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Claudia Coplon
President
Executive Speak/Write
www.executivespeakwrite.com
It takes effective
oral and written communications to create and maintain business
relationships in today’s competitive environment.
Executive Speak/Write
helps individuals strengthen their oral and written communications
with skills improvement training that is interactive, enjoyable
and extremely effective at any level.
We know that
being able to capture audience attention and convey messages takes
practice, continual refinement and assistance from trainers who
understand business and can help participants be the best “you.”
What differentiates
our service is that our customized programs focus on each individual's
existing style, personality and industry. We then refine that style
into a comfortable, professional edge.
Using a behavioral
approach, we help individuals and groups:
- Capture
and keep audience attention
- Deliver
the message(s) more effectively and
- Benefit the
company and themselves
Executive Speak/Write
principals include:
Steve Clements
who effectively translates 40 years as an award-winning producer,
writer, director and executive consultant in broadcast, video, industry
and academia into a unique oral communications training approach
that takes the anxiety out of verbal interactions.
Claudia Coplon
who encapsulates 30 years of experience in writing and public relations
for a wide variety of industries into training programs for industry
and academia that blend writing processes and direction to take
the fear out of the blank page.
To discuss skills
improvement or receive a monthly clue on communicating more effectively,
contact Claudia at: claudiac@execspeakwrite.com.
The purpose
of the Learning Alert is to share best practices that help
learners improve their personal and business results.
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Are You Communicating . . . or Are You Just Writing?
Claudia
Coplon
President
Executive Speak/Write
Do you just
write business communiqués or do you structure your writing
so that it truly communicates? Do you just dash off an email or
do you actually strengthen an existing relationship?
If you are like
most business professionals, you write to fit your busy schedule
and advance your own agenda. The real message often gets lost and
you miss the opportunity to build the relationship.
As a result,
you are forced to expend more energy on follow-up correspondence,
phone calls, face-to-face meetings, and so forth – time that
could otherwise be used to grow your organization, advance your
career and stimulate others. In a global enterprise, where the written
word may be your only form of interaction, weak writing makes it
harder to get others’ attention, more difficult to get things
done.
To begin to
move from short-sighted writing to long-term relating, evaluate
some of your recent correspondence. How often do you open with the
word “I” (which is synonymous with “we”
or the company name)? Doing so makes that communication all about
you and your needs: buy my product, use my service, trust me. And
yet, with a simple reprioritizing of the message, you can capture
and keep your audience’s attention.
For instance,
rather than: “Our organization can offer you top-notch training
on feedback and coaching,” consider wording like:
- “Would
you benefit if your managers provided more effective coaching
and feedback?”
- “Why
not start the new year off with a truly effective program that
will help your managers develop their people?”
Making the communications
about your reader better positions you to inform, persuade or motivate
the action you desire, while setting the stage for long-term relationships.
Next, grab a
pen and start editing. Typically you can cut 30 to 50 percent of
the copy in that business letter; 50 percent of that email.
Why make it
shorter? Your audience is being inundated with information at an
increasingly furious pace – a stack of letters, an inbox of
emails, two people waiting on hold, streaming Internet video, satellite
radio – the list is endless. The tighter your writing, the
easier it is for the reader to grasp your message in the time available
– and take action. And, he is more apt to read your next communication,
knowing you will write right to the point.
Finally, pay
attention to how you end your message. Reinforce what is most important
– what you can do to meet the reader’s need, and thereby
yours, as you close. And always end with a call to action. This
is your opportunity to propel your audience toward your goal.
Ideas
Into Action
- Focus
on your audience.
Curtail the use of I/we/company name (especially in your opening
line) in all communications over the next three weeks and watch
how much more receptive your audience becomes.
- Write
more concisely. Limit your sentences to no more than
15 to 20 words, and vary the lengths. This will force you to get
to your point quickly, and reduce run-on and confusing sentences.
- Close
with the most important thought. Always end with a call
to action, a recommendation or good will. Otherwise, you’ve
wasted your opportunity and your reader’s time.
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2006, Fort Hill Company, All rights reserved
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