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Business Communication Skills for Managers. Module 2 : Writing in Business. Writing the Right Message. Audience. General Communication System. Audience (cont.). Downward and Upward Communication upward: initiated by staff and directed at executives complaint or request
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Business Communication Skills for Managers Module 2: Writing in Business
Audience General Communication System
Audience (cont.) • Downward and Upward Communication • upward: initiated by staff and directed at executives • complaint or request • Downward: executive levels to staff • policy manuals, rules and regulations • Horizontal Communication • information from peers to one of similar rank
The Right Message Narrow and organize communication to highlight purpose Clear, efficient communication Positive, negative, and persuasive
The Right Message (cont.) • Positive Messages • Routine or good news • Sympathy messages • Negative Messages • Bad news- want to avoid quitting • Refusal to provide refund, cancellation of event • Persuasive Communications • Need encouragement to act as sender desires • When receiver is reluctant
Writing for the Reader • Audience is receiver • Focuses on how writer can best convey message • You-view • Put receiver needs before sender • Start with what receiver needs to know
Language as an Obstacle Avoid: • Clichés - makes writing boring • Jargon - “technical terminology or characteristic idiom of a special activity or group” • Slang - informal and less credible • Euphemisms/Doublespeak - unpleasant topics in polite way, disguises word meaning
Bias-Free Writing Gender Bias: use both genders, plural subjects Race and Ethnicity Bias: don’t mention race Disability Bias: avoid labeled nouns
Concise Writing • Sentence Length: one subject, one verb phrase - related to reader comprehension • Expressing accurate ideas • prepositions - avoid “with” or “of” • use verbs - more engaging • reduce extra words - detract from meaning • avoid repetition
Concise Writing Avoid Passive Voice - makes writing flat • Created using to be • “She was falling” versus “she fell” • How to identify passive voice • Something is happening • Subject is not doing that thing
Clarity • Precision • must be clear, specific, and precise • Plain Words • focus should be on reader understanding • Lists • draw attention, add white space, emphasis
Parallel Construction • Messages easier to absorb • Improves writing style • positive example: “Yara loves running, swimming, and hiking” • negative example: “Yara loves running, to swim, and biking”
Emphasis Helps readers easily access intended message What is appropriate differs in age of texting & social media Not personal communication
Planning Business Messages Great deal of analysis Determine how receiver likely feels about communication Enables writer to document process Pre-writing (outlines): guides to particular goal
Planning Business Messages (cont.) Messages contain: • News: states point • Reasons: supports news • Goodwill and action: closing paragraph • Buffer: in negative & persuasive messages
Planning Business Messages (cont.) Persuasive Messages • Determine how likely receiver is going to comply with sender • AIDA (Awareness, Interest, Desire, Action) • Opens with positive or negative message • attention grabbing • discuss details
Writing Business Messages • Post planning: need to craft words and phrasing • Must have writing skills • subject lines • constructing buffers • negative words and tone • You-View How to write persuasive, positive, and negative messages
Revising Business Messages Rearrangement and fine tuning of a draft Highly critical step Two-step revision process Proofreading - avoid fragments, run-ons
Formatting Business Writing General format: • Non-indented paragraphs • 1.0 line spacing in paragraph • 2.0 line spacing between paragraphs • Left margin: straight line • Right margin: ragged or straight • Font size: 10 or 12
Formatting Business Writing (cont.) Business letter format: • Sender's address, date, inside address, salutation, body, closing, attachments Business Memo & Email Format • Pay close attention to subject line
Formatting Business Writing (cont.) Style: • White space between words, paragraphs • Lists: easy-to-understand pattern • Headings: guide/provide messages • Font: Serif vs. Sans Serif • print Media vs. Digital Media
Microsoft Word • Line and Paragraph Spacing • Headers and Footers • holds footnotes, page numbers, titles, etc. • information repeated every page
Microsoft Word • Spell & Grammar Check • compares words against dictionary or database • press F7 to open • Sentence Length • File > Options > Proofing • “Show readability statistics”
Google Docs • Line and Paragraph Spacing • select lines • Format > Line Spacing • Adding headers, footers, & page numbers • Insert > Header & page number • choose Header or Footer • enter text
Google Docs (cont.) • Spell & Grammar Check • Sentence Length • Tools > word count • Command+Shift+C
Quick Review • Know your audience and how to communicate with them • Think about the purpose of a message and stay bias-free • When writing, always be clear, concise, and provide emphasis • Remember the planning, writing, and reviewing stages • Using Microsoft Word and Google Docs to write messages