, high severity w high controllability written: low severity w high controllability, low severity w low controllability both: high severity w low controllability

Delivering bad news to various audiences- Customers

indirect bad news delivery

Delivering bad news to various audiences- External partners

indirect bad news delivery

Passive incivility

indirect forms of disrespect

Richness

level of immediacy and number of cues available

email communication is characterized by

little coordination

Eyes, hands, voice, and stance. Know what to do with each.

make eye contact with your audience, hands at your side or palms up, enthusiastic and confident tone, open stance, lean forward

Challenges with writing routine business messages

make sure your reader pays attention

Building connections with phone conversations

makes personal connections, resolves problems more quickly, makes better decisions, manages conflict more effectively

Terms that focus on differences

may imply an opposing position; creates a me vs you tone

Concision

message is easy to read

Apply the AIM planning process to crisis communications

message should be developed for specific stakeholder in mind (specific channel), provide accurate information as soon as possible, choose components of message based on type of crisis

Completeness

messages provides all the information necessary to meet the purpose

Relationship of meta messages to credibility

meta messages become the basis for your reputation as how people perceive your meta message helps then form their impressions of your credibility

Audience analysis with routine messages

minimal audience analysis because matter is straight forward and audience is likely to respond positively

Idioms and metaphors

nonliteral, lack precise meaning; our of place or inappropriate in business

Cyber silence

nonresponse to emails and other communications

Author credibility and routine business messages

not enough information will decrease credibility

Losing your place: Know what to do when you lose your place during a presentation.

pause until find your thoughts or repeat the last statement you made

Aiko has to tell Demetrius that his attitude and mannerisms have offended some customers. She also must inform him that he is on probation for six weeks and will be fired if his behavior does not improve. It would be best for Aiko to deliver this message in a(n)

personal meeting

I-voice vs. we-voice vs. you-voice

place focus on the reader (you), your shared interest with the reader (we), repeated use of I-voice gives a self-centered tone

Task and goals of the stages of effective message creation

plan: get the content right (understand your audience, gather the right information, and develop your message), write: get the delivery right (set the right tone, apply a clear and concise style, and focus on navigational design), review: double check everything (get feedback, ensure your message is fair, make sure to proofread)

Planning and reviewing with routine business messages

planning: message development; reviewing: one or two minutes, reread message

Specificity

precise and avoid vagueness

Authenticity: Know what it means to present with authenticity

present your real self to the audience

Slanting

presenting only those facts that only support or favor your position in a message.

Efficiency and routine business messages

primary goal

deductive

primary message first

direct

primary message first

Effective subject lines for routine business messages

primary message in 10 or fewer words

Front-loading routine business messages

primary message on subject line and in first sentence or two

Shifts in readers' values and priorities

priorities tend to shift more often than values

a person who has to deliver a bad news message should gather as much information as possible from a variety of sources to reduce the

probability of making subjective judgements

Likelihood

probability of the bad event occurring

Economic responsibility

producing products and services that meet the needs of customers and clients

Review crisis communications for fairness and effectiveness

proofread, get feedback, and apply FAIR test

Review public relations messages for fairness and effectiveness

proofread, get feedback, apply FAIR test

Ease of processing

readers need less mental effort to understand your message

Negativity effect

recipients are more likely to perceive messages that are intended as neutral as negative

Neutrality effect

recipients are more likely to perceive messages with an intended positive emotion as neutral

Results of multitasking

reduced productivity

Handling emotion effectively in online communications

reinterpretation, relaxation, defusing

Relaxation

releasing and overcoming anger and frustration so that you can make a more rational and less emotional response

Determining information relevancy

repeatedly asking yourself if the information is necessary for the purpose of your message

Doug has just been appointed leader of a new virtual team. He senses that the team members have doubts about each other's competence. What can he do to alleviate this situation?

schedule a time when people can share their professional accomplishments

Strategic selection of communication channels

selection is based on richness, control and constraints; As sensitivity in your communication increase, you will use richer forms of communication (face to face, meetings, phone calls, and online conferences); For highly detailed messages, you will use higher control channels (letters, emails, blogs, podcasts)

Providing deadlines

setting out the timeline by which the work should be accomplished satisfactorily

Considerations for deciding which channels to use when delivering bad news

severity, controllability, and likelihood

Elements of a good subject line

short descriptive subject line that frames your entire message within 5 to 10 words

Message alerts and e-interruptions

show reduced attention spans, increased stress, and reduce creativity

Effects on readers of having long paragraphs

signal disorganization, signal disrespect for readers time, confuse readers, readers may miss some ideas altogether

SOFTEN: What does it mean? When and how do you use it?

smile, open stance, forward lean, tone, eye contact, and nod; this is a nonverbal communication model that can show confidence and strength while also showing warmth and concern; use in presentations

Cues

social, verbal, and nonverbal

Preventable crisis

stakeholders believe the company is to blame and is completely responsible for the damages and losses to stakeholders ex. employee error

Victim crisis

stakeholders generally do not hold companies responsible ex. natural disaster

Accident crisis

stakeholders hold companies responsible but understand that what happened was not intentional and was difficult to foresee ex. equipment error

Positions

stances that you take based on a set of conclusions

Facts

statements that can be relied on with a fair amount of certainty and can be observed objectively

which stage of team development do virtual teams sometimes skip

storming

Communication channel

the medium that carries the message

Communicating with colleagues: effects of humor, sarcasm, abbreviations, acronyms, emoticons in email

the message can be misinterpreted or can draw attention away from the message itself

Importance of a specific subject

the more specific you are, the more likely your readers are to have their questions answered. if you are unspecific, the readers are unlikely to respond to your message as you intend.

