Seven C's of effective communication.
The seven C's of effective communication include completeness, conciseness, consideration, clarity, concreteness, courtesy and correctness
Effective communication requires a clear message from the speaker, an active listener, and a shared understanding between both parties. Some principles for effective communication include completeness, conciseness, consideration, concreteness, clarity, courtesy, and correctness. When communicating, one should provide all relevant information, keep the message brief, understand the audience's perspective, use concrete examples, make the meaning clear, be respectful of the listener, and ensure factual accuracy. Following these seven C's of communication can help improve problem solving, decision making, work processes, relationships, and professional reputation.
The document discusses the 7C's of communication, which are principles for effective communication. The 7C's are completeness, concreteness, clarity, correctness, consideration, conciseness and courtesy. Each C is defined in 1-2 sentences. For example, completeness means providing all necessary information without omissions, and clarity means conveying the intended message without ambiguity. The document provides examples and tips for achieving each C to ensure effective transmission of information between parties.
The document discusses the seven C's of effective communication. The seven C's are: Completeness, Conciseness, Consideration, Concreteness, Clarity, Courtesy, and Correctness. Each C is defined and guidelines are provided for how to apply each one to improve communication effectiveness. Completeness involves providing all necessary details to answer any questions from the recipient. Conciseness means conveying the message using as few words as possible. Consideration requires focusing on the recipient's needs and perspective. Concreteness means using specific details rather than general statements. Clarity involves choosing precise and easy to understand language. Courtesy requires being respectful and thoughtful of the recipient. Correctness involves proper grammar, accurate
The 7 C's of communication are:
1. Completeness - ensuring the message contains all relevant information for the intended reaction or response.
2. Conciseness - composing the message briefly while including all key points.
3. Consideration - keeping the audience in mind when composing the message and focusing on their benefits or interests.
4. Concreteness - making statements specific rather than general to avoid misunderstanding.
5. Clarity - composing the message so the receiver understands it clearly.
6. Courtesy - using respectful words appropriate for the audience.
7. Correctness - carefully attending to grammar, mechanics, accuracy and appropriate language level.
The document discusses guidelines for effective business communication. It emphasizes communicating with clarity, completeness, conciseness, consideration, correctness, concreteness, and courtesy. Clarity means emphasizing a specific message rather than too much at once. Completeness means conveying all necessary facts to the audience. Conciseness is communicating the main message in the fewest words possible. Consideration means understanding the audience's perspective. Correctness means avoiding errors. Concreteness means using specific language. Courtesy means respecting the receiver.
The document discusses the seven C's of effective communication: Correctness, Clarity, Conciseness, Completeness, Consideration, Concreteness, and Courtesy. Each C is defined and guidelines are provided for how to incorporate that quality into messages to make communication effective. Correctness means using the appropriate language and style for the intended receiver. Clarity demands using simple language and structure so the meaning is easy to grasp. Conciseness means avoiding unnecessary words and being brief but complete. Completeness means including all necessary details to achieve the desired response. Consideration means seeing things from the receiver's perspective. Concreteness means using specific facts and vivid language rather than vagueness. Courtesy means being polite,
The document discusses the seven C's of effective communication: completeness, conciseness, consideration, concreteness, clarity, courtesy, and correctness. It provides guidelines for each C, such as including all necessary information for completeness, eliminating unnecessary words to be concise, focusing on the receiver's perspective in consideration, using specific facts and vivid language for concreteness, choosing precise words for clarity, being tactful and respectful for courtesy, and ensuring proper grammar, spelling and accurate information for correctness.
The document outlines the 7 C's of communication which are principles that should be followed for effective written and oral messages. They are completeness, conciseness, clarity, correctness, concreteness, consideration, and courtesy. Each C is defined with guidelines provided for how to ensure each principle is followed, such as being thorough but concise, using simple language for clarity, accuracy of facts, using specific examples, understanding the recipient's perspective, and being polite.
Effective communication requires a clear message from the speaker, an active listener, and a shared understanding between both parties. Some principles for effective communication include completeness, conciseness, consideration, concreteness, clarity, courtesy, and correctness. When communicating, one should provide all relevant information, keep the message brief, understand the audience's perspective, use concrete examples, make the meaning clear, be respectful of the listener, and ensure factual accuracy. Following these seven C's of communication can help improve problem solving, decision making, work processes, relationships, and professional reputation.
The document discusses the 7C's of communication, which are principles for effective communication. The 7C's are completeness, concreteness, clarity, correctness, consideration, conciseness and courtesy. Each C is defined in 1-2 sentences. For example, completeness means providing all necessary information without omissions, and clarity means conveying the intended message without ambiguity. The document provides examples and tips for achieving each C to ensure effective transmission of information between parties.
The document discusses the seven C's of effective communication. The seven C's are: Completeness, Conciseness, Consideration, Concreteness, Clarity, Courtesy, and Correctness. Each C is defined and guidelines are provided for how to apply each one to improve communication effectiveness. Completeness involves providing all necessary details to answer any questions from the recipient. Conciseness means conveying the message using as few words as possible. Consideration requires focusing on the recipient's needs and perspective. Concreteness means using specific details rather than general statements. Clarity involves choosing precise and easy to understand language. Courtesy requires being respectful and thoughtful of the recipient. Correctness involves proper grammar, accurate
The 7 C's of communication are:
1. Completeness - ensuring the message contains all relevant information for the intended reaction or response.
2. Conciseness - composing the message briefly while including all key points.
3. Consideration - keeping the audience in mind when composing the message and focusing on their benefits or interests.
4. Concreteness - making statements specific rather than general to avoid misunderstanding.
5. Clarity - composing the message so the receiver understands it clearly.
6. Courtesy - using respectful words appropriate for the audience.
7. Correctness - carefully attending to grammar, mechanics, accuracy and appropriate language level.
The document discusses guidelines for effective business communication. It emphasizes communicating with clarity, completeness, conciseness, consideration, correctness, concreteness, and courtesy. Clarity means emphasizing a specific message rather than too much at once. Completeness means conveying all necessary facts to the audience. Conciseness is communicating the main message in the fewest words possible. Consideration means understanding the audience's perspective. Correctness means avoiding errors. Concreteness means using specific language. Courtesy means respecting the receiver.
The document discusses the seven C's of effective communication: Correctness, Clarity, Conciseness, Completeness, Consideration, Concreteness, and Courtesy. Each C is defined and guidelines are provided for how to incorporate that quality into messages to make communication effective. Correctness means using the appropriate language and style for the intended receiver. Clarity demands using simple language and structure so the meaning is easy to grasp. Conciseness means avoiding unnecessary words and being brief but complete. Completeness means including all necessary details to achieve the desired response. Consideration means seeing things from the receiver's perspective. Concreteness means using specific facts and vivid language rather than vagueness. Courtesy means being polite,
The document discusses the seven C's of effective communication: completeness, conciseness, consideration, concreteness, clarity, courtesy, and correctness. It provides guidelines for each C, such as including all necessary information for completeness, eliminating unnecessary words to be concise, focusing on the receiver's perspective in consideration, using specific facts and vivid language for concreteness, choosing precise words for clarity, being tactful and respectful for courtesy, and ensuring proper grammar, spelling and accurate information for correctness.
