I’ve just watched, again, an episode in the Back to the Floor television series, which aired on the BBC (United Kingdom) and PBS (United States). Once more, communication turned out to be a key issue, as it often does in business stories.
Continuous Communication: Making Your Site Speak
A Site Review Of Ent Federal Credit Union By Edward Hadome of EdwardHadome.com.
From what I see the major problem comes from the home page. After reading through the profile of your business, I automatically created an image in my head of what a financial institution website would look like. What I pictured in my mind is that of a site with a feel of the corporate world. But this wasn’t the first impression I got.
Bill Sanders Answers Flash Communication Server Questions
Are you having trouble configuring Flash Communication Server? Are you just curious about what it does and how it can help your business? Then ask Bill Sanders. He can help you write server actionscripts, stream your multimedia files, and master the ins and outs of this powerful tool.
3 Ways to Make Your Communication More Persuasive
Is all communication persuasive, aimed at convincing others to act or think as we wish? Sometimes it seem like it is. At the least, we can say that much of what we communicate has a persuasion component in it.
Consider this article, which takes an editorial rather than an overtly persuasive approach. Yet, the underlying premise is that strategic communication works more effectively than communication without a conscious purpose. So, I’m trying to persuade you that one approach (the strategic) to communication works better than another.
Thinking Should Come Before Communication
Communication has become the great fashion and addiction of our age. Kids think a mobile phone is cool. Workers think that communicating is a sign of productivity. Communication may make you look cool, but it does not necessarily make you more productive. Communication, without thought, is in fact an unproductive activity.
Even Communication Experts Miscommunicate
“There’s a program on ‘virtual reality’ tonight at Stanford. Do you want to go?” Robert asked.