Writing is
one of the most common tasks that you’ll find yourself doing during a regular
workday. In 2011 the average corporate
user sent and received an average of 112 emails every day.
And that’s just email, it doesn’t include the sales proposals, technical
documentation, business letters and other documents that you’ll work on.
Just as
important as the content of business writing is the tone – the writer’s opinion
and emotion toward the reader and subject matter. Just like your tone of voice in a spoken
conversation, the tone of a written conversation is as – and sometimes more –
important as the actual content.
When
crafting a piece of business writing – a quick email before you dash off to a
meeting or a hundred page sales proposal that you and your team slaved over for
weeks – you certainly have to make sure that the content is appropriate but you
have to make sure the tone is, too. You
can’t take chances when you’re communicating through writing – you can’t read
facial expressions or body language and you might not get a second chance if
your content and tone miss the mark.
Not Good: Joe, get me the final specs quick or you’ll
cause us to deliver late.
Better: Joe, we really need the final specifications
before we can finalize delivery. Would
you be able to send them over at your earliest convenience to avoid delays?
One of the
most important considerations in establishing the tone of your writing is to be
honest, authentic and sincere. Most
readers will pick up if you’re not being true and you might lose your
credibility. If the reader doesn’t trust
you there isn’t much of a chance that they’ll be convinced by your writing.
Your state
of mind plays a large role in your tone: if you’re in a bad mood, if you’re
feeling playful, if you’re feeling happy – all of these emotions will come out
in your writing. If you are in a bad
mood or feeling stressed, you might want to stay away from your keyboard –
those grumpy feelings will seep into your writing whether you like it or not.
At all
times, you should maintain a professional tone, even if you are very
comfortable or have a friendly relationship with the recipient. Talking about the baseball game you went to,
how your kids are doing in school or your kitchen renovations might be
appropriate for the person that you’re writing to directly but not for those
that the recipient could forward it on to and you can’t count on them deleting
the friendly chit chat before they do.
Finally, you
should favour a concise and precise tone in business communication over a
verbose and flowery one. The person
reading your writing doesn’t have time to wade through linguistic pyrotechnics
fancy words and filter out your message.
Also, there’s a good chance that instead of coming off sounding eloquent
you’ll end up sounding pretentious.
Not Good: We would like to inquire about your upcoming
availability to arrange a mutually convenient brief conference call, if
possible on next Wednesday morning, so we might gain some additional insight
into your requirements for the upcoming project.
Better: Are you available for a short call next
Wednesday at 10:00am? We have some
questions about the project that we’d like to ask.
Conclusion
The tone of
a piece of business writing is just as important as the content. If you’re in a positive frame of mind, are
honest and sincere and keep your message concise then you’ll infuse a positive tone
in your writing and generate a readable and convincing piece. And if you decide that you need help with any
sales and marketing, technical or business writing projects that you’re working
on, we’re only an email or phone call
away.
Got something to say? Leave a comment below, we’d love
to hear from you! Got a question that we can address in our blog? Contact us
through our website
or email me directly and we’ll put our crack
team to work and let you know when we post a reply.
Amanda Hartley, Managing Partner
Fering Communications Inc.
Website: www.feringcommunications.com
Email: amanda.hartley@feringcommunications.com
Amanda Hartley, Managing Partner
Fering Communications Inc.
Website: www.feringcommunications.com
Email: amanda.hartley@feringcommunications.com
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