Home » Blog » Call me maybe – The Sunday Snippet – [12.09.12]

Call me maybe – The Sunday Snippet – [12.09.12]

(Thank you to our readers who have responded with great topic ideas for our weekly Snippet. This week’s topic comes from Arjun Desai, marketing campaign manager at Sabre Travel Network. Thanks, Arjun!)

We’ve all seen an email thread gone awry. It usually starts with the best intentions but disintegrates into a testy, awkward exchange where nothing gets resolved. These occurrences can be destructive to morale, relationships – and careers.

It’s a common trap:  an urgent, somewhat emotionally-charged message comes in and we reply. And this has become far too easy thanks to our smartphones. At the time, it might seem like a good idea to jump into the discussion. Be careful.

A few things to consider:

  1. Tone and context are easy to misread. Emotion just doesn’t translate, even with emoticons and the nuclear option of ALL CAPS and exclamation points!!! A conversation allows for voice modulation and inflection, and humorous stop and go’s that relieve tension.
  2. We’ve developed a Pavlovian response to email and text – it must be answered now, we must engage. It’s almost always better to wait and sleep on it especially if there is some controversy. In emotionally charged situations we  tend to use the digital communications as a shield and become more brazen and bold. In conversation, we’re more practiced at ‘biting our tongue’, and seeking understanding rather than winning.
  3. There is a diminishing return in an email debate. The back and forth often goes on beyond usefulness. There’s also the danger of creating so much frustration that it shuts down all communications. A conversation just makes it easier to gain some consensus and move forward immediately.

When to make the call:

  • When there is serious disagreement.
  • When emotions are high (or low.)
  • When parties haven’t spoken for a long time due to schedules, proximity or department silos.

Making a phone call takes a little more time, but it can make the difference between creating problems and fixing problems.

Best wishes for a successful week.

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