| Word Count: 1,316 Estimated Read Time: 5 1/2 min. |
Part 1: Looks Who’s Talking
Communication abounds in business. It is needed for effective teamwork, sharing of ideas, collaboration across departments and between levels of leadership, interaction with clients and vendors, hiring and training of staff, and much more. Some of it is written, but most of it is verbal. But there is a law of diminishing returns when it comes to talking at work. Everyone knows there are productive conversations, there are pointless meetings, and then there is idle blather. For work to get done, people must communicate on the work at hand. Often, though, business conversations digress into rants and yammering that is a waste of time. There is a point where repetitive and rehashed discussions and personal chit chat waste time. There is moment when the talk should stop and work should start (unless, of course, the job involves talking, such as teaching, phone sales, customer service, etc.) The truth is that most jobs require some time spent talking and the rest of the time doing other tasks related the job. Developing code. Designing blueprints. Balancing spreadsheets. Analyzing data. Writing content. Setting up digital campaigns. Processing payments. Etc. And, in most jobs, when talk exceeds action, it undercuts productivity and eats into profits. Continue reading




