Jakeel, a salesperson at Sensations Inc., attended a regional sales meeting where he was more of a listener than a participant. During the meeting, he tried to jot down as many of the discussion details as possible in his notebook. Later, when his colleagues were talking about what was discussed in the meeting, Jakeel could not share his viewpoints. This scenario illustrates that Jakeel most likely has a bad listening habit of O a. faking attention O b.over-listening O c.casual listening O d. stereotyping Electronic meetings provide a rich nonverbal context but have logistical issues of schedules and distance. O a. True b. False Making spontaneous judgments about others based on their speech delivery is known as storming a. True O O b. False Which of the following is true of business writing? O a. It should be elaborate and detailed. O b. It requires providing sufficient "entry points" into a message to enable skimming O c. It uses a formal style complete with multisyllabic words and long sentences O d. It is contrary to technical writing. Malcolm is a professional writer. He has published many bestsellers. One of his friends expressed interest in knowing more about his writing process, so Malcolm showed his friend a few of his first drafts. The friend observed that the drafts were nothing like the final book, and the writing seemed amateurish compared with Malcolm's published work. In this scenario, which of the following is a likely reason for the difference in Malcolm's first drafts and the final books? a. Malcolm would have spent time making sure the first drafts are perfect O b. Malcolm would have revised his work many times before he was satisfied with it. O c. Writers only create first drafts, other people produce all subsequent drafts. O d. The publishing company would have changed Malcolm's books entirely before publishing them