INTRODUCTION

Understanding your message’s audience and considering how to adapt your message is key to successful interactions. In this task, you will:

1.  Write two emails introducing yourself in a professional workplace setting to two different characters from the scenario below.

2.  Demonstrate in a written analysis how each introductory message is adapted to the audience you are addressing.

3.  Use the RRM3 D268 Task 1 Template located in the Supporting Documents section below the rubric as a guide to complete this task.

SCENARIO

You work for a corporation with multiple branches across the United States. You have been called to the East Coast headquarters to work on a training program that will be used nationwide. You will be meeting your team members—who come from various branches—for the first time and would like to communicate with them to introduce yourself before arriving. The following list has important information to know about each of their work cultures.

The team is as follows:

•  Sarah: At Sarah’s branch at company headquarters, her team values time, efficiency, and direct communication. She typically plans out every minute of her day and expects meetings to have clear agendas with concise information about daily tasks. The culture is low context and values certainty and formality. Sarah has worked in the organization for nearly 20 years.
 

•  Joe: At the company’s Southeast branch, Joe’s team values a relaxed and informal atmosphere. He and his colleagues focus a lot of energy on developing genuine relationships and trust. Joe and his coworkers use a high-context communication style. Joe is the newest hire out of this branch but has been working in the organization for 10 years.
 

•  Blake: At Blake’s branch in the Southwest, his team values collaborating, sharing work, and equally contributing to ideas. The culture tends to focus on equal distribution of workload and people who desire to improve the success of the overall group. They generally communicate in a nonassertive manner. Blake has been working in the organization for 30 years.
 

•  Talia: At Talia’s branch in the Midwest, the culture is friendly and warm. People are very supportive of each other and value kindness and expressions of appreciation. They, at times, have difficulty communicating criticism. They are largely assertive and uncomfortable with silence. Talia was recently promoted, and she has worked for the organization for 5 years.
 

•  Mei: At Mei’s West Coast branch, employees can work in the office building, outside on patios, or on lawn spaces. Their workplace culture is individualistic, and people focus on direct communication. In Mei’s office, workers appreciate diverse and novel ideas. They value discussion and are comfortable with ambiguity. Mei is a recent graduate, and this is their first year at the organization.
 

REQUIREMENTS

Your submission must be your original work. No more than a combined total of 30% of the submission, and no more than a 10% match to any one individual source, can be directly quoted or closely paraphrased from sources, even if cited correctly. The similarity report that is provided when you submit your task can be used as a guide.

You must use the rubric to direct the creation of your submission because it provides detailed criteria that will be used to evaluate your work. Each requirement below may be evaluated by more than one rubric aspect. The rubric aspect titles may contain hyperlinks to relevant portions of the course.

Tasks may not be submitted as live documents or cloud links, such as links to Google Docs, Google Slides, OneDrive, SharePoint, etc., unless specified in the task requirements. All other submissions must be file types that are uploaded and submitted as attachments (e.g., .docx, .pdf, .ppt, .pptx).

A.  Choose two of the characters from the scenario above and write an introductory email introducing yourself to each character (one email per character). 

For each email you must:

1.  Use a different communication style based on the characters chosen from prompt A.

2.  Include an opening (i.e., Dear, Hello, etc.) and closing (i.e., Sincerely, See you soon, etc.).
 

Note: Suggested length for each email is 1–3 paragraphs.
 

Note: When introducing yourself, you may use real or fictitious details about your personal and professional life.
 

B.  Based on the characters you chose to introduce yourself to in prompt A, complete the following:

1.  Explain why you chose each communication style for each character.

2.  Describe how each email from prompt A is different from the other.
 

Note: Suggested length is 1–2 pages.
 

C.  Acknowledge sources—using in-text citations and references—for content that is quoted, paraphrased, or summarized.
 

Note: Sources are NOT required for this task, but if sources are used, they must be acknowledged and cited appropriately.
 

D.  Demonstrate professional communication in the content and presentation of your submission.
 

Note: See the rubric for what professional communication entails.

RRM3 D268 Task 1 TEMPLATE

Instructions: Complete and submit this document as your Task 1 for D268.

Section A:

Choose two of the characters from the task scenario and write an introductory email introducing yourself to each character (one email per character).
Tip: See Section 1 (Communicating in Diverse Groups): Lesson 5.4 (Email 1/2) and 5.5 (Email 2/2) for an example email format and what email parts to include.

For each email you must:

1. Use a different communication style based on the characters chosen from prompt A.

2. Include an opening (i.e., Dear, Hello, etc.) and closing (i.e., Sincerely, See you soon, etc.) to each character you chose.

Note: When introducing yourself, you may use real or fictitious details about your personal and professional life.

Note: (
Suggested length of 1–3 paragraphs), using a different communication style for
each EMAIL.

Write email 1 here

Write email 2 here
   

Section B:

Based on the characters you chose to introduce yourself to in prompt A, complete the following:

Tip: See Section 1 (Communicating in Diverse Groups): Lessons 2.4 (Communication Styles) and 2.5 (Adapting to Different Communication Styles) & Lessons 3.2 (Knowing you Audience 2/2), 3.3 (An Audience Analysis Tool 1/3), 3.4 (An Audience Analysis Tool 2/3) and 3.5 (An Audience Analysis Tool 3/3) for instruction on addressing communication styles.

1. Explain why you chose each communication style for each character.

2. Describe how
each email from prompt A is different from the other.

Section C:

If sources are used, acknowledge sources—using in-text citations and references—for content that is quoted, paraphrased, or summarized. 

 

Note: Sources are not required for this assignment unless you are using research to support your claims. If you use research, you must cite in-text and create a reference list.  You are encouraged to use the
Simple Guide for Citing Sources. You do not have to cite the course materia