The document outlines the 7 C's of communication which are principles that should be followed for effective written and oral messages. They are completeness, conciseness, clarity, correctness, concreteness, consideration, and courtesy. Each C is defined with guidelines provided for how to ensure each principle is followed, such as being thorough but concise, using simple language for clarity, accuracy of facts, using specific examples, understanding the recipient's perspective, and being polite.
The document discusses communication and the various barriers to effective communication. It defines communication and provides quotes about communication from different authors. It then describes the different types of barriers to communication, including physical, mechanical, organizational, cultural, linguistic, and socio-psychological barriers. Some examples of these barriers are noise, language mismatches, organizational hierarchy, prejudice, and selective listening. Overall, the document provides a comprehensive overview of communication and the potential issues that can interfere with the transmission of effective communication.
The 7Cs of Effective Communication outlines key principles for creating effective business messages. The 7Cs are: Completeness, ensuring all necessary information is included; Conciseness, being brief without sacrificing other details; Consideration, taking the recipient's perspective; Concreteness, using specific examples; Clarity, ensuring the message is easily understood; Correctness, using proper language, facts and tone; and Courtesy, communicating respectfully. Following these principles helps create messages that inform the recipient and achieve communication goals.
The document outlines the 7 C's of communication: completeness, conciseness, consideration, concreteness, clarity, courtesy, and correctness. Each C is defined in 1-2 sentences. Completeness means including all necessary information to avoid misunderstandings. Conciseness is expressing ideas using the fewest words possible. Consideration involves focusing on the recipient's perspective. Concreteness requires using specific details and examples. Clarity relies on precise language and familiar terms. Courtesy shows respect and care for the recipient. Correctness means free from errors in spelling, grammar and facts.
The 7 Cs of effective communication are completeness, conciseness, consideration, clarity, concreteness, courtesy, and correctness. Completeness means conveying all necessary information without missing details. Conciseness communicates the message using as few words as possible. Consideration involves understanding the audience's perspective. Clarity ensures the message is easy to understand. Concreteness uses specific examples. Courtesy shows respect for the recipient. Correctness means using proper grammar, vocabulary, and facts. Mastering these 7 Cs makes one an effective communicator.
This document outlines the seven C's of effective communication: completeness, conciseness, consideration, concreteness, clarity, courtesy, and correctness. It defines each C and provides examples. Completeness means conveying all necessary facts to the audience. Conciseness communicates the message in the fewest words possible without sacrificing other C's. Consideration takes the audience's perspective into account. Clarity emphasizes one message at a time for ease of understanding. Concreteness uses specific facts and language for unambiguous understanding. Courtesy shows respect for the recipient. Correctness ensures proper grammar and language are used.
Thank you for your message. I regret that I am unable to provide the specific details you requested, as I do not have access to confidential customer information. However, I appreciate you bringing this to my attention and will pass it along to the appropriate team to look into. Please let me know if there is any other way I can assist you.
The document discusses the 7 C's of communication that are important for effective business communication:
1. Correctness - Ensuring proper spelling and punctuation.
2. Clarity - Making information easy to understand through logical organization and avoiding ambiguity.
3. Conciseness - Communicating information using as few words as possible.
4. Completeness - Providing all necessary details to avoid further questions.
5. Consideration - Understanding others' perspectives and communicating empathetically.
6. Concreteness - Using specific examples, facts and details rather than vague language.
7. Courtesy - Interacting with others in a polite, respectful manner.
Effective communication requires clarity, conciseness, completeness, concreteness, consideration, courtesy and correctness. The message must be clear, brief yet fully convey the intended meaning using everyday language and proper structure. It should consider the audience by focusing on their needs and using a positive tone. Accuracy of information and appropriate language are important to maintain credibility. Overall the goal is to deliver the intended message to the recipient in a manner that is easily understood.
This document discusses the different types and levels of communication. It defines communication as the exchange of information, ideas, thoughts, and feelings through speech, signals, writing or behavior. There are two main types of communication - verbal communication which uses words, and nonverbal communication which uses body language and other signals. Verbal communication can be further divided into oral communication using spoken words, and written communication using written symbols. The document also outlines different levels of communication from intrapersonal communication within one's own mind to mass communication reaching large audiences through media. It discusses some common barriers to communication and provides tips for effective communication.
7cs Of communication Communicational SkillsTarun Nayak
ย
The document discusses the 7Cs of effective communication. The 7Cs are: Completeness, Conciseness, Consideration, Concreteness, Clarity, Courtesy, and Correctness. Each C provides guidelines for crafting messages that consider the audience and convey intended information clearly. For example, Completeness means including all relevant details, Conciseness means using few words, and Consideration means focusing on the receiver's interests and needs. Mastering the 7Cs helps ensure effective written and oral communication.
Intrapersonal communication is the process of communicating within oneself. In intrapersonal communication we receive messages through four stages namely stimulation, registration, organization and interpretation.
For more such innovative content on management studies, join WeSchool PGDM-DLP Program: http://bit.ly/ZEcPAc
The document discusses the history and development of written communication. It begins by explaining how writing evolved from economic necessities in ancient civilizations, where clay tokens were used and eventually developed into written documents like cuneiform. The document then outlines three stages in the progression of written communication: 1) pictograms, 2) writing on materials like paper and parchment with common alphabets, and 3) electronic communication using controlled waves and signals. It also discusses advantages like creating permanent records, and disadvantages such as being time-consuming. Common etiquettes for effective written communication are presented, including focusing on format, structuring content, ensuring connectivity, and being sensitive to the audience.
Communication is the sharing of ideas, concepts, feelings and emotions between a sender and receiver. It is a two-way process involving a message from the sender to the receiver, and feedback from the receiver back to the sender. While words account for only 7% of communication, tone, volume and other non-verbal cues like body language, facial expressions and movements account for 55% or more. Effective communication aims to avoid misunderstandings through understanding both verbal and non-verbal forms of communication, as well as overcoming barriers like noise, assumptions and emotions.
This document discusses and compares verbal and non-verbal communication. Verbal communication involves the use of spoken or written words to transfer information, while non-verbal communication conveys messages without words through gestures, facial expressions, eye contact, tone of voice, and other means. Both types of communication have advantages and disadvantages. Verbal communication allows for personal interaction but words can be forgotten, while non-verbal communication helps communicate emotions and overcome language barriers but cannot be used for public communication.
