Here are two situations when keeping your lips zipped will enhance your reputation as a good listener
Busy bosses expect you to read their minds. They rush from appointment to appointment and rarely find time to tell you what you need to know.
Problem: “When addressing a business letter, is it correct to put a comma or a colon after the addressee’s name?” (From Lynne Nelson, Princeton, N.J.)
Proofreading a document for grammar and spelling mistakes won’t snag every error, and while program features such as automatically updated fields help, they aren’t completely foolproof.
Answer the question “What do you want?” or “What should I know?” in the first sentence of your memo, report, e-mail or other piece of business writing, and your time-strapped, information-overloaded readers will see you as a hero.
People who interrupt when you speak don’t simply annoy; they block your ideas and opinions. Exert authority with these techniques
Several readers recently asked us about the use of semicolons versus commas in a complex sentence.
Boost your persuasive powers by exuding poise when you speak. Use these five tactics:
Generic e-mail subjects aren’t just inefficient and confusing; they put your message at risk.
Just because e-mail is handy doesn’t make it efficient. Indeed, three out of four people delete an e-mail before they finish reading it, a recent survey found.
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