Why it’s easier to communicate through the web than face to face
This article is brought to you from atruevision.com, Hell Yeah Dude’s sister Web site about PR & Marketing.
Working in large offices, and with people who have various tasks throughout the day. You are forced to communicate with people who are on all sorts of levels. You are forced to communicate with people who may not understand your job, or people who may not like your job. But you must communicate with them, your tasks, your idea’s, the benefits of those things, and how you will execute them. Sounds easy? Well it really isn’t. Communication between two people is the biggest barrier to executing large idea’s and brainstorming new products. So why has it become more popular to communicate through the web than face to face?
For one thing, communication through the web allows for the reader to break down words and sentences to better help them understand your goal. Your goal may be to “portray a certain point” or it could be “earning this amount of money.” But ultimately, your goal will seem much more understandable to you, than to others. With vast majorities of information available, people are learning more and more. But that also means that people have the possibility to learn more about subjects that their peers or friends may not. Think of it like a broken bridge, you have to figure out a way to either get across the river, or fix that bridge. For some, getting across the river just seems easier, and that means making detours at smaller words and more understandable sentences. Which is precisely the reason why the communication on the web is so important, as well as so overused in todays world. You are able to spend more time focusing on your words, sentences, and structure when you type, than when you speak.
Communication through e-mails, instant messages, twitters, blog posts, all of these things are means of communication. It raises more questions than just the Webliographical side of things. But until that time comes around, users and readers are still going to find it easier to communicate through the web. Are our brains getting slower to process thoughts, words, and sentences. Or are generational gaps finally being filled with a bridge (technology).








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