Effective Communications
Effective Communications
Effective Communications
6. Open Communication Climate -> Transparent glass cubicles -> Results in team work. Therefore,
there is a "BE" than a "BY". Eg. Bank Manager in a glass cabin.
9. Case Studies
Approach to Case Studies:
(a) State briefly the natures of the problem (4 - 5 lines only)
(b) Possible Solutions ( each solution to be described in 2 - 4 lines only)
(c) My Solution -> Reasons to be given why you have chosen a particular solution.
It should begin with "I THINK" & not "I FEEL".
Communication is a truly remarkable process. Clearly the most complex form of behavior in which we
engage, it sharply separates us from other members of the animal kingdom. Through the use of words
and other signs and symbols for which we share meanings, we perceive, evaluate, and respond to the
physical and social world around us.
Communication is not only the basis of human thought, it is the means by which each of us develops
an individual pattern of beliefs, attitudes, and values––the personal attributes that bring us to
understand, misunderstand, accept, or reject others who are like or unlike ourselves. In that sense,
communication is the foundation of an effective democratic and multicultural society.
Language: The choice of words or language in which a sender encodes a message will influence the
quality of communication. Because language is a symbolic representation of a phenomenon, room for
interpreation and distortion of the meaning exists. In the above example, the Boss uses language (this
is the third day you've missed) that is likely to convey far more than objective information. To Terry it
conveys indifference to her medical problems. Note that each different person will interpret the same
words different. Meaning has to be given to words and many factors affect how an individual will
attribute meaning to particular words. It is important to note that no two people will attribute the exact
same meaning to the same words.
Defensiveness, distorted perceptions, guilt, project, transference, distortions from the past
Misreading of body language, tone and other non-verbal forms of communication (see section below)
Noisy transmission (unreliable messages, inconsistency)
Receiver distortion: selective hearing, ignoring non-verbal cues
Power struggles
Communicating consists of far more than merely telling people things. Until the mangers learn,
understand and become skilled in the basic process of transmitting and receiving information, they
cannot possibly lead and motivate people in the manner required to get the work done efficiently. It is
a means of bringing about the maximum production with the lowest cost by maintaining good relations
in the organization, by encouraging suggestions and implementing them, whenever feasible. In fact, it
is impossible to have human relations without communication, and vice versa.
Communication skills are critical for success in professional life. The importance of communication is
obvious in professions such as teaching, law, sales, and counseling, where talking and listening are
central to effectiveness. Many attorneys, counselors, and businesspeople major in communication
before pursuing specialized training. Even highly technical jobs such as computer programming,
accounting, and film editing require communication skills. Specialists have to be able to listen
carefully to the needs of their clients and customers. They also need to be skilled in explaining
technical ideas to people who lack their expertise. Developing communication skills is important no
matter what your career goals are.
Communication may be defined as the transfer of a message or information from one person to
another or a group of people for a common understanding. The person who sends the information is
called the sender and the person who receives the information is referred to as the receiver. A business
organization may be described as an institution made up of a group of people who work together in a
structured way for a common purpose such as production of goods or provision of services or buying
and selling of goods and services. Communication from time immemorial has played an important role
in the life of human beings. It is very interesting to discuss the importance of communication in
business organizations.
Generally communication can help in transmission of messages from one person to another, conveying
ideas, feelings and grievances of people, for entertainment et cetera. In business organizations,
communication can help inform workers about the goals of a particular organization; it may also help
management to know the problems of workers and their grievances.
Communication passes through a process in which the sender thinks of an idea, puts it into words and
sends it through a medium such as a telephone line or through the mail to the receiver. The receiver
However, there are formal channels of communication that are used in a business organization. These
include business letters, memoranda and notices. One cannot imagine how a business organization can
function properly without any form of communication. It cannot advertise its products or services to
the customers and the customers would not inform it of their tastes. Communication continues to be
the life-blood of all business organizations. Without communication, it is doubtful if any business
organization can exist and continue to survive. One can foresee that communication will, for a long
time, remain and continue to be in the future, the most important tool of management of any business
organization which wants to progress. Thus business organizations ca hardly do without
communication.
