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	<title>Articles&gt;Management&gt;Organizational Communication&gt;Business Communication</title>	<link>http://tc.eserver.org/dir/Articles/Management/Organizational-Communication/Business-Communication</link>
	<description>A listing of the most recently indexed works about Articles and Management and Organizational Communication and Business Communication in the field of technical communication.</description>
	<language>en-us</language>
	<copyright>Copyright (c) 2005-08 by the EServer. All rights reserved.</copyright>
	<managingEditor>tclib-editorial@eserver.org (TC Library Editorial Board)</managingEditor>
	<webMaster>webmaster@eserver.org (Geoffrey Sauer)</webMaster>
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		<title>Articles&gt;Management&gt;Organizational Communication&gt;Business Communication</title>
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		<title>Shotgun Communication</title>
		<link>http://tc.eserver.org/35813.html</link>
		<guid>http://tc.eserver.org/35813.html</guid>
		<description>After new product releases or service updates, a torrent of disparate corporate information follows based on the perceived requirements for each team to show their worth. Sales collateral, Marketing webcasts, Support knowledgebase articles, Engineering release notes, and internal reference guides from formal Documentation teams stagger out like drunken sailors looking for their ship after a Cinderella liberty. Add to this meandering information all of the informal input from bloggers, social sites, forums, and independent Web sites, and you have a fog of information to stumble through to find real knowledge and employ best practices for purchased products and services.</description>
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		<title>Beyond Taxonomies of Influence: &quot;Doing&quot; Influence and Making Decisions in Management Team Meetings</title>
		<link>http://tc.eserver.org/33502.html</link>
		<guid>http://tc.eserver.org/33502.html</guid>
		<description>Studies of influence in organizational settings have tended to concentrate on defining categories of influence based on self-reports and questionnaires. This has tended to decontextualize and generalize the findings and therefore overlooks the inevitably temporally and locally situated nature of all social activity. Using conversation analysis as a methodology and videotaped data of naturally occurring talk, this article seeks to go beyond such taxonomies of influence. More specifically, this article seeks to provide a fine-grained analysis of how subordinates, as well as superiors, can influence decision-making episodes of talk. It is also argued that the results of such research can be fed back into practice and ultimately can be of help in allowing better decision-making practices.</description>
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		<title>Why You Should Hire Professional Writers to do the Writing</title>
		<link>http://tc.eserver.org/32205.html</link>
		<guid>http://tc.eserver.org/32205.html</guid>
		<description>Who is writing all the documents that organizations produce? The typical answer: Anyone who has a keyboard. But not everyone with a keyboard has the skills required to create the quality documents that ultimately fall into the hands of customers and regulators. Nor does everyone who is asked to write these important documents have   the desire—or time—to perform such tasks.</description>
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		<title>Beyond Power and Resistance: New Approaches to Organizational Politics</title>
		<link>http://tc.eserver.org/31682.html</link>
		<guid>http://tc.eserver.org/31682.html</guid>
		<description>In this introduction to the special issue, the editors question the still-prevalent dichotomy of power and resistance when studying organizational politics. They begin by tracing the evolution of power and resistance in critical scholarship. Then, they propose that because of changing workplace dynamics, power and resistance are increasingly intertwined. More nuanced concepts are required to describe this. Finally, they argue that power and resistance should be considered as a singular dynamic called struggle.</description>
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