The Journal of Business Communication articles
123
total articles
Publishes manuscripts that contribute to knowledge of business communication. Communications include composition/technical writing, information systems, organizational, and corporate dialogues.
The Journal of Business Communication back issues:
2008 | 2003 | |||
2007 | 2002 | |||
2006 | 2001 | |||
2005 | 2000 | |||
2004 | 1999 |
Recently added articles from The Journal of Business Communication:
Are investors influenced by how earnings press releases are written?(Report)
October 1, 2008 ... This two-part study begins with a rhetorical analysis of the genre of earnings press releases. Then, a quantitative analysis uses capital markets data to assess the investor impact of tone and other stylistic attributes. The genre analysis...
Performance appraisal interviews: preference organization in assessment sequences.(Report)
October 1, 2008 ... Performance appraisal interviews play a crucial role in internal communication. Most of the research on performance appraisal interviews has focused on strategic aims and interview design, but less attention has been given to the way in which...
Deception by design: figure ground and verbal illusion in direct mail.(Report)
October 1, 2008 ... Analyzing illustrative set of direct mail messages, this article explores textual strategies that invite readers to participate in their own deception. These strategies, which include personalization, imbalance, and competing frameworks,...
The learning history: analyzing an emerging genre.(genre theory)(Report)
October 1, 2008 ... Contemporary genre theory contends that genres are flexible, dynamic, and deeply, embedded within the institutional cultures that created them. In this examination of the learning history, an emerging genre of organizational research writing,...
Why do we flirt? Flirting motivations and sex differences in working and social contexts.(Report)
October 1, 2008 ... Employing worker and student samples, motivations to engage in flirtatious communication are explored. Six flirting motivations, derived from Henningsen, are considered. Differences across samples are considered using cognitive valence theory...