Professional Communication 101: Our Guide
Interested in enhancing your professional communication skills? Proper communication etiquette is key in any job, so check out our guide by reading...
Is it worth setting up a video call this morning when your coworkers wouldn’t need to change out of their pajamas for a voice call?
There’s a question you probably never thought you’d have to ask yourself at work. But today it’s a real dilemma.
With so many teams working from home today, we’re in an exciting time for remote communication because we have so many options to communicate with. At the same time, it’s increasingly difficult to determine where one communication tool begins and another ends. We’re all still finding the line between when to send an email or a Slack message.
If you’re managing remote workers, how you communicate online has everything to do with your organization’s productivity and motivation. You need to learn the tools you have available and exactly where their strengths and weaknesses lie to communicate with them effectively.
We’ve compiled a list below of some of the best remote communication tools you need to know your way around and their pros and cons when used at work.
Believe it or not, the first true email communication system was used at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) all the way back in 1965. Back then, everyone who had a computer terminal at the school was hooked up to one mega-computer and messages were sent internally. Since then, it has expanded tremendously in use but still keeps many of the functions and interface it has had since its creation.
It is widely believed email was the biggest driving force behind the creation of the internet we know today.
A study conducted via the Human-Computer Interaction Institute of Carnegie Mellon University found that people who prioritize email all communicate with it similarly:
Interestingly, the same study found that keeping many email folders and only checking email at specific times was associated with increased feelings of email overload. The best countermeasure to overload was keeping their inbox small.
Interestingly, messaging was found better when running a language class as there was less stress around navigating social cues and non-native speakers had more time to conduct their thoughts.
-(van der Zwaard 2016)
While it scratches our itch for interaction, video chat may occasionally make communication more difficult due to our instinct for maintaining harmony. Messaging and email give us more time to collect our thoughts before speaking and when we do speak, we are less concerned with immediate reactions from listeners.
Today we still associate voice calls with the telephone, but the truth is, most of us don’t use phone lines for voice calls anymore; we use apps on our computers and our phones. While the primary tool for remote communication for over a century, the voice call today is just another option and should only be used in specific circumstances.
Messaging apps appeared suddenly in the past decade and swept every aspect of our communications at work and in the home. Workplaces in nations with a long-standing office culture have made a leisurely transition over to messengers over the past couple of years from our traditional methods like email. In many cases, we’re still phasing them in and out.
Workplaces in regions that have developed more recently like China jumped headfirst into the technology as soon as it became widely available. For us to understand the effects of messaging communications on the workplace, much of the best data currently comes from the East.
Messaging apps provide many unique benefits to your office but can have negative effects if overused.
A 2019 study from the International Journal of Communication on the Chinese app, WeChat, in the workplace found participants appreciated the convenience of communicating quickly online. However, the informality people associate with communication over messenger apps was also noted to seep into the workplace. These apps may also create a time drain for senior staff. According to the experiences of one participant:
As a chief operating officer, Antonia’s presence and active participation in WeChat workgroups were expected because they could encourage her subordinates and help to create a positive atmosphere for internal communication. However, she had to manage her attention so that she could focus on more important tasks at work, which created a paradox of engagement.
(HUANG, ZHANG 2019)
The situation in China with WeChat may be unique as employees frequently use the same profile for business as they use for their personal social media. Outside of China, many companies keep their messaging to platforms specifically meant for business.
If your organization hasn’t started talking about virtual reality yet then you can probably expect it soon.
According to Forbes, “VR is expected to grow as an industry from $6.1 billion in 2021 to an astounding $27.9 billion by 2025, largely due to the impact of Covid-19.”
While it is still in its infancy, VR office places are already being created as a way of covering the extra mile of interaction left uncovered by video calls and messaging.
In some apps on the market today, you can move an avatar around a virtual office and talk through voice chat to coworkers who are in your immediate vicinity. If you want privacy, you can move into a private zone. This may help to bring back some of the casual “water cooler conversations” and spontaneous, collaborative environments that we’ve been missing.
Simulations really shine for training employees remotely. According to Healthtech Magazine, a 2019 study found that medical students trained through VR were able to carry out some procedures more quickly and accurately than students trained without.
Remote communication isn’t just revitalizing how we train teams, it’s also changing how we hire them too.
Today remote work isn’t just enhancing how teams communicate with each other remotely. It’s also totally redeveloping talent pipelines into the workplace.
Remote internships are a great way to bring in the talent you need to keep your organization modern without spending unnecessary time or money. They let you draw from a global pool of applicants at a lower price point without the hassles of work visas or the logistics of getting interns into the office.
If you’re interested in exactly how a virtual internship can benefit your organization we’re happy to help. At Virtual Internships, we offer a program bringing fresh graduates from top universities and programs around the world connecting them with organizations that need them most.
We offer advisors to our interns to make sure they stay on track and we offer tried and tested program templates to our partner organizations so you don’t have to waste time designing one.
The best part? Our program is completely free to partners that participate today.
Send us your email on our website and let’s talk about how a virtual intern could change your business today.
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