Communication-04 - University of San Diego Home Pages
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Transcript Communication-04 - University of San Diego Home Pages
COMMUNICATION
Focus on Listening
Definitions of
Effective Communications
Cognitive congruence
between what is
sent and what is
received: shared
meaning.
More Effective
Communication
Behavioral
produces the desired
response: achieves
its purpose
Organizational
the right people
receive the right info
in a timely manner
COMMUNICATON IS MORE
THAN JUST THE MEDIA
Model of the Communication
Process
Feedback
Sender
Thinking
Encoding
Transmitting
Receiver
Perceiving
Decoding
Understanding
The Process in Action
Thinking: Purchasing manager says to herself, “I
think we’re getting short on Liederhosen.”
Encoding: Writes an e-mail to assistant telling him
to get Liederhosen
Transmitting: Sends e-mail
Perceiving: Assistant reads e-mail three days
later.
Decoding: Checks dictionary to find out exactly
what Leiderhosen is.
Understanding: Realizes that he needs to buy
men’s traditional German leather shorts.
Examples of Barriers to
effective communication
Use
of
emotionally
charged words
or politically
incorrect
terminology
Exclusive
focus
on content
rather than
context –
ignoring:
Intonation
Emotions
Non-verbal
cues
Distrust or
credibility of
sender
Cover – Economist - October 4-10,
2003
Even More Barriers
Unclear Messages
Jargon
Inadequate Information
Semantics
Inappropriate Channel Richness
Listening:
Filtering
Selective Listening
Lack
of feedback
Increasing Message Clarity
Use
Multiple Channels
Phone
conversation followed up with an email. Team VTC followed by a personal
meeting.
Be
Complete and Specific
Provide
as much information as possible.
Message Clarity
Claim Ownership of Your Message
Be Congruent
State your point of view rather than making
generalizations (e.g. “Most people think that..’.)
Do what you say and make sure body language
and words say the same thing
Simplify Your Language
“I have changed my mind” is almost as good as: “I
am experiencing a paradigm shift”
Not-so favorable
recommendations
Extremely inept – “I most
enthusiastically
recommend this candidate
with no qualifications
whatsoever.”
Totally worthless – “I can
assure you that no person
wood be better for this
job”.
Not-so-favorable continued
industrious – “In my opinion,
you will be very fortunate to get this
person to work for you.”
Not worthy of further consideration
– “I would urge you to waste no
time in making this candidate an
offer of employment.”
Not
Match the Medium to the
Message
Channel Richness
Richest
Type of Message
Nonroutine
Ambiguous
Information Medium
> Personal chat
>Telephone
>Personal e-mail
>Memos, Letters
Leanest
Routine,
Clear
>Fliers, Web Sites
Electronic Bulletins
Increasing Communicator
Credibility/Trust
Expertise
Mutual
Trust
Reliability
Warmth and Friendliness
Personal Image / Confidence
How to Project Confidence with
Your Words
Know
exactly what you want
Commitment
to goal > better able to sell
idea
Use
first person (“I”) if not part of team
Take
credit for ideas
Minimize
appearance of uncertainty
If
unsure of opinion, make broad but
positive statements
Make
bold statements about ideas.
Effective Listening
1. Make Eye Contact
2. Exhibit Affirmative Head Nods and Appropriate Facial
Expressions
3. Avoid Distracting Actions or Gestures
4. Ask Questions
5. Paraphrase
More on Listening
6. Avoid
Interrupting the Speaker
7. Don’t talk while trying to listen
8. Judge the message after it has been
delivered
9. Listen for and respond to feelings
10. Note all cues, verbal and non-verbal
Stay away from emotionally
charged words!
Examples of Political correctness
Physically challenged
instead of physically
disabled or handicapped
Women in the Office instead
of office girl
Undocumented workers
instead of illegal aliens
Monocultural instead of
white, honkey
Politically Correct
Senior
instead of elderly or old codger
Vertically challenged instead of short
Indigenous peoples instead of Native
American or Australian
Differently-sized people instead of fatso
Visually impaired instead of blind
Temporarily insane instead of guilty
Communication Exercise
Procedure
As
individuals, fill out and score
Listening Skills survey.
When done get into groups and select
one observer
Everyone but the observer: Produce a
list (by consensus ) of gender-based
communication differences. Select a
spokesperson to present your list. (20
minutes max.)
Observers
On the sheet provided, record your
observations of the group
Stop the group after 20 minutes if it has
not finished
Using your supportive communication
skills, feedback your observations of
listening skills to each individual.
Group
members (other than the focal
person) may contribute their observations.
Focal person – listen.