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HOW USEFUL ARE THE OFFICIAL CORRESPONDENCES IN THE PUBLIC SERVICE ppt

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Official correspondence are ways the Government communicates through letters,circulars memos .these correspondence should be clear concise ,compelling consistency correct and complete

Official correspondence are ways the Government communicates through letters,circulars memos .these correspondence should be clear concise ,compelling consistency correct and complete

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HOW USEFUL ARE THE OFFICIAL CORRESPONDENCES IN THE PUBLIC SERVICE ppt

  1. 1. OFFICIAL CORRESPONDENCE IN THE PUBLIC SERVICE ABRAHAM MARANGU LECTURER 1
  2. 2. ` Introduction • It is the process by which the management functions of planning, organizing, leading, directing and controlling are accomplished • Information has to be communicated to managers so that they have a basis for planning • Plans have to be communicated to others • Most managerial work is spent on the activity of communication 2
  3. 3. What is correspondence Sharing of information in the discharge of official functions through official documents which include but not limited to: • Letters—ordinary and circular • Internal submissions—concept papers, instructions, proposals • Reports—routine and special or investigative • Memos –ordinary and cabinet memos • Minutes—ordinary meetings and special meetings 3
  4. 4. Official letters Letters(ordinary or circular letters) • These written mediums of communication are used internally when disseminating information of highly formal nature such as promotion, recognition, discipline, commendations etc • Addressed to specific person(s) • Communicate with external publics 4
  5. 5. • Deals with Specific subject • Complete address and logo • Referenced • sent by post or courier • content too formal • Originate from superiors 5
  6. 6. • We should sign all letters • We do not have authority to sign over our own designation except for the accounting officer • We sign on behalf of the HOD or accounting officer • If we have been delegated to sign over our own designation we should type our own name and designation clearly • Letters are normally addressed to the accounting officer or HOD and should be marked for the attention of a particular officer who is expected to deal with the matter 6
  7. 7. Rules • Reply to all correspondent within a reasonable time– some within a day. • When we refer a matter to a senior officer through written communication, it should be stated clearly with all facts to aid in effective decision making • All letters should have folio numbers 7
  8. 8. • When confidential correspondence is sent through the fax, the authorized officer should be asked to stand by to receive the correspondence personally • When corresponding through via a fax, faxed documents which are for clarification, acknowledgements or inquiries need not be followed by true copies unless specifically requested by recipient 8
  9. 9. –Documents of contract terms with financial or legal implications should bear original signatures such include purchase orders, agreements, credit notes, debit notes and certificates 9
  10. 10. • If an officer needs to write a letter to a superior who is not the immediate supervisor, this should be through their immediate supervisor. Such letters contain information on serious issues which cannot be communicated through a memo. 10
  11. 11. • Use letters when communicating with other organizations and not a memo. • Seek authority from your superior if you do not have the authority to do so. • You cannot write letters to your colleagues who you do not supervise but you can write a memo. • Apply good protocol when you communicate in the public service 11
  12. 12. Circular letters • Cabinet decisions are communicated to ministries by Permanent Secretary, Head of Public Service and Secretary to the Cabinet through a circular to all accounting officers with copies to other relevant officers • Information at this level is in form of policies or general direction on specific issues affecting the public or public service 12
  13. 13. • Other circular letters are usually produced by the HOPS or Accounting Officers to provide policy direction or clarify issues which might not be clear for example circular letters from MOSPS or Treasury 13
  14. 14. Memos Ordinary Memos and Cabinet Memos • There is nothing like internal memo. The word memo in itself means internal communication • We use memos for purposes of sharing information when we are not able to interact face-to-face. • Therefore memos do not communicate information of a highly confidential nature or formal nature 14
  15. 15. Memos • This is precisely why initially memos used to be called “loose minutes” • Some memos do not have folio numbers • We do not use memos to communicate with external publics whether as individuals or organizations 15
  16. 16. Memos • General information • Updates or progress, meeting, seek authority or approval • Communication to many • Recipient does not acknowledge receipt 16
  17. 17. challenges in production of correspondence • Structure • Obtaining information • The writing process itself • Mechanics/principles of writing – take longer to internalize---punctuation marks, paragraphing, constructions(length of sentences and ambiguity, clarity), tenses, prepositions etc • Audience analysis 17
  18. 18. Tips on effective correspondence A complex communication activity which requires a lot care. There are several reasons why writing is complex communication activity: • Principles guiding writing take longer time to internalize. • Prepare documents that meet all the standards of communication in order to reflect a good image of the Government 18
  19. 19. • Completeness • Conciseness • Consistency • Compelling • Clarity • Courtesy • Correct—structurally • construction 19
  20. 20. Conclusion As we correspond using various mediums lets bear in mind best practices as spelt out in standards of business communication. However we should change some outdated practices that we continue to embrace since they have no place in modernizing public service 20

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