Communication has its limitations depending on the cultural environment in which a particular
organization is. For example, a multinational company cannot communicate in a foreign country in the
same way it does in its home country because of different cultures. There may be problems or
challenges in communication in a business organization. There may be physical barriers such as noise,
clarity of expression by the sender, vague objectives of the message, other factors such as fear of the
sender e.g. a strict manager sending information to a junior clerk.
In spite of its limitations, communication in the world today, can be said to be better than
communication in the world twenty (20) years ago. 20 years ago, in the developing countries,
communication was mainly through the talking drums, ‘gong-gong’ beating, snail mail and word-of-
mouth. In the developed countries it was through telephone of a low technology, snail mail, telegraph
and Internet with a fairly low technology. Today, in both the developing and developed countries,
means of communication are common. Thus, a company in Africa can send information to companies
in any part of the world in a matter of minutes by electronic mail. One can say that business
organizations are better off today than 20 years ago in terms of communications especially distant
communication.
If the barriers of communication can be taken into consideration and the appropriate channels of
communication chosen, communication can continue to be an effective life-blood of business
organizations.
Communication Process
In this stage the sender takes the decision to communicate a message i.e., he creates ides, information,
certain guidelines which have to be conveyed to someone lese. Messages are the product of an internal
reasoning or emotional process and some of an external stimulus. As Davis has said: “The motto
should be: Don’t start talking until you begin thinking”.
The sender puts the ideas and thoughts into some form of a logical and coded message. The language
of communication includes the following:
The spoken and the written word
The number, picture, drawing, symbol or diagram
The non-verbal communication like expression, gesture, posture.
An appropriate method of communication has to be selected by the sender of the message, which will
reach the receiver who will give attention to it.
Once the appropriate language has been chosen, the sender needs to select the right medium through
which the message will be transmitted. Some major factors influencing the choice of communication
medium, are:
Potential effectiveness
Need for fact
Simultaneous reception of information by recipients
Need for a record
Confidentiality
Need for instant feedback
Complexity of message
Time cost
Need for speed
Before a message can be absorbed or acted upon, it first needs to be understood. This requires that the
receiver must be skillful in reading or listening, and must be able to reason. Many messages are
ineffective because the sender fails to realize that the language he had chosen might be beyond the
ability of his receiver to comprehend.
The receiver acts or reacts to the message he has interpreted. He needs to comprehend and interpret the
message correctly at this stage.
Feedback is the check on how successful one has been in transferring his messages as originally
intended. Feedback provides a means of reassuring a sender that :
Such feedback when positive, may be signaled by a nod, smile, a written acceptance of an invitation or
a series of agreeing murmurs at the other end of a telephone line. Alternatively, it may be negative – a
stifled yawn, a restless fidgeting, an angry silence or vociferous clamor. Whether positive or negative,
if correctly interpreted, feedback is always productive to the alert and sensitive sender. It is therefore
important to be able to recognize the signals and read them correctly.
a) The Passive style: People utilizing this style tend to be easy to get along with and pleasant, but
are not often unwilling to stand up for their rights, for fear of offending others. They are very
uncomfortable expressing anger or disagreement and usually deny or suppress this feeling
should it occur. As a result, resentment often builds under the surface producing stress and
tension. They are also unable or unwilling to cope with small annoyances and frictions that
happen in most relationships. Often, as result of this, such people start avoiding close
relationships and focus only on very few “safe” relationships.
b) The Aggressive style: People who utilize this style tend to be very focused on their needs and
almost always go after what they want, but are often unconcerned about how this will affect
others. Their dominating and somewhat imposing manner tends to alienate people who, in
time, may start opposing them. Aggressive individuals are usually suspicious of others and
often feel that most people are trying to encroach upon or violate their rights. Thus, the
Aggressive style produces stress and prohibits the development of close, trusting, and caring
interpersonal relationships.
c) The Assertive style: is characterized by both fairness and strength. Assertive individuals are
able to stand up for their rights, but remain sensitive to the rights of others. They would not let
their rights be encroached upon yet will allow others their rights too. People who choose these
styles are usually relaxed and easy going, but are very honest about their feelings. This is the
best style for minimizing stress and maintaining long-standing intimate relationships.