The document outlines the essentials of effective communication. It discusses clarity of purpose, understanding the audience, avoiding jargon, and confident delivery. It also describes the 7 C's of communication - being clear, concise, concrete, correct, considerate, complete and courteous. Each C is then defined in more detail, focusing on using simple language, brevity, specificity, accuracy, putting the recipient first, providing all relevant information, and politeness. The overall message is that effective communication requires transparency, brevity, precision, truthfulness, empathy, comprehensiveness and courtesy.
There areย 7 cโs of effective communicationย whichfarhanbutt
ย
The document outlines the 7 C's of effective communication: Correctness, Conciseness, Clarity, Completeness, Concreteness, Consideration, and Courtesy. Each C is defined, with Correctness focusing on proper grammar, Conciseness emphasizing brevity, Clarity ensuring understandability, Completeness providing all needed information, Concreteness using specific examples, Consideration showing empathy for the reader, and Courtesy strengthening relationships. Follow these principles for effective written and oral communication.
Communication Cycle | Communication | Communication processVishalVishwakarma59
ย
In this presentation we will learn introduction of communication , definition , communication cycle and types of communication.
communication cycle
define communication
define communication cycle
types of communication cycle
type of communication cycle
process of communication cycle
type of noise
Oral communication refers to communication through speech including conversations, presentations, lectures, and speeches. It allows for direct interaction and feedback which helps build rapport. Some advantages are that it is more transparent than written communication, allows for flexibility, and is more time efficient. However, oral communication can also lead to misunderstandings if not done attentively and lacks permanence compared to written records. Successful oral communication requires clarity, developing trust, overcoming barriers, and incorporating feedback.
This document discusses communication. It defines communication as the transfer of information from a sender to a receiver so that the message is understood. It notes that communication is a process that requires a sender, message, medium, and receiver. The document outlines the key elements and process of communication, including encoding a message, transmitting it through a channel, decoding it, and providing feedback. It also discusses characteristics of communication like it being a process involving transmission and understanding, and purposes of communication like providing information or influencing others. Barriers to effective communication are also mentioned.
Communication is the process of transmitting information from one person to another. It involves the transmission of a message from a sender to a receiver through an agreed-upon channel. The communication process consists of a sender encoding a message and selecting a channel to transmit it through, the receiver decoding the message, and the receiver providing feedback to the sender. Effective communication is a two-way process of sharing information and building understanding between individuals.
The 7 Cs of business writing are:
1. Completeness - Answer all questions fully using the 5Ws and 1H.
2. Conciseness - Be focused and avoid unnecessary words.
3. Consideration - Focus on the reader's needs and use a positive tone.
4. Clarity - Use simple, familiar language and effective structure.
5. Concreteness - Provide specific details, facts, and vivid descriptions.
6. Courtesy - Be sincere, tactful and avoid language that could offend.
7. Correctness - Ensure accurate information and proper writing mechanics.
The document discusses the key aspects of communication including the definition, process, types, levels and barriers of communication. It defines communication as the exchange of information, ideas, thoughts and feelings through various channels like speech, signals, writing and behavior. The types of communication covered are verbal, nonverbal, oral, and written. Verbal communication can be oral or written, while nonverbal involves body language, appearance and sounds. The levels of communication range from intrapersonal to interpersonal, small group, one-to-group, and mass communication. Barriers to effective communication include physical, perceptual, emotional, cultural, language, gender and interpersonal factors. The document also provides tips for overcoming barriers and tools for effective
The document discusses communication and the various barriers to effective communication. It defines communication and provides quotes about communication from different authors. It then describes the different types of barriers to communication, including physical, mechanical, organizational, cultural, linguistic, and socio-psychological barriers. Some examples of these barriers are noise, language mismatches, organizational hierarchy, prejudice, and selective listening. Overall, the document provides a comprehensive overview of communication and the potential issues that can interfere with the transmission of effective communication.
The 7Cs of Effective Communication outlines key principles for creating effective business messages. The 7Cs are: Completeness, ensuring all necessary information is included; Conciseness, being brief without sacrificing other details; Consideration, taking the recipient's perspective; Concreteness, using specific examples; Clarity, ensuring the message is easily understood; Correctness, using proper language, facts and tone; and Courtesy, communicating respectfully. Following these principles helps create messages that inform the recipient and achieve communication goals.
The document outlines the 7 C's of communication: completeness, conciseness, consideration, concreteness, clarity, courtesy, and correctness. Each C is defined in 1-2 sentences. Completeness means including all necessary information to avoid misunderstandings. Conciseness is expressing ideas using the fewest words possible. Consideration involves focusing on the recipient's perspective. Concreteness requires using specific details and examples. Clarity relies on precise language and familiar terms. Courtesy shows respect and care for the recipient. Correctness means free from errors in spelling, grammar and facts.
The 7 Cs of effective communication are completeness, conciseness, consideration, clarity, concreteness, courtesy, and correctness. Completeness means conveying all necessary information without missing details. Conciseness communicates the message using as few words as possible. Consideration involves understanding the audience's perspective. Clarity ensures the message is easy to understand. Concreteness uses specific examples. Courtesy shows respect for the recipient. Correctness means using proper grammar, vocabulary, and facts. Mastering these 7 Cs makes one an effective communicator.
This document outlines the seven C's of effective communication: completeness, conciseness, consideration, concreteness, clarity, courtesy, and correctness. It defines each C and provides examples. Completeness means conveying all necessary facts to the audience. Conciseness communicates the message in the fewest words possible without sacrificing other C's. Consideration takes the audience's perspective into account. Clarity emphasizes one message at a time for ease of understanding. Concreteness uses specific facts and language for unambiguous understanding. Courtesy shows respect for the recipient. Correctness ensures proper grammar and language are used.
Thank you for your message. I regret that I am unable to provide the specific details you requested, as I do not have access to confidential customer information. However, I appreciate you bringing this to my attention and will pass it along to the appropriate team to look into. Please let me know if there is any other way I can assist you.
The document discusses the 7 C's of communication that are important for effective business communication:
1. Correctness - Ensuring proper spelling and punctuation.
2. Clarity - Making information easy to understand through logical organization and avoiding ambiguity.
3. Conciseness - Communicating information using as few words as possible.
4. Completeness - Providing all necessary details to avoid further questions.
5. Consideration - Understanding others' perspectives and communicating empathetically.
6. Concreteness - Using specific examples, facts and details rather than vague language.
7. Courtesy - Interacting with others in a polite, respectful manner.
Effective communication requires clarity, conciseness, completeness, concreteness, consideration, courtesy and correctness. The message must be clear, brief yet fully convey the intended meaning using everyday language and proper structure. It should consider the audience by focusing on their needs and using a positive tone. Accuracy of information and appropriate language are important to maintain credibility. Overall the goal is to deliver the intended message to the recipient in a manner that is easily understood.
