Basically, we discovered that in any interaction, the person with the higher status uses I-words less (yes, less) than people who are low in status. [...] When undergraduates wrote me, their emails were littered with I, me, and my. My response, although quite friendly, was remarkably detached — hardly an I-word graced the page. And then I analyzed my emails to the dean of my college. My emails looked like an I-word salad; his emails back to me were practically I-word free.
-
Schlagwörter
2010 Atlassian Best Practice Branding Calculated Column Case Studies CEWP Collaboration Confluence CSS Design Enterprise 2.0 Film Forms Google Henry Jenkins Information Architecture Intranet Intranet 2.0 Javascript jQuery Knowledge Management List Media Studies Metadata ROI Science Fiction Search Sharepoint SharePoint 2010 Social Media Sociology ThoughtFarmer Transmedia Storytelling Tweets Twitter Usability User Experience Video Video Games Web Part Web Parts Wiki Workflow World Building -
Feeds