Minding Your
Mission
Conversational Etiquette
When it comes to the first contact
with potential employers, remember that the spotlight has already begun to
shine on you. When employers dial your phone number, give them
a polite, welcoming, and helpful response on the other end, whether it's you
or your voice mail that replies. If someone else such as your mother, roommate,
girlfriend, brother, or aunt normally answers the telephone, be sure to inform
and prepare them to respond properly take a detailed message for you. When
it's you making the phone call or sending the email to employers, keep in
mind that clarity is everything.
| Follow
these guideposts for first-contact finesse: |
| E-mail:
- Always check the address to be sure the message
goes to the right person
- Keep messages short and make the subject clear
- Re-read what you write several times
- Spell check your message
- Use complete sentences
- Don't assume you can be informal with everyone,
particularly in business correspondence
- Always be polite
- Remember that nothing is private! Your message
can be printed, forwarded, and saved, so don't
write anything that you don't want to be publicly known
- Humor is difficult to communicate through
email so be extremely cautious about saying something funny
- Don't write in capital lettersßit's the same
as shouting
- Avoid using emoticons and abbreviations in
business email correspondence
|
| Telephone:
Answering:
- Assume that the caller is someone important
that you don't know
- Smile when you pick up the phone, the caller
will hear it in your voice
- Don't yell, sing, laugh, or chew as you answer
Call
waiting:
- Generally, it's rude to interrupt your current
phone call for an incoming call unless it's an emergency
- If you are waiting for an important call,
tell the person you're talking to that you may have to interrupt them
Leaving
a message:
- Say your name and phone number slowly and
clearly; spell your name if necessary
- Immediately state what your message is regarding,
then clearly give the details
- Prepare your message by practicing first and
don't ramble
- Be polite and professional by always returning
your calls
Your
own voice mail/answering machine message:
- Keep them clear and short
- No background noise such as music, children
singing, or dogs barking.
- Don't annoy callers with a recorded "hello?"
greeting that fools them into thinking that someone has answered the
phone.
- Keep the message current. For example, if
it's Tuesday, don't have a message saying you'll be back on Monday
|