Title: Professional Communication in the Workplace
1Professional Communication in the Workplace
- Lance Kissler,Marketing Communications
2Outcomes
- Overview of basic communication theory
- Understanding phone etiquette
- Learning the principles of proper email
correspondence
3Basic Communication Theory
Image http//www.articulate.com/rapid-elearning/
wp-content/uploads/2007/09/comm_process.jpg
4Basic Communication Theory
Image http//www.uxmatters.com/mt/archives/2007/
08/images/rediscovering-figure2.gif
5Email vs. Phone
- Convenience stop/start as needed
- Review the message
- Focus the conversation
- Attachments links
- Mulitple recipients
- Written record
- Prior contacts
- Quick questions immediacy
- Clarify points immediately
- Everyone participating at the same time
- Initial contact for new people follow-up with
email
Source http//www.indywebshop.com/bestpractices/
2006/10/25/talking-to-clients-phone-vs-email/
6Appropriate Response Time
- Same day if possible
- If a reply requires research or more information,
follow up to confirm youve received the message
and that you are working on a complete reply
7Answering Phone Calls
- Be polite and courteous
- Remember the tone of your voice conveys its own
message - Provide your name, office and organization
- Speak slowly and clearly
- Ask for clarification of details take notes if
needed
8Transferring Phone Calls
- Inform the person you are going to transfer them
shortly - Call the person you are transferring to
- If the person is there, provide a summary
- If the person is not there, return to caller ask
if they would like to be transferred to voice
mail - Provide the caller with the persons
9Leaving Messages
- Repeat detailed information, such as
- Name
- Organization/office
- Contact info (alternative contact methods)
- Purpose of the call
- Speak slowly and clearly
- Spell out email addresses
- Be concise dont leave long messages
10Taking Messages
- Ensure accuracy
- Record date/time, caller, contact info,
organization/office, purpose of call, specific
details - Tip use a checklist to keep track of messages
that require follow-up
11Voicemail Greetings
- Have a professional greeting
- Provide your name, organization, office, etc.
- State how long you will be out of the office
- Provide multiple contact information options or
emergency contact info
12Forwarding Voicemessages
- Record a summary/intro about the message
- Inform the recipient if you have responded to the
caller
13Email Composing Replying
- Greet new contacts (formal)
- Greetings,
- Dear Name,
- To Whom It May Concern (only if you dont know
the recipients name) - Greet known contacts (casual)
- Name,
- Good time of day,
- Resource
- http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salutation_(greeting)
14Email Composing Replying
- Use a signature
- Name, title
- Organization, office
- Contact info
- Other relevant info
- May require a confidentiality disclaimer
- Use concise subject lines with keywords
- Gives recipients a quick summary before opening
- Allows for quicker searching in email inbox
- If email topic changes, rename the subject line
15Email CC, BCC Forwarding
- CC carbon copy
- include additional recipients as an FYI
- seen by TO and BCC recipients
- BCC blind carbon copy
- TO and CC recipients do not see these people
- these people see TO and CC recipients
- Forward
- Usually better than BCC
16Email Emoticons
- Symbols that express emotion
- Happy Face -)
- Sad Face -(
- Etc.
- Not appropriate for formal communication
- Best for casual communication, if you think it
enhances or clarifies the tone
17Email Attachments
- Reference attachments in the message body
- File types
- avoid sending .EXE, .EPS
- 1-2MB file size per attachment
- no more than 5-10MB total
- use .ZIP to compress individual or multiple files
- Use service such as www.yousendit.com to send
large file attachments separately
18Email Assigning Priority
- Priority settings
- Highest, High, Normal, Low, Lowest
- Tip generally send Normal and reserve
Highest for messages that require an immediate
response or attention - Not all email clients offer this function
19Email Grammar, Style, Etc.
- Use appropriate grammar avoid jargon explain
acronyms - Use punctuation
- Double-check spelling
- Formatting
- CAPS Lock, bullets, numbering, bold italics,
font size, type color, background - HTML vs. text-only
- Refer to editorial style guide
20Email Out of Office Messages
- State how long you will be out of the office
- Will you be checking email while you are out?
- Provide emergency/alternative contact info
- Turn off when you return
21Email Your Email Address
- Select one that is easy to remember and
identifies you - Pacific provides an alias option as an
alternative to your PUNetID - Appropriate and professional words
- Examples
- lancekissler_at_pacificu.edu
- lance.kissler_at_pacificu.edu
- lkissler_at_pacificu.edu
22Email Additional Resources
- www.thewritemarket.com/mcnn/index.php?mcnnkeelti
tle1520Top20Tips20for20Effective20Email20Co
mmunication - http//careerplanning.about.com/od/communication/a
/email_tips.htm
23Questions?
- Lance Kissler
- Director of Marketing
- Marketing Communications, University Relations
- Pacific University
- 503-352-2007
- lkissler_at_pacificu.edu