This document discusses the different types and levels of communication. It defines communication as the exchange of information, ideas, thoughts, and feelings through speech, signals, writing or behavior. There are two main types of communication - verbal communication which uses words, and nonverbal communication which uses body language and other signals. Verbal communication can be further divided into oral communication using spoken words, and written communication using written symbols. The document also outlines different levels of communication from intrapersonal communication within one's own mind to mass communication reaching large audiences through media. It discusses some common barriers to communication and provides tips for effective communication.
7cs Of communication Communicational SkillsTarun Nayak
ย
The document discusses the 7Cs of effective communication. The 7Cs are: Completeness, Conciseness, Consideration, Concreteness, Clarity, Courtesy, and Correctness. Each C provides guidelines for crafting messages that consider the audience and convey intended information clearly. For example, Completeness means including all relevant details, Conciseness means using few words, and Consideration means focusing on the receiver's interests and needs. Mastering the 7Cs helps ensure effective written and oral communication.
Intrapersonal communication is the process of communicating within oneself. In intrapersonal communication we receive messages through four stages namely stimulation, registration, organization and interpretation.
For more such innovative content on management studies, join WeSchool PGDM-DLP Program: http://bit.ly/ZEcPAc
The document discusses the history and development of written communication. It begins by explaining how writing evolved from economic necessities in ancient civilizations, where clay tokens were used and eventually developed into written documents like cuneiform. The document then outlines three stages in the progression of written communication: 1) pictograms, 2) writing on materials like paper and parchment with common alphabets, and 3) electronic communication using controlled waves and signals. It also discusses advantages like creating permanent records, and disadvantages such as being time-consuming. Common etiquettes for effective written communication are presented, including focusing on format, structuring content, ensuring connectivity, and being sensitive to the audience.
Communication is the sharing of ideas, concepts, feelings and emotions between a sender and receiver. It is a two-way process involving a message from the sender to the receiver, and feedback from the receiver back to the sender. While words account for only 7% of communication, tone, volume and other non-verbal cues like body language, facial expressions and movements account for 55% or more. Effective communication aims to avoid misunderstandings through understanding both verbal and non-verbal forms of communication, as well as overcoming barriers like noise, assumptions and emotions.
This document discusses and compares verbal and non-verbal communication. Verbal communication involves the use of spoken or written words to transfer information, while non-verbal communication conveys messages without words through gestures, facial expressions, eye contact, tone of voice, and other means. Both types of communication have advantages and disadvantages. Verbal communication allows for personal interaction but words can be forgotten, while non-verbal communication helps communicate emotions and overcome language barriers but cannot be used for public communication.
The document outlines the essentials of effective communication. It discusses clarity of purpose, understanding the audience, avoiding jargon, and confident delivery. It also describes the 7 C's of communication - being clear, concise, concrete, correct, considerate, complete and courteous. Each C is then defined in more detail, focusing on using simple language, brevity, specificity, accuracy, putting the recipient first, providing all relevant information, and politeness. The overall message is that effective communication requires transparency, brevity, precision, truthfulness, empathy, comprehensiveness and courtesy.
There areย 7 cโs of effective communicationย whichfarhanbutt
ย
The document outlines the 7 C's of effective communication: Correctness, Conciseness, Clarity, Completeness, Concreteness, Consideration, and Courtesy. Each C is defined, with Correctness focusing on proper grammar, Conciseness emphasizing brevity, Clarity ensuring understandability, Completeness providing all needed information, Concreteness using specific examples, Consideration showing empathy for the reader, and Courtesy strengthening relationships. Follow these principles for effective written and oral communication.
Communication Cycle | Communication | Communication processVishalVishwakarma59
ย
In this presentation we will learn introduction of communication , definition , communication cycle and types of communication.
communication cycle
define communication
define communication cycle
types of communication cycle
type of communication cycle
process of communication cycle
type of noise
Oral communication refers to communication through speech including conversations, presentations, lectures, and speeches. It allows for direct interaction and feedback which helps build rapport. Some advantages are that it is more transparent than written communication, allows for flexibility, and is more time efficient. However, oral communication can also lead to misunderstandings if not done attentively and lacks permanence compared to written records. Successful oral communication requires clarity, developing trust, overcoming barriers, and incorporating feedback.
This document discusses communication. It defines communication as the transfer of information from a sender to a receiver so that the message is understood. It notes that communication is a process that requires a sender, message, medium, and receiver. The document outlines the key elements and process of communication, including encoding a message, transmitting it through a channel, decoding it, and providing feedback. It also discusses characteristics of communication like it being a process involving transmission and understanding, and purposes of communication like providing information or influencing others. Barriers to effective communication are also mentioned.
Communication is the process of transmitting information from one person to another. It involves the transmission of a message from a sender to a receiver through an agreed-upon channel. The communication process consists of a sender encoding a message and selecting a channel to transmit it through, the receiver decoding the message, and the receiver providing feedback to the sender. Effective communication is a two-way process of sharing information and building understanding between individuals.
The 7 Cs of business writing are:
1. Completeness - Answer all questions fully using the 5Ws and 1H.
2. Conciseness - Be focused and avoid unnecessary words.
3. Consideration - Focus on the reader's needs and use a positive tone.
4. Clarity - Use simple, familiar language and effective structure.
5. Concreteness - Provide specific details, facts, and vivid descriptions.
6. Courtesy - Be sincere, tactful and avoid language that could offend.
7. Correctness - Ensure accurate information and proper writing mechanics.
The document discusses the key aspects of communication including the definition, process, types, levels and barriers of communication. It defines communication as the exchange of information, ideas, thoughts and feelings through various channels like speech, signals, writing and behavior. The types of communication covered are verbal, nonverbal, oral, and written. Verbal communication can be oral or written, while nonverbal involves body language, appearance and sounds. The levels of communication range from intrapersonal to interpersonal, small group, one-to-group, and mass communication. Barriers to effective communication include physical, perceptual, emotional, cultural, language, gender and interpersonal factors. The document also provides tips for overcoming barriers and tools for effective
The document summarizes the seven principles of effective business communication known as the "Seven C's". The seven C's are completeness, conciseness, consideration, concreteness, clarity, courtesy, and correctness. Each C principle is defined in one to three sentences with examples provided. The principles guide effective composition of both written and oral business messages.
The document discusses the 7 principles of effective communication: Conciseness, Completeness, Consideration, Clarity, Concreteness, Correctness, and Courtesy. It provides guidelines for each principle to help compose messages that achieve communication goals in the shortest time possible. The principles tie closely with basic communication concepts and are important for both written and oral interactions.
ReadySetPresent (Communication PowerPoint Presentation Content): 100+ PowerPoint presentation content slides. The foundation of all skills remains in effective communication in today's professional world. Communication PowerPoint Presentation Content slides include topics such as: Exploring the critical elements of good communication, different methods of communication, 10 slides on keys to effective listening, 6 slides on listening techniques, 10 slides on improving your listening, asking vs. telling, 10 slides on barriers and gateways to communication, 20 slides on effective business communication, why attending is important, responding to content, posturing and observing and feedback, 20+ slides on nonverbal communication, including eye contact, language barriers, how to's and more!
