BCRW Lecture#3
BCRW Lecture#3
Lecture # 03
OVERVIEW
Chapter # 02
The Seven C’s of Effective Communication
• Completeness
• Conciseness
• Consideration
• Concreteness
• Clarity
• Courtesy
• Correctness
CLARITY
5. CLARITY
Getting the meaning from your head accurately
to the reader is the purpose of clarity.
GUIDELINES FOR CLARITY
Keep the following guidelines in mind
Example:
Length
Unity
Coherence
Emphasis
Length:
17 20 words
3 30 words for variety
Not more than 40 words use more sentences
Not under 10 words on average too simple
Unity:
In a sentence, one main idea and other ideas closely
related to it.
I like apples and Eiffel Tower is in Paris.
I like apples and I can eat more than one at a time.
Coherence:
Words are arranged so that ideas clearly express the
intended meaning.
Unclear: After planting 10,000 berry plants, the deer
came into out botanist's farm and crushed them.
Clear: After our botanists had planted 10,000 berry
plants, the deer came into the farm and crushed them.
Emphasis:
Quality which gives force to important parts of
sentences and paragraphs is emphasis.
Put main ideas up front within a sentence.
Writers must decide what needs emphasis, and then
decide the correct sentence structure.
Example:
Little emphasis: The airplane finally approached the
speed of sound, and it became very difficult to control.
Better emphasis: As it approached the speed of sound,
the airplane became very difficult to control.
COURTESY
6. COURTESY
True courtesy involves being aware not only of
the perspectives of others, but also their feelings.
Be aware of your message receiver/audience
Singular pronouns:
English lacks a neutral pronoun signifying ‘he’ or ‘she’
The trend to follow should be to avoid using ‘he’, ‘his’ or
‘him’ etc.
Example:
Questionable: Anyone who comes to class late will get his
grade reduced.
More desirable: Students who come to class late will get
their grade reduced.
Questionable: Each manager has a assigned parking
space. He should park his car ...
More Desirable: Each manager has been assigned a
parking space. Each car should be parked in …
Names
Treat each gender with respect.
Use names in parallel form.
Undesirable: Mudassir Ali and Sonia
More desirable: Mudassir and Sonia Ali
CORRECTNESS
7. CORRECTNESS
At the core of correctness is proper
• Grammar
• Punctuation
• Spelling
GUIDELINES FOR CORRECTNESS
The term correctness applied to business
messages also means the following
characteristics.
Use the right level of language
Check accuracy of figures, facts and words
Maintain acceptable writing mechanics
USE THE RIGHT LEVEL OF LANGUAGE
There are three levels of language
• Formal
• Informal
• Sub-standard
Formal Writing
Often associated with scholarly writing.
E.g. doctoral dissertations, scholarly articles, top-
level government agreements etc
Unconventional, impersonal and involves sentences
Informal Writing
More characteristic in business writing
E.g. communications via E-mail, memos etc.
Substandard:
Using incorrect words, grammar, faulty
pronunciation, in short inability to use good English.
Avoid substandard language
CHECK ACCURACY OF FIGURES, FACTS
AND WORDS
Verify your statistical data.
Double check your totals.