Meta messages

the overall but often underlying messages people take away from a communication or group of communications

Tone

the overall evaluation the reader perceives the writer to have towards the reader and the message content

Constraints

the practical limitations of coordination and resources

corporate values

the stated and lived values of a company

why is efficiency one of the primary goals when sending routine messages

the volume of routine messages is high

Delivering bad news to various audiences- Colleagues

typically can be more direct than with customers and clients

AIM process and delivering bad news

understanding the nature of the bad news and the impacts on them, delivering the news in a timely matter, and choosing the right mix of communication channels

Format for routine messages: bullets, paragraphs, numbered sequence, etc.

use bullets, numbering, special formatting, and external links to relevant information to highlight key ideas

The principles to apply in order to write effective emails

use for the right purpose, ensure ease of reading, show respect for time, protect privacy and confidentiality, respond promptly, maintain professionalism and appropriate formality, manage emotion effectively, and avoid distractions

personal values

values that individuals prioritize and adhere to

Cyber incivility

violation of respect and consideration in an online environment based on workplace norms

Which communication channel is synchronous and high in control?

webinar

Lighting: Know the concepts behind leaving the lights up and turning them down during a presentation.

when turning off the lights, it makes it easier to see the slides and harder to see the presenter. This will make the slides the main focal point and take attention away from presenter. Also, dim lights can make the audience sleepy.

When and when not to text

when: announcements, questions, confirmation of plans, quick tips, support, congratulations when not: important decisions, reschedule meetings

Audience and relationship-oriented routine messages

will respond to the message with more emotion than a routine business message

Delivery and content: importance

with bad news delivery can be more important than the content because the audience will react more to your tone, style, delivery

Redundancy

words or phrases that repeat the same meaning

Call to action

writing that urges people to action or promotes change

Choosing a communication channel in regard to message development

written communication allows for the most message development with having lost of most control

Trade-offs associated with richness, control, and constraints when choosing a communication channel

written has the most control and the least amount of richness where in person has low control and lots of richness

Professional credibility at career stages

your credibility is low at the beginning of your career because you are just starting out

Relationship-oriented routine messages- Apologies

• Acknowledge mistake • Express regret • Take responsibility • Offer commitment • State goodwill

Relationship-oriented routine messages- Sympathy

• Express sympathy • Offer support • State goodwill

Task-oriented routine messages- Announcements

• Gain attention • Give announcement • Provide details • Issue call to action • State goodwill

Relationship-oriented routine messages- Appreciation

• Give thanks • Provide rationale • State goodwill

Task-oriented routine messages- Claims

• Make claim • Provide rationale • Issue call to action • State goodwill

Task-oriented routine messages- Responses to inquiries

• Provide responsibilities • State goodwill

Task-oriented routine messages- Directions

• State the goal • Give step-by-step directions • State goodwill

Routine messages and credibility

• establishes your credibility • Influence how others evaluate you • Responsiveness • Reliability • Attention to detail • Commitment • Professionalism

Strategies for managing digital message overload

•Check messages just four or five times daily •Wean yourself off checking devices constantly •Develop strategies to manage your inbox •Turn off message alerts •Use face-to-face and phone conversations •Reply immediately only to urgent messages •Avoid unnecessarily lengthening an email chain •Use automatic messages to let people know you are unavailable

Task-oriented routine messages- Expectations

•Explain overall expectation •Describe responsibility •Provide deadlines •Discuss coordination •State goodwill

Task-oriented routine messages- Requests

•Make request •Provide rationale •Issue call to action •State goodwill

Principles for effective phone conversations and videoconferences

•Practice using technology beforehand •Be effective when using a webcam •Be careful using interactive tools •Start the call with purpose •Take charge of the call •Follow guidelines for effective meetings

Making business phone calls: protocol and etiquette

•Schedule and plan calls •Ensure good audio quality •Open with a warm greeting and caller's name •Get to the issue in one or two minutes •Use a pleasant, enthusiastic voice •Share conversation time equally •Listen actively •Don't multitask •Take notes •Summarize next steps at the end of the call •Close with appreciation •Follow up on agreements

Developing routine business messages

•State the primary message •Provide details •Restate the request or key message specifically •State goodwill •Use AIM process

Delivering and receiving negative performance reviews

■ Give clear, targeted feedback ■ Focus on actions and results ■ Explain the impact of their poor performance ■ Link to consequences ■ Ask for reasons ■ Problem solve rather than blame ■ Be firm ■ Establish measurable and realistic expectations ■ Receive negative feedback


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