The Cost of Miscommunication
Title:
The Cost of Miscommunication
Word Count:
329
Summary:
Using jargon, technical terms, abbreviations, and specialized vocabulary in email messages is
Keywords:
email, commmunication, business, marketing, customer service
Article Body:
Using jargon, technical terms, abbreviations, and specialized vocabulary in email messages is
1.
It can affect your professional relationships.
2.
It can make you, or your company, liable.
Relationships
Miscommunication can jeopardize business relationships. Using jargon can crush the rapport yo
To read more on avoiding miscommunication visit: http://www.keepcustomers.com
A reader who receives an email message filled with technical terms and industry jargon may hav
The reader may also think you´re trying to be condescending, or that you´re trying to show off
Why subject your customers or coworkers to that type of treatment?
Don´t take the chance of r
Liability
If a customer misunderstands information you have provided via email, and then acts upon it, w
For example, let´s say you are providing financial data to a customer, and he/she misunderstan
The ˆcost˜ to the customer may be monetary.
Why take the risk?
The ˆcost˜ to you may be a loss of credibility.
Don´t put yourself or your customer in a risky situation.
This is a demo version of txt2pdf v.10.1
Developed by SANFACE Software http://www.sanface.com/
Available at http://www.sanface.com/txt2pdf.html
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The Cost of Miscommunication
Word Count:
329
Summary:
Using jargon, technical terms, abbreviations, and specialized vocabulary in email messages is
Keywords:
email, commmunication, business, marketing, customer service
Article Body:
Using jargon, technical terms, abbreviations, and specialized vocabulary in email messages is
1.
It can affect your professional relationships.
2.
It can make you, or your company, liable.
Relationships
Miscommunication can jeopardize business relationships. Using jargon can crush the rapport yo
To read more on avoiding miscommunication visit: http://www.keepcustomers.com
A reader who receives an email message filled with technical terms and industry jargon may hav
The reader may also think you´re trying to be condescending, or that you´re trying to show off
Why subject your customers or coworkers to that type of treatment?
Don´t take the chance of r
Liability
If a customer misunderstands information you have provided via email, and then acts upon it, w
For example, let´s say you are providing financial data to a customer, and he/she misunderstan
The ˆcost˜ to the customer may be monetary.
Why take the risk?
The ˆcost˜ to you may be a loss of credibility.
Don´t put yourself or your customer in a risky situation.
This is a demo version of txt2pdf v.10.1
Developed by SANFACE Software http://www.sanface.com/
Available at http://www.sanface.com/txt2pdf.html
Try to use cle