The document appears to be a presentation on effective communication given by a group of students. It includes sections on the introduction to communication, what is effective communication, the 7 C's of communication, barriers to effective communication, listening, and techniques for effective listening. The presentation provides definitions and explanations of key concepts related to effective communication and emphasizes the importance of listening, clarity, and overcoming barriers.
The document discusses effective communication skills, defining communication as the transmission of ideas or feelings so that the sender and receiver share the same understanding. It outlines the communication process, types of communication, components of communication, and barriers to communication. It emphasizes the importance of active listening, providing tips to improve verbal and non-verbal communication skills. Mastering communication is key to professional success.
All request please fwd to wah17@yahoo.com.My linkedin is wah17@yahoo.com.A copy of the full research is here:
http://www.scribd.com/share/upload/4814477/2dx6gqho7w9gwvvrwbhq
The document discusses the seven C's of effective communication: Completeness, Conciseness, Consideration, Concreteness, Clarity, Courtesy, and Correctness. Each C is defined in one or two sentences. For example, Completeness means providing all necessary information to answer questions fully. Conciseness means conveying messages using the fewest words. Consideration means focusing on the receiver's interests.
Routine letters And Good Will MessagesGaurav Singh
ย
Routine business letters are an essential form of communication between businesses and clients. Business letters must be written in a formal, professional tone. There are various types of routine business letters, including requests, replies, and goodwill messages. Key characteristics of effective business letters include clear content, a goodwill tone that emphasizes reader benefits, and correct formatting. The document provides guidelines for writing different types of routine business letters, such as requests, order letters, claim letters, replies, recommendations, and goodwill messages. It stresses the importance of considering the reader's perspective and revising letters thoroughly before sending them.
True courtesy involves being aware of others' perspectives and feelings. It grows from respect and concern for others, not just mechanical politeness. Courtesy rules include being thoughtfully tactful, using respectful expressions, and choosing non-discriminatory language. Particularly when communicating with Asian cultures, a soft, polite written and oral approach is appreciated.
The document discusses the 7 C's theory of communication which are completeness, conciseness, consideration, concreteness, clarity, courtesy, and correctness. It provides examples to illustrate each of these concepts in business communication.
The document outlines the Seven C's of Communication, which are principles of effective communication. They are completeness, conciseness, consideration, concreteness, clarity, courtesy, and correctness. Each C is defined in one to three sentences with examples provided for how to apply each principle to oral and written communication.
The document describes the 7Cs of Learning Design framework, which provides guidance for teachers and instructional designers on how to effectively design learning experiences using digital technologies. The 7Cs include: Conceptualize, Create, Communicate, Collaborate, Consider, Combine, and Consolidate. For each C, the framework provides tools and activities to help visualize the design process and make the design explicit and shareable. The goal is to shift the focus from content to activities and the learner experience. The framework is meant to help teachers and designers make pedagogically sound decisions and appropriately leverage digital tools and resources.
The document provides an overview of e-commerce, including:
- Defining e-commerce as commercial transactions of products/services between individuals and organizations that occur digitally over the internet.
- Discussing unique features of e-commerce like ubiquity, global reach, interactivity, and personalization.
- Outlining different business models for e-commerce, including internet-only businesses, offline businesses that transitioned online, and offline-only businesses.
- Comparing "clicks" online commerce with "bricks" physical commerce and the advantages of each.
- Describing different types of e-commerce like B2C (business to consumer), B2B (business to business
This document discusses the 7Cs framework for analyzing a website's customer interface. The 7Cs include context, content, community, customization, communication, connection, and commerce. Each C has multiple dimensions that need to be considered for website design. The document provides exhibits and supporting slides that analyze each of the 7Cs in more detail and provide examples from existing company websites. It concludes by discussing how to ensure the 7Cs work together to reinforce a company's value proposition and business model through good website design strategies.
This chapter introduces electronic commerce and discusses its key concepts. It describes how e-commerce involves using technology, particularly the Internet, to conduct business transactions. The chapter outlines different models of e-commerce, including business-to-consumer, business-to-business, and others. It also discusses how economic forces have driven a second wave of e-commerce focused on profitability through analyzing business processes and revenue models. The chapter covers challenges of global e-commerce like cultural and legal differences between countries.
The document provides an overview of the history and development of the Internet from the 1960s to the late 1990s. It discusses early computer networking research and the development of technologies like TCP/IP, DNS, HTML, and web browsers that led to the modern Internet. It also defines common Internet terminology like IP addresses, domains, protocols, and search engines.
E-commerce has gone through two eras since 1995, with the first from 1995-2000 seeing explosive growth in advertising products online, and the second from 2001-2006 involving a reassessment of e-commerce companies. There are several types of e-commerce models, including business-to-business (B2B), business-to-consumer (B2C), consumer-to-consumer (C2C), peer-to-peer (P2P), and mobile commerce (M-commerce). E-commerce provides benefits like low entry costs, reduced transaction costs, and access to global markets, but also disadvantages such as the inability to examine products personally and security risks.
The document discusses several key principles of effective communication:
1) Messages should be complete by conveying all necessary facts and figures for the intended audience.
2) Communication should be concise by expressing ideas using the fewest words possible. Concise messages are time-saving, highlight the main point, and are more appealing.
3) Messages must take the audience's perspective into account by considering their viewpoints, background, and education level. The audience's emotions and self-respect should not be harmed.
The document discusses key principles of effective communication:
- Messages should be complete by conveying all necessary facts and figures to the intended audience.
- Communication should be concise by expressing ideas using the fewest words possible to maximize efficiency and comprehension.
- Effective communication takes the audience's perspective into consideration by understanding their background, views, and needs.
- Clear communication focuses on one specific message at a time using exact, concrete language to facilitate understanding.
The document discusses key principles of effective communication, including ensuring messages are complete, concise, considerate of the audience, clear, concrete, courteous, and correct. It emphasizes conveying all necessary facts and details while using the fewest words possible. Effective communication considers the audience's perspective and respects their feelings, background and education level. Messages should be specific, unambiguous, supported by facts, and show respect for the recipient while maintaining objectivity. Proper grammar and precise language and details help ensure the accuracy and credibility of the communication.
The document discusses the 7 Cs of effective communication: clarity, completeness, conciseness, consideration, correctness, concreteness, and courtesy. Each C is defined as follows: clarity means emphasizing a specific message; completeness means conveying all necessary facts; conciseness means communicating in few words; consideration means understanding the audience's perspective; correctness means having no grammatical errors; concreteness means being clear rather than vague; and courtesy means respecting the receiver. Effective communication follows these 7 Cs to ensure the message is easily understood by the audience.
