Business Communication Essentials, 8th Ed.
Chapter 6. Crafting Messages for Digital Channels
"This is it.
Ginny Soskey presents an infographic on the topic created by WhoIsHostingThis.
Recently Gmail began dividing its incoming email into 3 inboxes - primary, social (Twitter, LinkedIn, Pinterest), and promotional (newsletters, retail offers, etc.
"Securing a job is the tough part, but scouting an open position?
"It's the Internet of the Ephemeral—the side of the Internet that gives us Snapchat and Confide and other apps that owe their popularity not just to the fact that they are not Facebook, but also to the fact that they trade, specifically, on their impermanence.
Ric Dragon (photo, left) gives a report on his conversation with Christi McNeill, project lead of social business and listening at Southwest Airlines.
According to Naomi Garnice (photo, left) of the Daily Muse, "Considering that email is the primary form of communication in most offices, we don't always choose our written words as wisely as we should.
"Forget distinguishing the salad fork from the dinner fork.
"It’s hardly an overstatement that social media has taken over our personal lives," writes Chris Riback in a piece at TheWeek.
"Understandably, for many students, email is a venue of freedom and distance from academic considerations.
"A compilation of 25 basic styles of blogging from award winning blogger and author of Personality Not Included, Rohit Bhargava (photo, left).
"Knowledge seldom takes the place of experience.
Shel Israel (photo, left) shares his 12 tips.
"It’s easy to see that the rise of social media has changed the way we communicate with those around us.
Bovee and Thill are the only authors who explain and illustrate in every chapter in their textbooks how mobile is revolutionizing business communication.
"If you're like most professionals, you probably write dozens of emails a day but barely think about the subject line.
To view the entire infographic click on the image or the link below.
"A study of how older teenagers use social media has found that Facebook is “not just on the slide, it is basically dead and buried” and is being replaced by simpler social networks such as Twitter and Snapchat," writes Matthew Sparkes in a piece for The Telegraph.
According to John Brownlee (photo, left), "In a world where inbox zero is the ultimate goal, who cares about good typography?
Robin Good's Pinterest selection on the topic.
"If you own a small business, you've been told that you need to get on Facebook, get on Twitter, and create a presence for your brand in order to compete in today's digital landscape.
"Startups face tremendous pressure while competing with their bigger counterparts.
Click the Pinterest logo to the left or the link below to view the Pinterest page.
Lee Odden (photo, left) covers the topic.
