2. The Process of Preparing Effective Business Message
Why preparing for effective business message?
Every communication process starts with a message.
Message plays a crucial role at every step of communication cycle.
Message is what initiates a communication process.
3. The Process of Preparing Effective Business Message
Five Planning Steps
1. Identify Your Purpose
2. Analyze Your Audience
3. Choose Your Ideas
4. Collect Your Data
5. Organize Your Message
4. The Process of Preparing Effective Business Message
Step 1: Identify Your Purpose
The first and most important step is to determine the specific reason of writing. The reason of
writing a message could be:
Mainly informational, such as announcement etc.
Persuasive, such as promotion of product or sending applications for personal reasons, etc.
Negotiating
Creating goodwill
5. The Process of Preparing Effective Business Message
Step 2: Analyze Your Audience
It is important to adapt to the message according to the receivers views, mental filters, needs, and
culture. While preparing a message the care must be taken for the following aspects:
Member of a group, such as business or professional person; laborer, colleague, or subordinate; woman or man.
New or long time customer; young, middle-aged, or elderly.
Receivers educational level, attitudes and probable values (often culture-specific)
Finally consider and decide whether the receiver or listeners are informed or uninformed on the subject and whether
they will react to the message positively or negatively, with interest or disinterest.
6. The Process of Preparing Effective Business Message
Step 3: Chose Your Idea
With the purpose and receiver in mind, the next step is to choose the idea for message.
The idea of writing a message depends on the background, situation, cultural context and
location of the receiver (national or international)
Brainstorming and jotting down the ideas
7. The Process of Preparing Effective Business Message
Step 4: Collect Your Data
After deciding about the idea to be included in the message, it is important to determine if the same
requires specific facts, figures quotations, or other types of evidence to support the main idea of the
message. It is important to know and take care of:
Company’s policies, procedures, and product detail if needed to support the main idea.
Enclose, if needed, a brochure, table, picture, or product sample.
8. The Process of Preparing Effective Business Message
Step 5: Organize Your Message
Before you write the first draft of the letter, outline your message (mentally or on paper). The order in
which the idea is presented is as important as the ideas themselves.
Disorganized, rambling messages often seem careless, confusing, and unimportant.
Different approaches of organizing the business messages are necessary for different cultures. While the
direct style is often preferred by US and European business people, the indirect plan is often more effective
while writing to business people from South America, Middle East, and Asian Countries.
9. What is Organizational Plan
Organizational Plan is the choice of sender to prepare a message in a particular manner. There are two approaches of planning
a message as follows:
Direct (Deductive) Approach:Use the direct approach when the audience is receptive of your message.
Indirect (Inductive) Approach:When you expect resistance to your message, choose the indirect approach, such as bad-news message or a
persuasive request.
For writing letters and memos, one of four basic organizational plans can be selected according to the situation:
1. The direct request (Deductive Approach)
2. Good news (Deductive Approach)
3. Bad-news (Inductive Approach)
4. Persuasive request plan (Inductive Approach)
10. Direct (Deductive) Organizational Plan
Direct Request Plan: This type of plan is used when the main purpose of message is to make a request that
requires less persuasion.
1. Main Idea
a) Request, main statement, assertion, recommendation, question
b) Reason, if desirable
2. Explanation
a) All necessary and desirable detail and data
b) Numbered questions, if helpful
c) Easy reading devices
3. Courteous Close
a) Clear Statement of action desired
b) Easy Action, dated when desirable
c) Appreciation and goodwill
11. Direct (Deductive) Organizational Plan
Good News Plan: This type of plan is used when the main purpose of message is to grant requests, announce favorable or neutral
information, and exchange routine information within or between companies.
1. Best News or Main Idea
2. Explanation
a) All necessary and desirable detail and data
b) Resale material
c) Educational material
d) Sales promotional materia
3. Positive, Friendly Close, Including, if appropriate:
a) Appreciation
b) Clear Statement of action
c) Offer of further help, reader benefits
12. Indirect (Inductive) Organizational Plan
Bad-News Plan: This type of plan is one of the most difficult to prepare because your reader may react negatively.
1. Buffer (Pleasant or Neutral Statements, reader-oriented)
2. Explanation
a) Necessary data, tactfully stated
b) Pertinent favorable, then unfavorable acts
c) Readers benefit reasons
3. Decisions (Implied or Expressed) along with the offer of additional help or suggestion
4. Positive, Friendly Close
a) Appreciation
b) Invitation to future actions desired
c) Easy action, dated when desirable
d) Willingness to help further
e) Reader benefit and goodwill
13. Indirect (Inductive) Organizational Plan
Persuasive Request Plan: These type of plans are the most difficult to prepare as the readers tend to react negatively.
1. Attention
a) Reader benefit
b) Reader-interest theme
2. Interest
a) Descriptive details and data
b) Psychological appeal
c) Reader benefit
3. Desire
a) Statement of request
b) Supporting data to help create reader’s desire to grant request
4. Action
a) Clear statement of action
b) Easy action, dated when desirable
c) Special inducement
e) Reader benefit and goodwill
14. The Beginning and Ending of Business Message
The most important part of Business Message is its opening and closing
paragraphs.
Why ?
Because “First Impression is the last impression”
“We remember best what we read last”
The trick is:
Whenever possible, place the main favorable ideas at the beginning and ending of a
message. This advice is also applies to the paragraph.
15. Opening Paragraph
• The opening of message determines whether the reader
continues reading, puts the message aside, or discard it.
The rules of good opening paragraphs are:
1. Choose an opening appropriate for the message purpose
and for the reader.
a) Main Idea or good-news first for direct-request, neutral, and good
news messages
b) Buffer first for bad news messages.
c) Attention-getting statements
16. Opening Paragraph (Contd.)
2. Make the opening considerate, courteous, concise, clear.
a) Get reader into opening.
b) Keep first paragraph relatively short
c) Focus on positive
d) Use courteous, conversational language
e) Avoid repetition
3. Check for completeness regarding:
a) Sentence structure
b) Date of letter you are answering
17. Closing Paragraph
• The closing is more likely to motivate the reader to act as
requested if it is appropriately strong, clear, and polite.
• Here you have the opportunity to bring the final focus
on the desired action and leave a sense of goodwill with
the reader.
18. Closing Paragraph (Contd.)
1. Make your action request clear and complete with the five W’s and the H (how) if you want your reader to
do something.
a) What and who: Clearly state when action you desire and who should do it.
b) How and where: Make action easy
c) When: Date the action if desirable
d) Why: Show reader benefit, if possible.
2. End with a positive, courteous thought.
a) Include any apologies and negative before the last paragraph
b) Be friendly
c) Show appreciation
d) Occasionally add a personal note
3. Keep the last paragraph concise and correct
a) Avoid trite expressions
b) Omit discussion of trivial details
c) Use relatively short and complete sentences
19. Composing the Message (End of Planning Stage)
•Drafting Your Message: When you have completed the five planning
steps and considered the opening and closing, you are ready for your
first draft.
•The important thing in preparing a draft message is to get the most
important information in your message on the paper.
20. Revising the message
•After finishing the first draft of the message, it is important to
evaluate its content, organization, and style. The following are
the suggestions for revising:
Does your message accomplish its purpose?
Have you chosen the most effective organizational plan?
Are your points supports the adequate material?
Is your language complete, concise, considerate, concrete, clear, courteous,
and correct?
Have you used variety in sentence structure?
21. Editing & Proofreading Your Message
•Editing and proofreading are important to ensure that your documents have
no mistakes in grammar, spelling, punctuation, or word choice.
•Persons writing in a second language will find it helpful to read their written
material aloud.