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1: Introduction to Business Communication

  • Page ID
    109833
    • Anonymous
    • LibreTexts

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    Communication is key to your success—in relationships, in the workplace, as a citizen of your country, and across your lifetime. Your ability to communicate comes from experience, and experience can be an effective teacher, but this text and the related business communication course will offer you a wealth of experiences gathered from professionals across their lifetimes. You can learn from the lessons they’ve learned and be a more effective communicator.

    Business communication can be thought of as a problem-solving activity in which individuals may address the following questions:

    • What is the situation?
    • What are some possible communication strategies?
    • What is the best course of action?
    • What is the best way to design the chosen message?
    • What is the best way to deliver the message?

    In this book, we will examine this problem-solving process and help you learn to apply it in the kinds of situations you are likely to encounter over the course of your career.

    • 1.1: Why Is It Important to Communicate Well?
      Communication forms a part of your self-concept, and it helps you understand yourself and others, solve problems and learn new things, and build your career.
    • 1.2: What Is Communication?
      Many theories have been proposed to describe, predict, and understand the behaviors and phenomena of which communication consists. When it comes to communicating in business, we are often less interested in theory than in making sure our communications generate the desired results. But in order to achieve results, it can be valuable to understand what communication is and how it works.
    • 1.3: Communication in Context
      Now that we have examined the eight components of communication, let’s examine this in context. Contexts can overlap, creating an even more dynamic process. You have been communicating in many of these contexts across your lifetime, and you’ll be able to apply what you’ve learned through experience in each context to business communication.
    • 1.4: Your Responsibilities as a Communicator
      As a communicator, you are responsible for being prepared and being ethical. Being prepared includes being organized, clear, concise, and punctual. Being ethical includes being egalitarian, respectful, and trustworthy and overall, practicing the “golden rule.”
    • 1.5: Additional Resources

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