By moving our everyday behavior closer to the assertive style of response, we will most likely
experience an increase in feelings of self-esteem and a decrease in feelings of stress.
Characteristics Allow others to choose for you. Choose for self. Appropriately Choose for others. Inappropriately
Emotionally dishonest. Indirect honest. Direct, self-respecting, honest (tactless). Direct, self-
self-denying, inhibited. In win- self-expressing, straight-forward. enhancing. Self-expressive,
lose situations you lose. If you do Convert win-lose to win-win. derogatory. Win-lose situation that
get your own way, it is indirectly. you win.
Your Own Anxious, ignored, helpless, Confident, self-respecting, goal- Righteous, superior,deprecatory,
Feelings on the manipulated. Angry at yourself, oriented, valued. Later: controlling. Later: possibly guilt.
Exchange and/or others. Accomplished.
Others' Feelings Guilty or superior. Frustrated with Valued, respected. Humiliated, defensive, resentful,
in the Exchange you. hurt.
Others' View of Lack of respect, distrust. Can be Respect, trust. Know where you Vengeful, angry, distrustful,
You in the considered a pushover. Do not stand. fearful.
Exchange know where you stand.
Outcome Others achieve their goals at your Outcome determined by above- You achieve your goal at others'
expense. Your rights are violated. board negotiation. Your and expense. Your rights upheld;
others' rights respected. others' are violated.
Underlying Belief I should never make anyone I have a responsibility to protect I have to put others down to
System uncomfortable or displeased... my own rights: I respect others protect myself.
except myself. but not necessarily their
behaviour.
In these networks, information is a commodity. It has value, can be exchanged, and is crucial to the
success of launching a project, selling a product, or marketing a service. Unfortunately, people
sometimes refuse to exchange this crucial information. They often erect barriers to shut out others in
situations they consider hostile. Most communication mishaps in organizations can be traced to these
barriers. They impede information exchange and thereby disrupt the orderly flow of activity. Because
of barriers, people fail to inform others of a meeting, a project deadline or a client need; they neglect to
compliment co-workers on a job well-done; they even lash out at others for little or no reason.
Often these barriers, resulting in a closed communication climate, cause lost business, damaged
reputations, endangered goodwill, and general unhappiness. Research shows that an open
communication climate is desirable because it enhances human relationships, which occasion
increased morale and productivity.
Communication climate can be defined as the internal environment of information exchange among
people through an organization's formal and informal networks. Communication climate is open when
information flows freely; closed when information is blocked.
In an open climate, employees feel free to express opinions, voice complaints, and offer suggestions to
their superiors. Employees talk freely among themselves about important policy decisions and their
production, personnel, or marketing concerns. Information passes without distortion upward,
downward, and horizontally throughout the organization. Research shows that this open
communication climate has at least three distinct characteristics: it is supportive, participative, and
trusting.
1. Supportive Environments:
In supportive environments, employees convey information to superiors without hesitation, confident
that superiors will readily accept it, whether good or bad, favorable or unfavorable.
2. Participative Environments:
Employees have to feel that what they say counts for something. The best suggestions for improving
production processes, for example, come from employees who work everyday on the assembly line.
Sales people know what the customers want because they are in daily contact. Customer service
3. Trusting Environments:
All parties in information exchange must tell the truth as they perceive it. They must also ensure that
information is correct. Credibility is any employee's greatest asset. A reputation for carelessness,
lying, deceit, or manipulation undercuts all future messages. The result of credibility is trust; it
underpins all human relationships. Employees have to believe their information sources. If, for
example, at weekly meetings, the staff hears contradictory information about project plans, decisions,
or salary, they will dismiss all information because they cannot confidently choose which to believe. If
one week they are told the start-up date is November 14, the next week November 20, and following
week November 7, they will understandably dismiss all the information as not credible.
