Module II - Effective Communication Skills
Module II - Effective Communication Skills
Module II - Effective Communication Skills
We also ask learners to refrain from the following during this session:
● We greet the advertiser in a friendly, upbeat manner, using his/her name and treat them like
a VIP
● We use a professional tone that exudes confidence -- we are not robotic in our
communication -- and avoid banned phrases and slang
● We understand and act upon the needs, wants, savviness, and emotions of our advertisers
● We endeavour to reduce effort for the advertiser by asking for information that was only
Communication ●
strictly necessary in order to address the issue.
We demonstrate genuine empathy when our advertisers face challenging situations
Skills ● We structure our written correspondence effectively to ensure ease of understanding: using
proper spelling, grammar, and syntax [Email/Chat]; correct usage of spoken language
[Phone]
● We exude ownership in communicating to the client about the issue
● We instill confidence by reassuring the advertiser of the steps being taken to investigate
their issues thoroughly
What are our advertisers looking for?
➔ Premium treatment and a natural, human interaction
◆ Offer an upbeat greeting, personalized and friendly service
◆ Display professionalism, without sounding robotic in tone
➔ Genuine empathy
◆ Demonstrate empathy through actions as well as words
◆ Steer clear of empathy statements that sound canned or scripted
◆ In situations where it’s difficult to fully understand or empathize with the advertiser’s unique situation, show that you are
listening and making a genuine attempt to understand
BEING
CONCISE, YET
THOROUGH
Structure is key, regardless of support channel
To consistently provide a clear and simple solution, top performers often have a
simple pattern of how they communicate their solutions to their advertisers:
Keep an eye out for wordy constructions in your writing and see if you can replace them with more concise words or phrases:
Wordy Concise
I came to the realization that I realized that
She is of the opinion that She thinks that
Concerning the matter of About
During the course of During
In the event that If
In the process of During, while
Regardless of the fact that Although
Due to the fact that Because
In all cases Always
At that point in time Then
Prior to Before
Writing concise emails that don’t sound rude
➔ Use exclamation points (within reason)
◆ But not too many; consider the advertiser’s mood and the overall situation before using exclamation points. If the mood is grim, using
exclamation points can make you seem unempathetic.
◆ If the mood is positive, using an exclamation point at the beginning during your greeting, or at the end during your send-off, can help
ensure that a direct, straightforward email doesn’t sound curt
➔ Proofread and Check: Have you written to express, rather than impress?
Inform/Impress
Express
● You’ll need to...
● Are you able to ...
● You’ll have to...
● I’d suggest...
● You must...
● I’d recommend...
● You should…
● Could you please…
● Send me...
● It’s necessary to…
● Please share
Written communication: Avoid Cliches
➔ Check if you have used cliches?
● The main way to avoid clichés is first to recognize them Last but not least Last
and then to create shorter, fresher equivalents. Pushing the envelope Approaching the limit
Up in the air Unknown/undecided
● Ask yourself if there is one word that means the same
thing as the cliché.
● If there isn’t, can you use two or three words to state the
idea your own way?
Words and phrases that sound natural and friendly
This section applies to...
phone, chat, & email
● Hi/Hello/Hey- A friendly greeting (Note: Hey can be used in follow up emails only
if the client’s tone is friendly)
● It sounds/looks/seems like
● It’s on my radar - Something you have on your task list and you’re keeping a
watch on.
● “I’d be happy to help you with this. Let’s see what we can do to get
Display a can-do this sorted out for you.”
attitude ● “Happy to work with you to get this resolved.”
● “I took a thorough look into your account and also checked a few of
Show your work our internal tools…”
● After exploring all of the options for this with our Payments team…”
How to gain a advertiser’s confidence
➔ Use wording choices that put the advertiser at ease and illustrate urgency
◆ “I’ll be happy to take it from here”
◆ “Thanks for the clarification; I’ll start work on this immediately.”
◆ “I’ve diagnosed the issue. Here’s what I found and how to fix it:...”
➔ Explain the steps you took (or are still taking) to reach a resolution
◆ Tell the advertiser how you diagnosed the issue
● Where did you go in the account?
● Which externally-safe tools did you use?
● Did you discuss the issue with a specialist?
➔ Alert the advertiser of other urgent account issues if you spot them
◆ Urgent Payments issues
◆ Potential policy issues/disapproved ads
Demonstrating confidence when you aren’t sure
Bad (minimize this) – demonstrating behaviors that diminish the advertiser’s trust in
you
● Using a lot of broken sentences or stammering
● Using words like "should," "probably," or "maybe" when more definite language is possible
● Stating “I don’t know” without further qualification, or without presenting a clear plan for moving
forward
● Providing a partial resolution, hoping it will suffice/the advertiser won’t notice
“I’ll definitely reiterate to the team responsible for this how important it
Pushback on bugs is to get this resolved as quickly as possible. In the meantime, let’s
“Isn’t there anything else you can do to get this resolved more quickly? take a look to see if there’s any kind of workaround available while this
Typically these issues are solved for us immediately.” is being worked on.”
Delivering bad news (handling service “no’s”)
One quick way to satisfy a advertiser’s logical and emotional needs is using a
Cushion Statement following this structure:
Scenario 3: Client states that they have been doing FB Ads for 10 years
and they have never had trouble with reports until we switched to this
new UI.
Thank You
Questions?