Business communication
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Transcript Business communication
BUSINESS
COMMUNICATION
What is communication?
“Communication” comes from the Latin word
“communis” which means “common”
When individuals communicate, they try to
establish a common understanding between
or among themselves.
What is communication?
(Cont.)
The process of speaking, writing etc., by
which people exchange information or
express their thoughts and feelings
The way people express their thoughts and
feelings or share information
A letter, message, or telephone call
Source: LONGMAN
Dictionary of Contemporary English
Business Communication
Definition: the process of establishing a
common understanding between or among
people within a business environment
Goals of Business Communication
1) Receiver Understanding
2) Receiver Response
3) Favorable Relationships
4) Organizational Goodwill
What is goodwill?
The kind feelings towards or between people
and a willingness to be helpful
The value that company has because it has a
good relationship with its customers
Resource: LONGMAN
Dictionary of Contemporary English
2 Main Communication Forms
1. Verbal Communication: communication
uses the words
2. Nonverbal Communication: does not use
words
Verbal Communication
Face-to-face or phone conversations
Meetings
E-mail and voice-mail messages
Letters and memos
Reports
Nonverbal Communication
Pictures
Company logos
Gestures and body language
Why communication is
important?
In your workplace, you’ll communicate by
reading information; listening to instructions;
asking questions; solving problem with other
workers in teams
Communication ability consistently ranks
first among the qualities that employers look
for in college graduates!
3 Basic Purposes of Business
Communication
•
•
•
To inform
To request or persuade
To build goodwill
5 Basic Criteria for
Business Writing:
o Is clear: readers gets the meaning the writer
o
o
o
o
intended easily
Is complete: all of reader’s questions are
answered
Is correct: all information in message is
accurate
Saves reader’s time: style, organization,
visual impact help reader to read, understand
Builds goodwill: message represents a
positive image of writer and organization
COMMUNICATING ACROSS
CULTURES
Multicultural Business
Communication
Definition1: the transmission of information
among business people of different cultures,
whether within national boundaries or across
national boundaries
Definition2: Communication with many
cultures; multinational communication is
interaction across national boundaries
Diversity
Gender
Race and ethnicity
Regional and national origin
Social class
Religion
Age
Sexual orientation (the fact of being
Heterosexual or Homosexual)
Physical ability
FYI
Diversity increases in the global marketplace
Business Week reports that two-thirds of all
industries either operate globally or are in the
process of doing so
How does diversity relate to
business communication?
Culture
Our understanding of acceptable actions and
beliefs
High-context culture or Lowcontext culture
High-context or Low-context
High-context cultures: indirectness,
politeness, ambiguity
(Examples: Japan, United Arab Emirates)
Low-context cultures: directness,
confrontation, clarity
(Examples: German, Canada, the United
States)
High-context culture VS.
Low-context culture
Source: ChangingMinds.org, n.d.
Opinion
Way of Life
Punctuality
Contacts
Anger
Party
3 Meals a Day
Queue When Waiting
HSBC’s Advertisement
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ALWwK7
Vz4gY
Cross cultural communication
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BrJTf97Ev
8o
Is this true?
Source: http://ikarusblog.blogspot.com/2010/04/international-business-reading.html
Gesture Around the World
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fa_GCK-
Czqs
Body language, the power is
in the palm of your hands:
Allan Pease at TEDx
Macquarie University
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZZZ7k8c
MA-4
How to kill your body
language Frankenstein and
inspire the villagers: Scott
Rouse at TEDxNashville
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ro2dgzX
KJfQ
Stereotypes Intercultural
Communication
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LQQtoySt
Me4
The Successful Intercultural
Communicator is:
Aware of the values, beliefs, and practices in
other cultures.
Sensitive to differences among individuals
within a culture.
Aware that his/her preferred values and
behaviors are influenced by culture and are
not necessarily “right.”
Sensitive to verbal and nonverbal behavior.
Flexible and open to change