--- name: professional-communication description: Guide technical communication for software developers. Covers email structure, team messaging etiquette, meeting agendas, and adapting messages for technical vs non-technical audiences. Use when drafting professional messages, preparing meeting communications, or improving written communication. allowed-tools: Read, Glob, Grep --- # Professional Communication ## Overview This skill provides frameworks and guidance for effective professional communication in software development contexts. Whether you're writing an email to stakeholders, crafting a team chat message, or preparing meeting agendas, these principles help you communicate clearly and build professional credibility. **Core principle:** Effective communication isn't about proving how much you know - it's about ensuring your message is received and understood. ## When to Use This Skill Use this skill when: - Writing emails to teammates, managers, or stakeholders - Crafting team chat messages or async communications - Preparing meeting agendas or summaries - Translating technical concepts for non-technical audiences - Structuring status updates or reports - Improving clarity of written communication **Keywords**: email, chat, teams, slack, discord, message, writing, communication, meeting, agenda, status update, report ## Core Frameworks ### The What-Why-How Structure Use this universal framework to organize any professional message: | Component | Purpose | Example | | --- | --- | --- | | **What** | State the topic/request clearly | "We need to delay the release by one week" | | **Why** | Explain the reasoning | "Critical bug found in payment processing" | | **How** | Outline next steps/action items | "QA will retest by Thursday; I'll update stakeholders Friday" | **Apply to**: Emails, status updates, meeting talking points, technical explanations ### Three Golden Rules for Written Communication 1. **Start with a clear subject/purpose** - Recipients should immediately grasp what your message is about 2. **Use bullets, headlines, and scannable formatting** - Nobody wants a wall of text 3. **Key messages first** - Busy people appreciate efficiency; state your main point upfront ### Audience Calibration Before communicating, ask yourself: 1. **Who** are you writing to? (Technical peers, managers, stakeholders, customers) 2. **What level of detail** do they need? (High-level overview vs implementation details) 3. **What's the value** for them? (How does this affect their work/decisions?) ## Email Best Practices ### Subject Line Formula | Instead of | Try | | --- | --- | | "Project updates" | "Project X: Status Update and Next Steps" | | "Question" | "Quick question: API rate limiting approach" | | "FYI" | "FYI: Deployment scheduled for Tuesday 3pm" | ### Email Structure Template ```markdown **Subject:** [Project/Topic]: [Specific Purpose] Hi [Name], [1-2 sentences stating the key point or request upfront] **Context/Background:** - [Bullet point 1] - [Bullet point 2] **What I need from you:** - [Specific action or decision needed] - [Timeline if applicable] [Optional: Brief next steps or follow-up plan] Best, [Your name] ``` ### Common Email Types | Type | Key Elements | | --- | --- | | **Status Update** | Progress summary, blockers, next steps, timeline | | **Request** | Clear ask, context, deadline, why it matters | | **Escalation** | Issue summary, impact, attempted solutions, needed decision | | **FYI/Announcement** | What changed, who's affected, any required action | **For templates**: See `references/email-templates.md` ## Team Messaging Etiquette > **Note:** Examples use Slack terminology, but these principles apply equally to Microsoft Teams, Discord, or any team messaging platform. ### When to Use Chat vs Email | Use Chat | Use Email | | --- | --- | | Quick questions with short answers | Detailed documentation needing records | | Real-time coordination | Formal communications to stakeholders | | Informal team discussions | Messages requiring careful review | | Time-sensitive updates | Complex explanations with multiple parts | ### Team Messaging Best Practices 1. **Use threads** - Keep main channels scannable; follow-ups go in threads 2. **@mention thoughtfully** - Don't notify people unnecessarily 3. **Channel organization** - Right channel for right topic 4. **Be direct** - "Can you review my PR?" beats "Hey, are you busy?" 5. **Async-friendly** - Write messages