Module 3 Written Communication
Module 3 Written Communication
Module 3 Written Communication
Written Communication
Written Communication
Writing is a mode of communicating a
message for a purpose. Writing reveals one’s
ability to think clearly and to use language
effectively.
A manager is responsible for a variety of
written communications such as replies to
clients, enquires, memos recording agreements,
proposals for contracts, formal or informal
reports to initiate action, and so on.
• Written communication is the process of
communicating a message through written symbols. It
is official communication between businesses and
within an organization. It is a controlled
communication and can be used as a reference point.
• Written communication can be considered a legal
document, so it is necessary that the words chosen are
careful, and language should be clear, complete,
correct, concise, and professional.
• Written communication is used when a business needs
to share or discuss critical technical issues requiring
complex figures, facts, data, and explanations.
Purpose of writing
1. Writing to Inform
i) Writer gives information and offers to
explains
ii) Expounds or expresses ideas and facts
iii) Accounts of facts , scientific data, statistics,
and technical and business reports.
iv)To inform or educate not persuade.
2. Writing to persuade
i) Convincing /influencing
ii) Expresses opinion
iii) Argumentative
iv) Opinion essays, editorials, letters to the
editors, business/research proposals, religious
books, reviews.
Principles of effective writing
1. Accuracy
2. Brevity
3. Clarity
1. Accuracy:-
Facts, figures, and words
Language and tone
Correctness of words
Technical accuracy of language
2. Clarity in writing
Friendly, interesting, persuasive
Flavor of easy conversation
no complex construction
3.Brevity:-
Leave out unnecessary details
Not at the cost of clarity
Language and Tone
Standard English
Tone-feelings created by words used to
communicate a message
The 3X3 writing process for business
communication
1. Prewriting (Planning)
2. Writing
3. Revising (Completing)
1. Pre writing
Team members work closely to determine
purpose, audience, content, organization
a) Analyze
Analyzing and Anticipating: Audience, Purpose
b) Anticipate
c) Adaptability
2. Writing
Team members work separately.
A) Research
b) Organize
Listing and outlining
Grouping ideas into patterns
Direct pattern for receptive audiences
Indirect pattern for unreceptive audiences
c) Compose
3. Revising (Completing)
Team members‘ work together to synthesize,
but one person may do final proofreading.
a) Proof reading
b) Evaluate
c) Determine specific purpose, think of how the
audience‘s ideas or behaviour should be
affected by the message
Types of Written Communication in Business
Business Letters
A business letter is usually a letter from
one company to another, or between such
organizations and their customers, clients and
other external parties. The overall style
of letter depends on the relationship between
the parties concerned.
A business letter is a letter written in
formal language, usually used when writing
from one business organization to another, or
for correspondence between such organizations
and their customers, clients and other external
parties.
Letters and memos are brief pieces of
communications. They tend to act upon the receiver‘s
feeling of thoughts with great immediacy of power.