1 / 10

Correspondence Media for Engineers

Correspondence Media for Engineers. Which to use? Phone E-mail Memo Business letter Tweet Text message Instant Message. Criteria for Media Selection. Recipients’ preferences Reply or forwarding requirements Security concerns Importance or length of the communication

xiang
Download Presentation

Correspondence Media for Engineers

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Correspondence Media for Engineers • Which to use? • Phone • E-mail • Memo • Business letter • Tweet • Text message • Instant Message

  2. Criteria for Media Selection • Recipients’ preferences • Reply or forwarding requirements • Security concerns • Importance or length of the communication • In-your-face factor

  3. Business Correspondence Style • Indicate the topic and purpose in the first sentence. • Identify the context of the communication. • Provide an overview of the communication. • Keep paragraphs short. • Use headings in longer communications. • Use bulleted and numbered lists for readability. • Use a brief, succinct writing style. • Use the “you” writing style. • Indicate action expected of the recipient.

  4. Tricky Situations • Tell the boss “no.” • Tell a client “no.” • Admit a mistake. • Assert that you did not make the mistake. • Point out a mistake. • Persuade a client or colleague. • Communicate bad news. • Request reimbursement. • Issue an unpleasant directive.

  5. Business Letter Format Date Heading (sender’s address) Inside address (recipient) Salutation (punctuated with a colon) Body (multiple paragraphs) Complimentary close Signature block

  6. Memo Format DATE: TO: FROM: SUBJECT: (Body: multiple paragraphs)

  7. Important E-Mail Functions • Save e-mail to meaningfully named folders. • Keep copies of e-mail sent. • Be able to search e-mail. • Create and use distribution lists. • Create and use a signature. • Use templates. • Proofread e-mail carefully (watch for missing words!). • Plan for e-mail access while on the road.

  8. E-Mail Style • Use caution with informal style. • Seek brevity even more than in business letters. • Compose specific, motivating subject lines. • State context early—assume recipient amnesia. • State important information first. • Keep paragraphs short. • Proofread carefully—watch for missing words! • Use headings, lists, highlighting if they increase readability. • Be careful with automatic replies.

  9. ok

  10. Internet Media • Forums • Blogs • Online meeting applications • Social media: • Websites (e.g., Facebook, LinkedIn) • Microblogs (e.g., Twitter) • Google: • Docs • Drive • Circles

More Related