The document outlines 7 principles of effective communication: completeness, clarity, conciseness, courtesy, correctness, concreteness, and consideration. It defines each principle and provides examples of their key aspects. Completeness means conveying all necessary facts. Clarity emphasizes a specific message through exact words. Conciseness communicates the main point using few words. Courtesy shows polite respect for the receiver. Correctness ensures factual accuracy. Concreteness uses clear, specific details. Consideration understands the receiver's perspective and emotions.
The document discusses the 7 C's of effective communication: completeness, conciseness, consideration, clarity, concreteness, courtesy, and correctness. It defines each C and provides examples of their key features. Completeness means conveying all necessary information to the audience. Conciseness is communicating concisely without excess words. Consideration involves understanding the audience's perspective. Clarity means having a specific message. Concreteness uses specific facts and language. Courtesy shows respect for the recipient. Correctness ensures no grammatical errors. Mastering these 7 C's leads to more effective oral and written communication.
The document discusses the 7 C's of effective communication: completeness, conciseness, consideration, clarity, concreteness, courtesy, and correctness. It provides details on each C, explaining their importance and features. Effective communication ensures the message is complete yet concise, considers the audience, is clear and concrete, shows courtesy, and has no grammatical errors. Mastering the 7 C's is important for both written and oral communication.
Communication is the exchange of information between a sender and receiver using common symbols. To be effective, communication must be complete, considerate of the audience, and clear. It should provide all necessary information, consider the audience's perspective, and focus on a specific message. Communication must also be concise, concrete, courteous, and correct - conveying the message in a few words without being vague or including errors.
The document discusses the 7 C's of effective communication: completeness, conciseness, consideration, clarity, concreteness, courtesy, and correctness. Completeness means conveying all necessary information to the audience. Conciseness is communicating concisely without sacrificing other C's. Consideration involves understanding the audience's perspective. Clarity focuses on a specific message. Concreteness uses specific facts and language. Courtesy respects the receiver. Correctness ensures no grammatical errors. Following these 7 C's makes one an effective communicator.
The document outlines the 7 C's of effective communication: completeness, conciseness, consideration, clarity, concreteness, courtesy, and correctness. It describes features of each C, such as completeness developing reputation and being cost-saving, conciseness being time-saving, consideration emphasizing the audience's perspective, clarity making understanding easier, concreteness using specific facts and building reputation, courtesy considering both viewpoints, and correctness boosting confidence through exact and well-timed messages. Mastering these 7 C's makes one an effective communicator.
The document discusses the key aspects of effective communication. Effective communication requires being clear, accurate, relevant, timely, and meaningful. It also requires the receiver to be engaged by listening attentively and providing feedback. Some principles for effective communication are the 7Cs - communication should be complete, concise, considerate of the audience, clear, concrete, courteous, and correct. Additional factors like tone of voice, rate of speech, and word choice also impact communication effectiveness. Effective listening is also important for communication to be a full, two-way process.
The 7 C's of effective communication are completeness, conciseness, consideration, clarity, concreteness, courtesy, and correctness. Completeness means conveying all necessary facts to the audience to help them make better decisions. Conciseness communicates the message using the fewest words possible without sacrificing other qualities. Consideration means modifying the message for the audience's background and perspective. Clarity emphasizes a single message or goal without trying to achieve too much. Concreteness strengthens messages by including specific facts and figures. Courtesy respects the receiver by being polite, reflective, and enthusiastic. Correctness ensures no grammatical errors to boost confidence in the message.
The document outlines the seven C's of effective communication: clear, correct, complete, concrete, concise, considered and courteous. Each C is defined with examples. Completeness means conveying all necessary facts to the audience. Conciseness communicates the message using the fewest words possible without sacrificing other C's. Consideration means understanding the audience's perspective. Clarity focuses the message and uses exact language. Concreteness uses specific examples rather than general statements. Courtesy shows respect for the receiver. Correctness ensures no grammatical errors. The seven C's help ensure effective communication and understanding between parties.
The 7 C's of Communication is a checklist that helps improve communication skills and ensure messages are understood as intended. The 7 C's are: Correct, ensuring accuracy; Clear, being easily understandable; Complete, including all relevant information; Concise, being precise and to the point; Concrete, leaving no room for misinterpretation; Consideration, relating to the recipient; and Courteous, respecting the recipient's viewpoint. Following these guidelines results in effective communication that has greater impact and boosts confidence.
The document discusses effective communication skills for leadership. It defines communication and outlines the communication process. Effective communication involves both verbal and nonverbal elements. The 7 Cs of effective communication are completeness, conciseness, consideration, clarity, concreteness, courtesy, and correctness. Good communication skills are important for leadership as leaders must communicate well to influence and motivate others. Leaders should focus on clarity of speech, connecting with their audience, and standing out through strong presence.
Professional Communication Skills BSC.IT SEM1agsvk1
ย
This document outlines the 7 C's of effective communication: Completeness, Clarity, Conciseness, Correctness, Courtesy, Consideration, and Concreteness. It provides examples of each C, describing how they make communication more effective. Completeness means providing all necessary information without needing follow up. Clarity emphasizes a specific message rather than too much at once. Conciseness keeps the message brief. Correctness has no grammatical errors. Courtesy shows respect for the recipient. Consideration means seeing from their perspective. Concreteness uses specific facts rather than generalities. Mastering these 7 C's leads to more efficient and effective communication.
The document discusses the 7 C's of communication, which are principles for effective communication. They are completeness, conciseness, consideration, clarity, concreteness, courtesy, and correctness. Completeness means conveying all relevant facts and context for the audience. Conciseness is communicating efficiently using the fewest words possible without sacrificing other principles. Consideration involves understanding the audience's perspective and tailoring the message accordingly. [END SUMMARY]
The document outlines the 7 C's of effective communication: completeness, conciseness, consideration, concreteness, clarity, courtesy, and correctness. Each C is defined individually. Completeness means including all necessary information for the desired reaction. Conciseness means composing messages briefly using few words. Consideration means focusing on the audience's perspective and benefits. Concreteness involves being specific rather than vague. Clarity means accurately conveying meaning. Courtesy involves awareness of others' perspectives and feelings. Correctness implies having no grammatical errors.
The document discusses the 7 C's of effective communication: completeness, conciseness, clarity, concreteness, correctness, courteousness, and consideration. It defines each C and provides examples of how to apply each one when communicating. Completeness means including all necessary information. Conciseness is communicating efficiently using few words. Clarity means having a specific, understandable message. Concreteness involves using facts, not generalizations. Correctness means having proper grammar. Courteousness is being polite and respectful. Consideration means taking the audience's perspective into account.
Economic growth refers to an increase in a country's real GDP or output, measured as a higher value of goods and services produced, while economic development encompasses broader socioeconomic changes that improve living standards. Development considers changes in factors like income distribution, employment opportunities, education, health, and sustainability, whereas growth only focuses on quantitative increases in production. The Human Development Index provides a more comprehensive measure of a country's progress than GDP alone by also accounting for literacy, life expectancy, and other quality of life indicators.
