How to communicate well with your colleagues
Nobody needs another monologue in their inbox. Axios and Slack co-founders share tips on making your team messages short, clear and efficient
Nobody needs another monologue in their inbox. Axios and Slack co-founders share tips on making your team messages short, clear and efficient
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As companies grow, effective internal communication becomes even more important. One confusing message from an editor can slow down the entire chain. Add in remote working and you have a growing need to make communication as clear as possible.
In an online event with Axios co-founder and CEO Jim VandeHei and Slack co-founder Stewart Butterfield, the pair traded tips on improving internal communication.
There was a lot of good talk about technical solutions and leadership techniques but fundamentally, none of that truly matters without putting your recipient first.
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"So much of writing is self-indulgent," says VandeHei.
"If you just change your frame to what the other person needs to know or do, that radically changes how you communicate forever."
Consider embracing newspaper writing, adds Butterfield. Short, clear sentences are key to clarity. Summarise what is essential and what the receiver needs to enact. They should not need to mine through paragraphs of writing to know what is needed of them.
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Part of Slack's onboarding process for new hires is to identify the expectations of internal communications. At its core, it is simply providing clear information and instructions for the person on the other end.
Other tips include: