Interpersonal Communication
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Transcript Interpersonal Communication
Interpersonal communication is:
communication which establishes, affirms and/or negotiates relations
between two or more people
usually perceived as always oral in form, but written forms also help
‘manage’ interpersonal relations
1.
ASSERTING
2.
RECEIVING CRITICISM
3.
RESOLVING CONFLICTS
4. APPLICATION: INTERPERSONAL SKILLS IN MEETINGS
PART I
ASSERTING
at the heart of interpersonal communication
refers to the manner by which you make explicit what you think about or
want from another person
acknowledges your rights as an individual and the rights of other people
Non-judgmental
description of behavior
• “You failed to attend
three important
company meetings I
have called for the
past five months.”
• “The awful attitude
you’ve shown by
failing to attend…”
Disclosure of asserter’s
feelings
• “I feel offended by your
failure to attend all
three important
company meetings I
have called for the past
five months.”
• Note: Culture plays a big part in
disclosure of feelings.
Clarification of concrete
and tangible effects of
behavior on asserter
• “You failed to attend
all three important
meetings I have called
recently. This has
resulted in the late
submission of the
company’s 2nd Quarter
Sales Report.”
GIVING FEEDBACK
LISTENING
MAKING REQUESTS AND GIVING DIRECTIVES
Deliver your feedback clearly and appropriately:
What is your feedback about? (Content)
How will you deliver it? (Delivery)
Describe the problem in a non-judgmental way.
Criticize the action or item, not the person.
Focus on what needs to be done.
Be specific and concrete.
Always be constructive.
Check your facts.
Do not embarrass.
If appropriate, accept partial responsibility for the problem.
Respect the other person’s right to respond.
Feedforward.
an assertion strategy
silence or a pause is a form of assertion
Two specific strategies in attentive listening:
Paraphrasing – shows your desire to understand others
Affirming – signals or implies respect for others’ ideas and turn to speak
These are important assertion strategies – you ask others to do
something for you
You are likely to need to do these in the workplace regardless of your
position and status
PART II
RECEIVING CRITICISM
TWO STRATEGIES:
Agree to the criticism
Seek for more information
Ask for specific examples.
Describe a situation and ask whether it illustrates the problem.
Paraphrase the criticism to focus on an outcome.
Ask how you can improve.
PART III
RESOLVING CONFLICTS
Act promptly.
Begin by citing areas on which you agree.
Schedule a meeting.
Listen attentively.
Focus on the problem, not the person.
Brainstorm solutions.
Formalize the solution.
Implement the solution and set a date for follow-up.
Three interpersonal functions of communication
1.
ASSERTING
2.
RECEIVING CRITICISM
3.
RESOLVING CONFLICTS
PART IV
Application:
INTERPERSONAL SKILLS IN MEETINGS
Meetings reveal who you are
Categories of meeting behaviour
◦ Task facilitating
◦ Group maintenance
◦ Self-oriented
Does culture matter in
Interpersonal communication?
In interpersonal communication,
the key term is respect:
◦ Respect for your right to speak, write or be silent
◦ Respect for others’ right to speak, write or be silent
THANK YOU!