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Digital Key Concepts Management 102 Professor Estenson

Digital Key Concepts Management 102 Professor Estenson. PREPARING TO WRITE. Writing Apprehension. CAUSES Early Efforts Never Been Taught Lack of Knowledge of purpose, audience or point of the effort FIXES Work Shops Write then Right Supportive Evaluation. PLANNING. WHAT

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Digital Key Concepts Management 102 Professor Estenson

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  1. Digital Key ConceptsManagement 102Professor Estenson PREPARING TO WRITE

  2. Writing Apprehension • CAUSES • Early Efforts • Never Been Taught • Lack of Knowledge of purpose, audience or point of the effort • FIXES • Work Shops • Write then Right • Supportive Evaluation

  3. PLANNING • WHAT • Nature of the message • What needs to be communicated? • WHY • Why bother? Does the receiver know why message is being sent? • WHO • Have I chosen the right person? • What channel is this person comfortable receiving? • WHEN • Too early or too late. Close to critical meetings • WHERE • Where should the message come from? • HOW • Channel (Letter, Memo, Report, Email, Phone Call, Brochure, Newsletter, Manual

  4. PRINCIPLE ONE: Choose Words Precisely • DENOTIVE - Word has a common meaning. • Malapropism - Confusing one word for another • Allegory or Alligator Immoral or Immortal • CONNOTATIVE - Word’s meaning is subjective. • Euphemism (Intended positive connotation) • Slim or Slender versus Skinny or Scrawny • Friendly Fire • Surgical Air Strike • LANGUAGE IS FLUID NOT STATIC

  5. PRINCIPLE TWOUse Short Rather Than Long Words • The goal is clarity and understanding not a chance to show how smart you are.

  6. PRINCIPLE 3Use Concrete Rather Than Abstract Words • Concrete Specific at lower rung • General at the higher rungs

  7. PRINCIPLE 4Economize on the Use of Words • Avoid Wordiness. • Break old writing habits. • Avoid use of old models of organizational writing.

  8. PRINCIPLE 5AVOID OVERUSED OR HACKNEYED PHRASES OR JARGON • Hackneyed • At your earliest convenience • Pursuant to • Thank you in advance • Jargon • Buzzword Hell

  9. PRINCIPLE 6Use Positive Words That Convey Courtesy • Minimize negative information • State information positively • Avoid gender terms

  10. PRINCIPLE 7Use a Conversational Style • Everyday business language (face to face communication with receiver) • Check your understanding of receiver (knowledge, expertise, interests, culture, and value system)

  11. PRINCPLE 8Keep Sentence Relatively Short • Most effective business sentences are between 15 to 20 words long. • Sentences express one main point

  12. PRINCIPLE 9Prefer Active Voice to the Passive Voice • Subject - Verb - Object • David Leeper directed the meeting. (A) • The meeting was directed by David Leeper (P)

  13. PRINCIPLE 10Develop Effective Paragraphs • One Main Idea Per Paragraph • Determine if Deductive or Inductive • If Deductive - Present main idea in lst sentence • If Inductive - Begin with details then main idea • Use a Variety of Sentence Structures • Emphasize Important Points • Keep Paragraphs Short

  14. PRINCIPLE 11DEVELOP COHERENCE • Create a smooth flow between sentences • Transitions can be created by • Repeating Key Words • Use pronouns and synonyms to avoid repetition • Use transitional words or phrases

  15. PRINCIPLE 12Edit and Rewrite • Read what was written • Exam for clarity, concreteness, and conversational tone • Determine grammatical accuracy • Check organization to assure coherence • Accept that multiple drafts are necessary

  16. Specific Check Points • Look for “Plain English” terms • Eliminate Unneeded Words • Explain Abbreviations and Acronyms • Eliminate Jargon • Eliminate Unnatural Phrases • Use Small Words

  17. EDITING (Continued) • Use Active Instead of Passive Verbs • Use a Fog Index • Correct Spelling and Grammatical Errors • Correct Sexist Errors

  18. Work Products • Audience analysis for each letter or memo. • Refusal Letter • Persuasive Letter • Memo to your leader • Transmittal Letter • You are free to pick topic and audience. • Remember to write in a manner that matches your topic and audience.

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