The memorandum of association is the charter of a company that defines its scope and powers, while the articles of association contain the internal regulations for how the company will operate. The memorandum must be filed for any company to be registered and can only be altered in limited circumstances, whereas the articles provide rules for matters like director duties, shareholder rights, and meetings and can be more easily altered by special resolution. Together the memorandum and articles establish the legal foundation for a company.
The document discusses key aspects of negotiable instruments under the Negotiable Instruments Act 1881. It defines negotiable instruments as promissory notes, bills of exchange, or cheques payable to order or bearer. Instruments can be negotiable by statute or usage. Negotiation involves transferring possession with intent to pass title to the transferee. Holders in due course take the instrument for value before maturity and in good faith, gaining defenses against certain claims. Endorsement involves signing to transfer ownership, and can take various forms like blank, special, or restrictive.
The document defines and compares different types of negotiable instruments - promissory notes, bills of exchange, and cheques. It states that a negotiable instrument is a document that allows the transfer of rights from one person to another according to the Negotiable Instruments Act of 1881. It then provides details on the key characteristics and requirements for each type of instrument, such as needing to contain an unconditional promise to pay, having ascertainable parties, and being in writing. It also highlights some of the differences between these instruments, such as cheques requiring a specified banker as the drawee and always being payable on demand.
A cheque is a written order from a customer to their bank to pay a specified sum of money to a payee. It has three key parties - the drawer (customer), drawee (bank), and payee (recipient of funds). There are different types of cheques including bearer, open, crossed, generally crossed, specially crossed, not negotiable, and restrictively crossed ("account payee") cheques. Crossed cheques provide more security than open cheques by requiring payment through a bank instead of in cash over the counter.
An unpaid seller is a seller who has not received full payment for goods. A seller can be considered unpaid if the full price was not paid or tendered, or if a negotiable instrument like a bill of exchange was received as conditional payment but the conditions were not fulfilled. An unpaid seller has certain rights against the goods, like lien or stoppage in transit, and rights against the buyer, like suing for the price or damages. A seller may be unpaid even if a small portion of the price is outstanding, or if the goods were sold on credit but the credit period has expired.
The document defines and distinguishes between a contract of sale and an agreement to sell goods under Indian law. A contract of sale involves the immediate transfer of ownership from the seller to the buyer upon agreement, whereas an agreement to sell involves the future transfer of ownership upon certain conditions being met. The key differences between the two are: (1) a sale is an executed contract while an agreement to sell is executory, (2) risk of loss falls on the buyer in a sale but on the seller in an agreement to sell, and (3) available remedies differ depending on whether it is a sale or agreement to sell in cases of breach or insolvency.
This document outlines the general rule that a seller can only pass on the same quality of title to goods that they themselves possess, along with nine exceptions to this rule. The exceptions include unauthorized sales by agents, transfers by estoppel, sales by joint owners, sales under voidable contracts, and resales by unpaid sellers or finders and pledgers of goods.
This document discusses the differences between conditions and warranties in contracts for the sale of goods. A condition refers to a stipulation that is essential to the main purpose of the contract, and breach of a condition allows the aggrieved party to terminate the contract. A warranty refers to a stipulation that is collateral to the main purpose, and breach of a warranty only allows claiming damages, not contract termination. Examples of each are provided.
This document compares and contrasts contracts of indemnity and guarantee. It notes that indemnity involves two parties, the indemnifier and indemnity holder, while guarantee involves three parties: the creditor, principal debtor, and surety. The liability of the indemnifier is primary, while the surety's liability is secondary and contingent on the principal debtor's default. Indemnity reimburses for losses, while guarantee ensures payment of a debt. The document outlines the key elements and examples of both contract types.
A bailment is an agreement where one person (the bailor) delivers goods to another (the bailee) for a specific purpose, with the understanding that the goods will be returned or accounted for when the purpose is fulfilled. In a bailment, possession but not ownership is transferred. Examples include hiring goods, delivering clothes to a tailor for stitching, or delivering a car for repairs. The document then discusses different types of bailments and the rights and duties of bailors and bailees.
An agent is a person authorized to act on behalf of another person called the principal. There are several ways agency can be created: by express agreement (oral or written), implied agreement through conduct or acts, ratification of unauthorized acts, operation of law, estoppel, or necessity. Agency by estoppel occurs when an agent acts without authority but the principal's words or conduct lead others to believe the acts were authorized. Agency by holding out exists when a principal's prior conduct indicates another was their agent. Agency by necessity arises in circumstances where it is impossible to contact the principal but action needs to be taken. Ratification validates past unauthorized acts if the principal accepts them later. Agency by operation of law designates someone as an
There are several types of contracts:
1. A valid contract is enforceable by law when all essential elements are present.
2. A voidable contract can be voided when consent is not free, such as under threat.
3. A void contract has no legal effect.
Contracts can also be express (verbal or written), implied (based on actions), quasi (not by agreement but recognized by law), executed (both parties fulfilled obligations), or executory (obligations still need to be performed).
The document discusses the essential elements of a valid contract according to Indian contract law. It states that for a valid contract there must be (1) a lawful offer and acceptance, (2) lawful consideration, (3) capacity of the parties to contract, (4) free consent, (5) a lawful object, (6) intention to create legal relations, (7) certainty and possibility of performance, and (8) no legal formalities required or fulfilled. It provides definitions and examples for key terms like agreement, promise, consideration, and capacity. It also outlines exceptions for certain domestic agreements and situations that would make a contract void.
objectives of Current 5 year plan(2012-17)Sweetp999
ย
The document summarizes India's 12th five-year economic plan (2012-2017). It discusses goals such as achieving 9% GDP growth through higher investment, job creation, and public-private partnerships. Key sectors covered include agriculture, transportation, environment, health care, energy, and education. The plan emphasizes balanced regional development, technological innovation, and making growth more inclusive. Overall the plan aims to accelerate economic growth while providing a supportive policy environment for private business and improving implementation at the state level.
Liberalisation, privatisation and globalisation.Sweetp999
ย
The document discusses India's New Industrial Policy of 1991 which introduced the principles of liberalization, privatization, and globalization (LPG). It aimed to address issues like the government's excessive spending, inefficiencies, and losses in public sector enterprises. Liberalization relaxed restrictions on trade, investment, industry and privatization transferred public sector enterprises to private ownership. Globalization opened the Indian economy to increased foreign investment and trade. The policy changes aimed to make the Indian economy more competitive and integrate it with the global economy.
This document discusses key accounting concepts and conventions. It explains the separate entity, money measurement, going concern, accounting period, accounting cost, matching, dual aspect, realization, conservatism, full disclosure, consistency, and materiality concepts/conventions. These concepts and conventions provide the basic assumptions and guidelines for preparing financial statements according to accounting principles.
