Trategy For Effective Communication Use of S
Trategy For Effective Communication Use of S
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INTRODUCTION
The message is said to be effective when the receiver
understands the same meaning that the sender was intended to
convey. For any communication in business, in order to be
effective, it must have seven qualities. These seven attributes
are called seven C’s of effective business communication.
(All these attribute starts with the alphabet ‘C’ so are called 7
C’s)
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SEVEN C’S ARE….
Clear.
Concise.
Concrete.
Correct.
Coherent.
Complete.
Courteous.
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CLEAR
When writing or speaking to someone, be clear about your goal or
message.
Make sure that it's easy for your reader to understand your meaning.
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BAD EXAMPLE
Hi John,
Best,
Skip
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GOOD EXAMPLE
Hi John,
I wanted to write you a quick note about Daniel Kadar, who's working
in your department. In recent weeks, he's helped the IT department
through several pressing deadlines on his own time.
We've got a tough upgrade project due to run over the next three
months, and his knowledge and skills would prove invaluable.
Could we please have his help with this work?
I'd appreciate speaking with you about this. When is it best to call you
to discuss this further?
Best wishes,
Skip
This second message is much clearer, because the reader
has the information he needs to take action. 6
CONCISE
When you're concise in your communication, you stick
to the point and keep it brief. Your audience doesn't want to
read six sentences when you could communicate your
message in three.
Hi Matt,
This would make a far greater impact, and it would stay in their minds
longer than a traditional sales pitch.
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What do you think? Jessica
CONCRETE
When your message is concrete, then your audience has a
clear picture of what you're telling them. There are details (but
not too many!) and vivid facts, and there's laser-like focus.
Your message is solid.
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BAD EXAMPLE
Consider this advertising copy:
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BAD EXAMPLE
Hi Daniel,
Best,
Jack Miller
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If you read that example fast, then you might not have caught
any errors. But on closer inspection, you'll find two.
Again, spell checkers won't catch word errors like this, which
is why it's so important to proofread everything!
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COHERENT
When your communication is coherent, it's logical. All
points are connected and relevant to the main topic, and the
tone and flow of the text is consistent.
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BAD EXAMPLE
Traci,
I wanted to write you a quick note about the report you finished last
week. I gave it to Michelle to proof, and she wanted to make sure
you knew about the department meeting we're having this Friday.
We'll be creating an outline for the new employee handbook.
Thanks,
Michelle
As you can see, this email doesn't communicate its point
very well. Where is Michelle's feedback on Traci's report? She
started to mention it, but then she changed the topic to
Friday's meeting.
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GOOD EXAMPLE
Hi Traci,
I wanted to write you a quick note about the report you finished last
week. I gave it to Michelle to proof, and she let me know that there
are a few changes that you'll need to make. She'll email you her
detailed comments later this afternoon.
Thanks,
Michelle
Notice that in the good example, Michelle does not
mention Friday's meeting. This is because the meeting
reminder should be an entirely separate email. This way, Traci
can delete the report feedback email after she makes her
changes, but save the email about the meeting as her reminder
to attend. Each email has only one main topic. 18
COMPLETE
In a complete message, the audience has everything
they need to be informed and, if applicable, take action.
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BAD EXAMPLE
Hi everyone,
Chris
Chris
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COURTEOUS
Courteous communication is friendly, open, and
honest. There are no hidden insults or passive-aggressive
tones. You keep your reader's viewpoint in mind, and you're
empathetic to their needs.
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BAD EXAMPLE
Jeff,
I wanted to let you know that I don't appreciate how your team always
monopolizes the discussion at our weekly meetings. I have a lot of
projects, and I really need time to get my team's progress discussed as
well. So far, thanks to your department, I haven't been able to do that.
Can you make sure they make time for me and my team next week?
Thanks,
Phil
Well, that's hardly courteous! Messages like this can
potentially start office-wide fights. And this email does nothing
but create bad feelings, and lower productivity and morale. A little
bit of courtesy, even in difficult situations, can go a long way.
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GOOD EXAMPLE
Hi Jeff,
I wanted to write you a quick note to ask a favor. During our weekly
meetings, your team does an excellent job of highlighting their
progress. But this uses some of the time available for my team to
highlight theirs. I'd really appreciate it if you could give my team a
little extra time each week to fully cover their progress reports.
Thanks so much, and please let me know if there's anything I can do
for you!
Best,
Phil
What a difference! This email is courteous and friendly,
and it has little chance of spreading bad feelings around the
office. 24
SELF LEARNING MODULE 1 CHAPTER 4
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KEY LEARNINGS
All of us communicate every day. The better we
communicate, the more credibility we'll have with our
clients, our boss, and our colleagues.
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