Reduce Popular Business Communication Tool Use?

<p>&lbrack;ad&lowbar;1&rsqb;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>Many managers are looking for ways to improve their business communications and reduce wasted time within and outside their companies&period; Are the most common business communication tools of meetings and emails the real problem&quest; According to recent studies&comma; the number of meetings and their duration has increased but meetings often are less than 50&percnt; productive&period; Are we using meetings when another communication tool like email might be more effective&quest; Email use is on the rise and this too is getting a bad reputation as overused or poorly constructed&period; Emails are used for internal communications and external marketing so they need to be effective&period; Many managers are looking for ways to reduce both meetings and emails in their companies&period; Is reduction the answer or is the answer using the tools correctly and more effectively&quest;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I&&num;8217&semi;ve written a book on meeting management and articles on what goes wrong in meetings&comma; so I already know where most people need help&period; I wanted to confirm that others may be concerned about what may go wrong in meetings and that meetings need improvement&period; Since I recently wrote an on-line article titled <i>&&num;8220&semi;Minding Meeting Manners&&num;8221&semi;<&sol;i>&comma; so I thought it might be helpful to use a popular internet search engine to measure how important the topic of &&num;8220&semi;meeting etiquette&&num;8221&semi; or &&num;8220&semi;meeting manners&&num;8221&semi; is&period; Using these as keyword in my search&comma; the combined total was over 41&comma;900 results&period; Just to see if there was agreement with some of my meeting improvement ideas in my articles and books&comma; I read a few of the results which had descriptions that indicated they would provide solutions&period; Much of the text I read included a few of the thirteen items in my article or some of the hints in my book&period; However&comma; they often listed other problem areas that were job specific&period; Although the item I reviewed did not yield all the same things I felt were essential&comma; they did reinforce my belief that meetings are important and that everyone needs to better know how to take advantage f this group communication method for business purposes&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>After looking up meetings&comma; I decided to check out &&num;8220&semi;email etiquette&&num;8221&semi; and got over 348&comma;000 results&period; I scanned the list of options in the first few pages and checked out the ones that claimed to include tips in their descriptions&period; Some of those I read I agreed with as relevant for professional emails and others I disagreed with because they might work for personal email but were not the correct usage for business communications&period; However&comma; I found that much of the text agreed with many of the thirteen I listed in the on-line article I wrote last month titled <i>&&num;8220&semi;Encouraging Email Etiquette&&num;8221&semi;<&sol;i>&period; Some justified their belief in what they stated with an explanation but most did not&period; For people to display proper etiquette in emails&comma; they not only need to know what is acceptable but why that should be the norm&period; Email is a great communication tool but only if the receiver understands what the sender is trying to say&period; Although I may not agree with every email etiquette item I reviewed&comma; the number of results clearly indicates this is a valid communication concern for business professionals&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>I wanted to find out if the two most popular business communication tools needed to be reduced or if they needed to be used effectively&period; In turning to the internet as a research tool&comma; I&&num;8217&semi;m not sure if the resulting numbers can indicate which tool people really need the most help with or which is used the most&period; Either way&comma; I feel confident that the results indicate all professionals need both meeting and email communication skills to be improved for business purposes&period; Improvement and proper utilization is more realistically the answer to business communication problems than trying to reduce the necessary use of meetings or email&period;<&sol;p>&NewLine;<p>&lbrack;ad&lowbar;2&rsqb;<&sol;p>&NewLine;&NewLine;