1 / 26

Week 5

Week 5. Memo, E-mail and Letters. Technical Communication John M. Lannon PowerPoint prepared by Jimidene Murphy (and messed with by Ray Lacina – shhh….). Why write?. What situations call for writing? Message is important or complex It’s necessary to create a written record.

Télécharger la présentation

Week 5

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. Week 5 Memo, E-mail and Letters Technical Communication John M. Lannon PowerPoint prepared by Jimidene Murphy (and messed with by Ray Lacina – shhh….)

  2. Why write? • What situations call for writing? • Message is important or complex • It’s necessary to create a written record. • What are a few examples of situations which might call for writing?

  3. Advantages • A written message: • Lessens chance of misunderstandings • Gives readers concrete document to refer to later for clarification • Ensures that all people receivesamemessage • Example?

  4. Disadvantages • Unfortunately, a written message also: • Creates paper trails • May irritate readers if a phone call would have done the job • May make a situation public that is best dealt with in private • Example?

  5. An Effective Message • Well-organized • Concise • Written in Reader Friendly Style (not “Letterese” • Gives prominence to main idea • Satisfies reader’s informational needs

  6. Memos, Letters & E-mail: • Document an agreement, action, plan, or request • Inform staff members about change • Introduce a document • Answer requests • Request information • Suggest a change

  7. Elements of a Usable Memo • Easy to scan • Easy to file • Easy to retrieve • Effective headers, subject lines, and body text

  8. Parts of a Memo • Heading • Body • Special Notations • Sample Memo

  9. Giving Good News • Main idea early • Present good news clearly, concisely, courteously in pleasant, good-natured tone • Reader reaction is influenced by sequence in which you present your ideas –opening sentence that says “yes” will grab reader and encourage him to keep reading

  10. Giving Good News • Necessary details: • Anything that helps reader understand message • Will notbenefitreader if it doesn’t give all the details necessary for him to fully understand message • Anticipatequestions—You Attitude

  11. Giving Good News • Action step • Tells readers what to do, how to do it, & when • Convince reader that action he must perform is easy-- don’t make things complicated—don’t appear dictatorial

  12. Giving Good News • Positive closing • Emphasizes what has or will be done & avoids mentioning anything that can’t be done • Key word is positive—don’tleave reader with negative impression • Review

  13. Good News Messages • Effect of Good-news memos on readers • Capture reader’s attention • Satisfy their informationalneeds • Build & maintain their good-will

  14. When to Use: Simple Memo • Neutral—written for reader’s information • Introduce reports, project outlines, other material • Also used when reader is familiar w/ subject • Summarize recent conversations • Inform readers something has been acted on, received, or sent

  15. When to Use: Requests • First, ask yourself: What info do I need? What action do I want reader to take? • Beginmessage by making request • Next justifyrequest or inquiry with your reasons • Next, give precise description of what you need so reader can fulfill request or answer your inquiry

  16. When to Use: Positive Announcement • Announce positive change w/details • Outline any necessary procedural changes that may affect staff, or any actions they must perform before change is implemented • Point out how any extra work change may create will provide long term benefits • End w/ positive note, perhaps giving credit to people who worked to bring about change

  17. Giving Bad News • Contain message reader may consider disappointing or unfavorable • Underlyingpurpose of every Bad-News message is to retain reader’s goodwill • Convey your sincere concern • Avoid personal rejection. Tone should be sincere and professional.

  18. Guidelines for Bad News • Use You Attitude—if possible, show how bad news will serve your reader’sneeds and interests • Be tactful—don’t focus on reader’s inadequacies or mistakes: make it clear you are rejecting request, not the person who made it

  19. Guidelines for Bad News • Take problem-solving approach—denied requests are problems to be solved • Display confidence—don’t apologize, explain • Reply promptly don’t get readers’ hopes up, or let them figure out bad news for themselves.

  20. Giving Bad News • Positive opening • Serves as cushion for bad news that follows • Should flow from positive to negative, but don’tmislead reader

  21. Giving Bad News • Explanation of circumstances • Want topersuade reader that refusal/denial is necessary • Give straightforwardexplanation supported by facts

  22. Giving Bad News • Statement of Bad News • Put in middle of paragraph to avoid drawing attention to it—begin w/explanation • If bad-news clear from reasons, omit this statement

  23. Giving Bad News • Constructive suggestion • Offer alternative • Provide info that will help reader fulfill his need • Offer appropriate substitute

  24. Giving Bad News • Positive closing • Find ways to express appreciation or invite further discussion • You might ask reader to let you know if an alternative you offered in constructive suggestion is acceptable

  25. When to Use: Refusing Requests • Refusal should be clear, but not rude/slighting • Begin w/ buffer assuring reader you have carefully thoughtover his position, understand his needs • Briefly explain why answer was no • End on a positive note

  26. When to Use: Announcing Change • Follow indirect pattern when announcing any changes that may be viewed negatively • Review • Exercise: Evaluate and Rewrite this Memo • Review: Training Memo

More Related