Communication
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Transcript Communication
McGraw-Hill/Irwin
Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
Managing Communication Processes
Organizations: Behavior, Structure, Processes
Chapter 15
Learning Objectives
Define the term communication
Describe the major elements in the
process of communication
Discuss how nonverbal cues influence
communication effectiveness
Compare the different types of
interpersonal communication
Identify the major barriers to effect
15-3
Communication
The process by
which things
get done in
organizations
15-4
Global Virtual Team Communication
Global virtual teams are cross-functional
They operate across time, space,
organizational boundaries, and cultures
Members communicate mainly through
electronic technologies
Internationally savvy companies provide
virtual teams with intercultural training
15-5
Intercultural Communication Training
Part one of this training focuses on helping
team members understand his/her own:
Cultural beliefs
Verbal and nonverbal communication styles
Attitudes toward time, space, work ethic, etc.
Part two of this training focuses on:
Learning to work with teammates from diverse
cultures
Interpreting the communication styles and cultural
backgrounds of teammates
Responding effectively to these unique cues
15-6
The Importance of Communication
Communication is vital
Person-to-person
Nation-to-nation
In organizations
In groups
Nearly all aspects of a manager’s job
involve communication
The most important aspect of
communication is the effect it produces
15-7
The Importance of Communication
Communication does not depend on
technology; it depends on
Forces within people
Their surroundings
Nearly all aspects of a manager’s job
involve communication
The most important aspect of
communication is the effect it produces
15-8
The Communication Process
Who...
Communicator
says what...
in what way...
Message
Medium
to whom...
Receiver
Feedback
...with what effect
15-9
Classic Communication Model
••••
Communicator
••••
••••
••••
Encoding
Message &
Medium
Decoding
••••
Receiver
Feedback
••••
= Noise
15-10
Classic Communication Model
Communicator: Someone with ideas, intentions,
information, and a purpose for communicating
Encoding: Converting a message into groups
of symbols that represent ideas or concepts
Message: An idea or experience that a sender
wants to communicate
Medium: Means by which a message is sent
Decoding: The message’s target
Receiver: Converts symbols into concepts and
ideas
Noise: Factors that distort the intended message
Feedback: Receiver’s response to sender’s
message
15-11
Nonverbal Communication
Messages sent with body posture, facial
expressions, and hand/eye movements
It is as important as verbal communication
15-12
Nonverbal Messages
People cannot refrain from behaving
nonverbally
A person trying to act passively is likely to
be perceived as inexpressive, inhibited,
withdrawn, uptight
Speakers with greater vocal and facial
pleasantness and facial expressiveness
were judged by audiences to have greater
competence
Vocal inflection refers to how a message
is transmitted
15-13
Body Language
Body language is classified into five
types of expression
Emblems
Illustrators
Regulators
Adaptors
Affect displays
15-14
Communicating Across Cultures
Words
Space
Time
Behavior
15-15
Directions of Communication
Downward communication
Flows from higher to lower levels in an
organization
Includes management policies, instructions, and
official memos
Upward communication
Flows from lower to higher levels in an
organization
Includes suggestion boxes, group meetings,
grievance procedures, anonymous emails,
unauthorized websites, airing grievances in
chat rooms.
15-16
Communication and Technology
Internet and World
Wide Web
Intranet
Voicemail
Conferencing
Mobile phone,
pager, PDA
Email, Instant
Messaging
15-17
The Grapevine
An informal communication channel that cuts
across all other channels of communication
Many employees listen to the facts, opinions,
suspicions, and rumors the grapevine provides
An organization has multiple grapevine systems
Grapevines, rumors, and gossip are deeply
ingrained in organizational life
Managers must be tuned into what is being said
and must seek to keep employees informed
15-18
Rumors
There are four categories of rumors
A pipe dream or wish fulfillment expresses the
wishes and hopes of those who spread the
rumors
Bogie rumors come from employees’ fears and
anxieties and cause general uneasiness
Wedge drivers are motivated by aggression or
hatred and are the most damaging type of rumor
Home-stretchers are anticipatory rumors; they
occur after waiting for an announcement
15-19
Interpersonal Communication
Flows between individuals in face-to-face
and group situations
A primary means of managerial
communication
Three-fourths of a manager’s communications
occur in face-to-face interactions
Problems that arise when attempting to
communicate with other people are traced to
Perceptual differences
Interpersonal style differences
15-20
Interpersonal Communication Style
How an individual
prefers to relate to others
15-21
Interpersonal Communication Style
The Johari Window: four combinations of
information known by self and others
The arena: the communicator and receiver(s)
know the information necessary to have effective
communication
The blind spot: relevant information is known to
self, but not to others
The façade: superficial communication, used
when information is known to self but not others
The unknown: relevant information known by
neither party
15-22
The Johari Window
Feedback
Less
Known
Exposur
e
Less
More
Known
Unknown
More
Unknown
Arena
Blind spot
Known
by others
Facade
Unknown
Unknown
by others
Known by self
Unknown by self
15-23
Interpersonal Strategies
Interpersonal communication can be
improved with…
Exposure
Feedback
15-24
Managerial Styles
All managers
Provide information
Give commands and instructions
Make efforts to persuade and influence
How managers communicate, both as
senders and receivers, is crucial to
effective performance
15-25
Managerial Styles
Type A managers use neither exposure
nor feedback; they appear aloof and cold
and are poor communicators
Type B managers seek good relationships
with their subordinates, but are unable to
express feelings
Type C managers value their own ideas
and opinions, but not those of others
Type D, the most effective style, balances
exposure and feedback. Managers can
express their own feelings and have
others express theirs
15-26
Barriers to Effective Communication
Communication
Gap
Communicator’s Field
of Experience
Encoding
Communicator
The
Message
Receiver’s Field
of Experience
Decoding
Receiver
15-27
Barriers Created by Senders
Semantic problems
Filtering
In-group language
Status differences
Time pressures
15-28
Barriers Created by Receivers
Selective listening
Value judgments
Source credibility
15-29
Barriers Created by
Sender and/or Receiver
Frame of reference
Proxemic behavior
Communication overload
15-30
Improving Organizational
Communication
Managers striving to become better
communicators must do two things
Improve the messages they transmit
Improve their understanding of what other
people are trying to communicate
15-31
Ways to Improve Communication
To narrow the communication gap
Follow up
Ensure an optimum flow of information
Utilize feedback
Employ empathy
Use repetition
Encourage mutual trust
Use effective timing
Use simple language
Listen closely
15-32