Communicating Clearly Through Email and Voice Mail
Clear messages are concise, complete, correct, quick?and make you look
competent. Whether you were a pioneer in the use of email and voice mail,
or have just recently been introduced to this technology, making effective
use of these forms of communication is not a ‘by chance” happening.
Here are a few tips for polishing your messages.
Follow the rules of etiquette when creating your messages.
Even though technology has changed, the rules of etiquette have not.
Avoid remarks that are vulgar, repetitive and verbose, and never write
or say anything you wouldn’t want forwarded to your company CEO,
your customers, your family, or your friends.
Distinguish between fact and opinion when the difference may
not be obvious to the person receiving your message.
If you are making a personal judgment, say so, lest your words come
back to haunt you. And even then, be sure you really want to state your
personal opinion in potentially libelous situations.
Respect others’ confidentiality and expect your own to
be nonexistent.
Most of us have been comforted by the thought of our guaranteed right
to free speech?to say what we think and feel with few exceptions. However,
messages left in the private sector do not enjoy such immunity; they
are considered private domain and are not subject to “free speech”
protection.
Respect all copyright and licensing agreements.
Take great care to discover who has authored information you may be
tempted to include as yours. Just because you do not claim the ideas
as your own, and even if you acknowledge other “unknown”
sources, you may still be liable for copyright infringement.
Understand the difference in being informal and looking careless
or stupid.
Informal means a conversational tone, a breezy manner, colloquial words
and phrases, intentional sentence fragments, and acronyms. On the other
hand, informal does not mean unclear and incomplete thoughts, ambiguous
references, irrelevant details, repetitive information, disorganized
ideas, unclear actions, misspelled words, or grammatical errors.
Use the MADE format to structure your messages.
People rarely understand messages that do not immediately get to the
point. Detailed information or situations make more sense to the reader
or listener when the message begins with a summary or overview and the
required action, followed by relevant details. Message:
Summary of 1-3 sentences. Action: What action do you
plan to take or want the reader to take? Details: Elaborate
on who, when, where, why, how, and how much. Evidence:
Mention any materials you think will make the message clearer or the
action easier to take.
Email and voice mail have made our lives increasingly more productive.
Use them to their fullest advantage, without abusing others’ rights
or offending their sense of decency and appropriateness. Common courtesy
and good sense go a long way in matters of etiquette. Your coworkers,
customers, family, and friends will appreciate your skill and your courtesy.
ARTICLE TAGLINE FOR DIANNA BOOHER
470 words
Author of 42 books (Simon & Schuster/Pocket, Warner, and McGraw-Hill),
Dianna Booher, CSP, CPAE, delivers keynotes, breakout sessions, and training
on communication and life-balance issues. Her latest books: Speak with
Confidence®, Your Signature Life®, Your Signature Work®, E-Writing,
and Communicate with Confidence®. For more information on Dianna and
her programs, visit www.diannabooher.com
or contact her firm, Booher Consultants, Inc., at 800-342-6621
Communication Skills Articles