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Page Title: Shipboard Public Affairs Office Management
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The Telephone
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Journalist 1 & C - Advanced manual for Journalism and other reporting practices
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Manning

.  Be  sure  your  telephone  conversations  always demonstrate courtesy, tact and good judgment. TAKING  MESSAGES When the person called is unavailable, offer to take a  message.  The  memorandum  of  call  (figure  1-16) contains  several  blocks  of  information  to  assist  you  in recording  a  message.  USE  THEM!  Gather  as  much information as possible so the person who was called does not have to reconstruct the entire conversation with you. Also, do not be lazy and scribble the message so that  it  can  only  be  deciphered  by  a  handwriting specialist. Even if a message is not given, make a note of the call. As soon as you hang up, place your note where the person for whom it is intended is sure to receive it. ANSWERING/FACSIMILE  MACHINES Only  a  few  years  ago,  answering  and  facsimile  (fax) machines were considered luxury items. Today, you would be hard pressed to find an excuse not to have them in  your  office. Figure  1-16.—Memorandum  of  Call. The  answering  machine  offers  many  benefits. During  nonworking  hours  or  when  training  is  in progress, the answering machine can be activated and you will not miss a call. Some state-of-the-art models can even give you the date and time of the incoming call. Fax  machines  allow  you  to  send  or  receive  a document from an office across the street or across an ocean. If your office has more than one telephone line, you can connect the answering machine to one and the fax  machine  to  the  other,  providing  total  office  coverage after  hours.  Fax  machines  come  in  handy  when disseminating  a  short  fuse  news  release  to  the  media  or when sending releases and correspondence to other public  affairs  offices. BUDGETING  TIME There  are  some  days  when  the  telephone  will seemingly “ring off the hook” and you spend half a day taking  care  of  business  on  the  telephone.  This  is permissible if your projects do not suffer in the process. Do not be a slave to your telephone. If you have several projects on the front burner and the telephone continually rings, the priority rests with your office work.  Make  sure  messages  are  taken returned at the earliest possible moment. SHIPBOARD PUBLIC AFFAIRS MANAGEMENT and calls are OFFICE Learning  Objective:  Outline  the  proper  arrangement  of a  shipboard  public  affairs  office  in  terms  of  office arrangement,  manning,  facilitating  special  projects and  financial  planning. Managing   a   shipboard   public   affairs   office incorporates all of the topics you have read about so far in this chapter, but it also includes a few other unique aspects  you  should  realize.  Manning  concerns  and special projects will be discussed in this section. TYPICAL OFFICE ARRANGEMENT A large public affairs office afloat normally includes a  full-time  (1650)  or  collateral  duty  PAO,  a  senior journalist  (JO1,  JOC,  JOCS  or  JOCM)  and  a  staff comprised  of  a  mixture  of  JO2s,  JO3s  and  JOSNs. Manning configurations vary from ship to ship. The staff handles more than just public affairs work. As the senior journalist and overall manager, you must make assignments to cover the closed circuit television 1-41

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