2.3 communication
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Transcript 2.3 communication
Communication
UNIT 2.3
IB Specification
Communication classification
Oral
Written
Visual
Non-verbal
Formal and informal
Barriers to effective communication
Learning Outcomes
Compare the ways in which communication
takes place within organization
analyse the causes of communication failure
evaluate the solutions to such failures
Barriers to Communication
Distraction and multi tasking
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xO_oEGHWS
MU
Language
Listening skill
Articulation
The Key to effective Communication
LISTENING
Speaking and listening
We take notes at about 20 wpm with a
pen/pencil, and between 40 and 100 wpm
with a keyboard
A teacher will lecture at about 100 to 120
wpm
You think at about 500 wpm
What is going on in that excess time/space
continuum?
Visual listening:
eye contact
nod
body language
Verbal Cues
Developing the conversation
“Tell me more” “What was that like for you?”
Taking it in
“I see”
Responding positively
“How interesting” “What an accomplishment”
Diverging
“On the other hand, do you think….”
Probing
“What do you mean by that?”
Expanding
“Why?”
Arguing
“What proof do you have of that?”
Involving
“What would that mean to me?”
Clarifying
“I think you are saying…..” “So the problem ….”
Empathy
“I can see how that must have been hard (frustrating) (tough)”
Body Language
Why Oral Presentation Skills are Important
Most information in this deck from presentation by Erik Palmer at Colorado Marketing Education Association, Vail, Sept 16, 2010
SPEAKING AND PRESENTING
THROUGH “PVLEGS”
Why is articulation
important?
because you simply don’t want to come
across like Miss South Carolina.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lj3iNxZ8D
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Oral Presentation Skills are
important because
Speaking is the predominant form of
communication in business
Writing is important, but being able to speak well is crucial.
People would rather do business with someone
who speaks well
Zero chance of success in marketing, finance,
hospitality, business management without
speaking skills
Knowledge alone is not power
Communicating knowledge is power
Two Parts to the
Speech/Presentation
Part 1: Building it.
Part 2: Performing it.
Building your
speech/presentation
ACOVA
Audience
Content
Organization
Visual Aids
Appearance
Audience
Build the speech using words, tone, visuals with
the following in mind:
Who?
To Whom are you presenting?
What?
What do they want?
What do they need to take away from your speech?
What is their level of understanding and knowledge?
How much do they know already?
Content
Include at least the minimum requirements for understanding what
you are saying
Important information
Interesting information
Clarify and Explain
Make connections
Provide visual and verbal cues to embed a connector
Exclude verbal virus
Fashionable words and phrases of the moment.
Ummm
Uh
Like
Obviously
OK
You know what I’m sayin’
Organization
Break through the barrier
Have opening down COLD
Grab their attention
Tell them what you are going to say
Tell them point 1
Build a signpost
Now that I have identified the target market, let
me explain how we are going to reach them
Visual Aids
Relevant
Accessible
Can everyone in the room see it?
Important
Does it add anything? Or detract?
Appearance
This would be about you, the speaker
You must be credible
Dress appropriately
Be attentive to details
Be well groomed
Hair combed, out of eyes, not a distraction
Hands and nails clean
Don’t fidget
Performing your
speech/presentation
PVLEGS
Poise
Voice
Life
Eye Contact
Gestures
Speed
Poise
Appear calm and confident
Avoid rocking, shuffling, fidgeting
Avoid a permanent, nervous, smile
Control the ONE thing you do which will
distract the audience from your speech
Everyone has a distracter
Some distracters simply ruin a presentation
Voice
Pleasant to listen to?
Not too nasal
Not whiny
Not yelling
Not high pitched
Not too soft
Enunciate
Do not mumble.
Do not blur words together.
Listeners need to hear EVERY WORD
Avoid strange vocal patterns
Such as a lift or tonal rise at the end of every phrase
Implying a question or that you are not sure
Life
Inflection
Is there any feeling or emotion?
Do you really believe what you are saying?
Can we hear the excitement
Or anger, sadness, happiness, emotion
Did you inject life so as to avoid BORING
Eye Contact
Look at people.
Look them in the eye.
Gestures
Move hands in a meaningful way
It is ok to talk using your hands
Does the body movement contribute to the
message?
Did you lean in when you want to make a point?
Ever notice what you think when someone rolls their
eyes or (worse) turns their head away while you are
talking to them?
Facial expressions matter
Speed
Pace
Don’t talk too fast.
Vary your pace.
Speak slightly quicker, then slow down on an
important point.
Pause for effect.
You cannot sound like you are reading your
speech.