Business Communication Today, 14th Ed.
Chapter 2. Collaboration, Interpersonal Communication, and Business Etiquette
"Games and activities, graphics, and polling are just a few ways to keep your learners active in the learning process when using online collaboration.
"We all send body language cues based on how we feel and what we think, here's how to decipher them quickly and in any situation.
"New research by Dr.
"It was the kind of email that makes your shoulders clench up tight, right by your ears," begins Alexandra Franzen (photo, left) in a piece at TheMuse.
"This infographic provides step-by-step interview tips for both the interviewee and the interviewer.
"You work with them, you live with them, heck, in many cases you love them, but the people closest to us can still cause a lot of problems," writes Eric Barker, owner of Barking Up the Wrong Tree.
"How often do you have a conversation with your team that consists of something other than what’s being done, what needs to get done, and what they didn’t do?
"I spent the past month doing something most people dread: networking," says Rachel Gillett (photo, left).
"Columbia Business School research highlights the disconnect between peoples’ own views and their counterparts’ views of their assertiveness—and the impact it can have on negotiations.
Ashley Fidel (photo, left) has some new opening lines for networkers to consider.
"Luckily, there are signs we can look for when trying to detect a lie.
"You don't have to play by the old rules: This is the digital age.
Here is an infographic created by learningpool and featured at elearninginfographics.
"See the fascinatingly morbid graphic below from Who Is Hosting This?
"It's natural to want to be liked.
"It turns out that using body language to determine whether somebody is lying is really quite hard.
The folks at Educational Technology and Mobile Learning share an infographic from Brainy Quote and Evan Carmichael.
Erin Meyer (photo, left) asks the question.
"If you're going to get anything done in business, you need people to respect you.
Christine Comaford (photo, left) discusses the topic.
Jennifer Frost presents an infographic on the topic.
"The solution to the age-old problem of understanding others may be as simple as taking the time to improve your active listening skills.
"Facial expressions are a universal language of emotion, instantly conveying happiness, sadness, anger, fear, and much more.