This document provides an overview of mutual funds, including their concept, types, advantages, organization, investment strategies, and growth in India. It discusses key mutual fund topics such as open-ended and closed-ended schemes, growth, income, balanced, and money market funds. The document also summarizes the history and growth of the mutual fund industry in India, from its beginnings in 1964 to recent growth and future prospects, with the industry expected to reach $800 billion by 2022 based on past growth rates.
The document discusses capital structure, which refers to the mix of long-term financing sources like equity shares, preference shares, debentures, and retained earnings that a company uses. It provides examples of different capital structure patterns that companies can use, including all equity, equity with preference shares, and combinations including debt. The optimal capital structure balances the costs and benefits of debt versus equity to maximize shareholder value. Formulas for calculating earnings per share under different capital structures and the indifference point between structures are also presented.
1. Management of cash involves preparing cash budgets to forecast cash inflows and outflows. This helps control cash levels and ensure adequate funds are available.
2. Techniques to control cash inflows include concentration banking and lockbox systems which speed up collection of receipts. Controlling outflows aims to delay payments as much as possible.
3. Surplus cash beyond normal requirements can be invested optimally using models like Baumol and Miller-Orr that balance carrying costs of holding cash versus transaction costs of converting investments to cash.
Andreas Schleicher presents PISA 2022 Volume III - Creative Thinking - 18 Jun...EduSkills OECD
ย
Andreas Schleicher, Director of Education and Skills at the OECD presents at the launch of PISA 2022 Volume III - Creative Minds, Creative Schools on 18 June 2024.
How to Manage Reception Report in Odoo 17Celine George
ย
A business may deal with both sales and purchases occasionally. They buy things from vendors and then sell them to their customers. Such dealings can be confusing at times. Because multiple clients may inquire about the same product at the same time, after purchasing those products, customers must be assigned to them. Odoo has a tool called Reception Report that can be used to complete this assignment. By enabling this, a reception report comes automatically after confirming a receipt, from which we can assign products to orders.
A Free 200-Page eBook ~ Brain and Mind Exercise.pptxOH TEIK BIN
ย
(A Free eBook comprising 3 Sets of Presentation of a selection of Puzzles, Brain Teasers and Thinking Problems to exercise both the mind and the Right and Left Brain. To help keep the mind and brain fit and healthy. Good for both the young and old alike.
Answers are given for all the puzzles and problems.)
With Metta,
Bro. Oh Teik Bin ๐๐ค๐ค๐ฅฐ
Philippine Edukasyong Pantahanan at Pangkabuhayan (EPP) CurriculumMJDuyan
ย
(๐๐๐ ๐๐๐) (๐๐๐ฌ๐ฌ๐จ๐ง ๐)-๐๐ซ๐๐ฅ๐ข๐ฆ๐ฌ
๐๐ข๐ฌ๐๐ฎ๐ฌ๐ฌ ๐ญ๐ก๐ ๐๐๐ ๐๐ฎ๐ซ๐ซ๐ข๐๐ฎ๐ฅ๐ฎ๐ฆ ๐ข๐ง ๐ญ๐ก๐ ๐๐ก๐ข๐ฅ๐ข๐ฉ๐ฉ๐ข๐ง๐๐ฌ:
- Understand the goals and objectives of the Edukasyong Pantahanan at Pangkabuhayan (EPP) curriculum, recognizing its importance in fostering practical life skills and values among students. Students will also be able to identify the key components and subjects covered, such as agriculture, home economics, industrial arts, and information and communication technology.
๐๐ฑ๐ฉ๐ฅ๐๐ข๐ง ๐ญ๐ก๐ ๐๐๐ญ๐ฎ๐ซ๐ ๐๐ง๐ ๐๐๐จ๐ฉ๐ ๐จ๐ ๐๐ง ๐๐ง๐ญ๐ซ๐๐ฉ๐ซ๐๐ง๐๐ฎ๐ซ:
-Define entrepreneurship, distinguishing it from general business activities by emphasizing its focus on innovation, risk-taking, and value creation. Students will describe the characteristics and traits of successful entrepreneurs, including their roles and responsibilities, and discuss the broader economic and social impacts of entrepreneurial activities on both local and global scales.
How to Download & Install Module From the Odoo App Store in Odoo 17Celine George
ย
Custom modules offer the flexibility to extend Odoo's capabilities, address unique requirements, and optimize workflows to align seamlessly with your organization's processes. By leveraging custom modules, businesses can unlock greater efficiency, productivity, and innovation, empowering them to stay competitive in today's dynamic market landscape. In this tutorial, we'll guide you step by step on how to easily download and install modules from the Odoo App Store.
3. The message must be complete. It should
convey all the facts required by the audience.
The sender of the message must take into
consideration the receiver and should
communicate all the facts and figures related
to the message.
4. ๏ฝ Conciseness means communicating what
you want to convey in least possible words.
Conciseness is a necessity for effective
communication. Concise communication
has following features:
โฆ It is both time-saving as well as cost-saving.
โฆ It underlines and highlights the main message.
โฆ Concise communication provides short and
essential message in limited words to the
audience.
โฆ Concise message is more appealing and
comprehensible to the audience.
5. Consideration
Consideration implies โstepping into the
shoes of othersโ. Effective communication
must take the audience into
consideration, i.e, the audienceโs view
points, background, mind-set, education
level, etc. Make an attempt to envisage your
audience, their requirements, emotions as
well as problems. Ensure that the self-
respect of the audience is maintained and
their emotions are not at harm.
6. ๏ฝ Clarity implies emphasizing on a specific
message or goal at a time, rather than
trying to achieve too much at once. Clarity
in communication has following features:
โฆ It makes understanding easier.
โฆ Complete clarity of thoughts and ideas
enhances the meaning of message.
๏ฝ Clear message makes use of
exact, appropriate and concrete words
7. ๏ฝ Concrete communication implies being
particular and clear rather than fuzzy and
general. Concreteness strengthens the
confidence. Concrete message has
following features:
โฆ It is supported with specific facts and
figures.
โฆ It makes use of words that are clear and
that build the reputation.
๏ฝ Concrete messages are not misinterpreted
8. ๏ฝ Courtesy in message implies the message
should show the senderโs expression as well as
should respect the receiver. The sender of the
message should be sincerely
polite, judicious, reflective and enthusiastic.
Courteous message has following features:
โฆ Courtesy implies taking into consideration both
viewpoints as well as feelings of the receiver of the
message.
โฆ Courteous message is positive and focused at the
audience.
โฆ It makes use of terms showing respect for the receiver
of message.
๏ฝ It is not at all biased
9. ๏ฝ Correctness in communication implies that there
are no grammatical errors in communication.
Correct communication has following features:
โฆ The message is exact, correct and well-timed.
โฆ If the communication is correct, it boosts up
the confidence level.
โฆ Correct message has greater impact on the
audience/ readers.
โฆ It checks for the precision and accurateness
of facts and figures used in the message.
โฆ It makes use of appropriate and correct
language in the message.