that don't require immediate response ### The "No Hello" Principle Instead of: ```text You: Hi You: Are you there? You: Can I ask you something? [waiting...] ``` Try: ```text You: Hi Sarah - quick question about the deployment script. Getting a permission error on line 42. Have you seen this before? Here's the error: [paste error] ``` ## Technical vs Non-Technical Communication ### When to Be Technical vs Accessible | Audience | Approach | | --- | --- | | **Engineering peers** | Technical details, code examples, architecture specifics | | **Technical managers** | Balance of detail and high-level impact | | **Non-technical stakeholders** | Business impact, analogies, outcomes over implementation | | **Customers** | Plain language, what it means for them, avoid jargon | ### Three Strategies for Simplification 1. **Start with the big picture before details** - People process "why" before "how" 2. **Simplify without losing accuracy** - Use analogies; replace jargon with plain language 3. **Know when to switch** - Read the room; adjust based on questions and engagement ### Jargon Translation Examples | Technical | Plain Language | | --- | --- | | "Microservices architecture" | "Our system is split into smaller, independent pieces that can scale separately" | | "Asynchronous message processing" | "Tasks are queued and processed in the background" | | "CI/CD pipeline" | "Automated process that tests and deploys our code" | | "Database migration" | "Updating how our data is organized and stored" | **For more examples**: See `references/jargon-simplification.md` ## Writing Clarity Principles ### Active Voice Over Passive Voice Active voice is clearer, more direct, and conveys authority: | Passive (avoid) | Active (prefer) | | --- | --- | | "A bug was identified by the team" | "The team identified a bug" | | "The feature will be implemented" | "We will implement the feature" | | "Errors were found during testing" | "Testing revealed errors" | ### Eliminate Filler Words | Instead of | Use | | --- | --- | | "At this point in time" | "Now" | | "In the event that" | "If" | | "Due to the fact that" | "Because" | | "In order to" | "To" | | "I just wanted to check if" | "Can you" | ### The "So What?" Test After writing, ask: "So what? Why does this matter to the reader?" If you can't answer clearly, restructure your message to lead with the value/impact. ## Meeting Communication ### Before: Agenda Best Practices Every meeting invite should include: 1. **Clear objective** - What will be accomplished? 2. **Agenda items** - Topics to cover with time estimates 3. **Preparation required** - What should attendees bring/review? 4. **Expected outcome** - Decision needed? Information sharing? Brainstorm? ### During: Facilitation Tips - **Time-box discussions** - "Let's spend 5 minutes on this, then move on" - **Capture action items live** - Who does what by when - **Parking lot** - Note off-topic items for later ### After: Summary Format ```markdown **Meeting: [Topic] - [Date]** **Attendees:** [Names] **Key Decisions:** - [Decision 1] - [Decision 2] **Action Items:** - [ ] [Person]: [Task] - Due [Date] - [ ] [Person]: [Task] - Due [Date] **Next Steps:** - [Follow-up meeting if needed] - [Documents to share] ``` **For structures by meeting type**: See `references/meeting-structures.md` ## Quick Reference: Communication Checklist Before sending any professional communication: - [ ] **Clear purpose** - Can the recipient understand intent in 5 seconds? - [ ] **Right audience** - Is this the appropriate person/channel? - [ ] **Key message first** - Is the main point upfront? - [ ] **Scannable** - Are there bullets, headers, short paragraphs? - [ ] **Action clear** - Does the recipient know what (if anything) they need to do? - [ ] **Jargon check** - Will the audience understand all terminology? - [ ] **Tone appropriate** - Is it professional but not cold? - [ ] **Proofread** - Any typos or unclear phrasing? ## Additional Tools - `references/email-templates.md` - Ready-to-use email templates by type - `references/meeting-structures.md` - Structures for standups, retros, reviews - `references/jargon-simplification.md` - Technical-to-plain-language translations ## Companion Skills - `feedback-mastery` - For difficult conversations and feedback delivery - `/draft-email` - Generate emails using these frameworks --- **Last Updated:** 2025-12-22 ## Version History - **v1.0.0** (2025-12-26): Initial release ---