Summary
Open communication climates encourage employees through supporting them, through allowing them
to participate in decision making, and, through trusting them, which assures the integrity of
information channels. Ultimately, the openness of any communication climate depends upon the
character of the participants. Openness often demands courage because the communicator operates
with lowered or eliminated defensive barriers, even when standing up to verbal assault. Because open
communicators have to articulate their positions in meetings, public arenas, and in print, they must be
secure individuals, confident in their own positions, ability, and authority. Yet, while open
communication climate may make formidable personal demands, such openness ultimately rewards
both the individual and the organization in providing an environment where people thrive and
enterprise flourishes.
Verbal communication can be defined as communicating your thoughts through words. Such thoughts
may be ideas, opinions, directions, dissatisfaction, objections, your emotions and pleasures.
For example, whenever you conduct a meeting, have a conversation over the phone, talk to a friend, or
any other form of conversation that you perform with others using words. In this article you will learn
how to acquire better verbal communication.
Verbal communication can be defined as communicating your thoughts through words. Such thoughts
may be ideas, opinions, directions, dissatisfaction, objections, your emotions and pleasures
Clear spoken or verbal communication skills are essential for many people. Being able to speak
clearly, briefly and with impact have a major impact on the credibility of managers and other
professionals and the organisations they work for. Whether delivering formal presentations or involved
in ad hoc meetings and discussions, the requirement to present ideas clearly and succinctly, is always
present.
The basic requirement is to be able to talk and be understood. However, beyond that we have to
consider the underlying purpose of oral communication. Very often we talk too much and with too
little structure... or, in the case of many formal presentations with too much structure! Whatever you
are doing, the way you communicate sets the emotional tone and builds relationships that very often
determines your success in the workplace.
1. Interpersonal Speaking
2. Hierarchical Communication
3. Etiquette
4. Public Speaking
5. Speak spontaneously and coherently.
6. Clarify, reframe and respond to questions.
7. Cope with all the questions that put you on the spot!
8. Anticipate challenges.
9. Convey your ideas with clarity, brevity and impact - even under pressure.
Nonverbal communication can be best defined as the procedure of communicating with a person or
party without using any form of speech to grab an audience attention or to exploit a message. Non
verbal communication is often used to make an expression of a thought or thoughts and make your
message more appealing and interesting to whom you are speaking.
1. Appearance
2. Body language
3. Sounds
2. Avoid Info Overload: PowerPoint expert Cliff Atkinson, author of Beyond Bullet Points says,
"When you overload your audience, you shut down the dialogue that's an important part of
decision-making." He points to some important research by educational psychologists. "When you
remove interesting but irrelevant words and pictures from a screen, you can increase the audience's
ability to remember the information by 189% and the ability to apply the information by 109%,"
recommends Atkinson.
3. Practice Delivery: A knockout business presentation is so captivating it makes you forget about
the speaker and become absorbed in the talk. Practice your delivery over and over until you remove
the distractions including nervous tics and uncomfortable pauses. Pay particular attention to your
body language. Is it non-existent or overly excessive? Good presenters work the stage in a natural
manner.
4. Forget Comedy: Business presenters will flirt with the temptation to deliver the stand up humor
of Chris Rock. Remember your audience didn't come to laugh; this is a business presentation. Leave
your jokes at home. It's ok to throw in a few natural off the cuff laughs but don't overdo it.
5. Pick Powerful Props: You don't need a box full of props like the watermelon-smashing comic,
Gallagher. A few simple props to demonstrate a point can be memorable in the minds of your target
audience. Management guru, Tom Peters, uses a cooking timer to show how quickly factory
expansion is occurring in China.
6. Minimize You: "Frankly, your audience doesn't care as much about your company history, as
they do about whether you can help them solve the specific problems they face. Write a script for
7. Speak the Language: A knockout business presentation doesn't leave people wondering what
you said. It might be tempting to throw in a few big words but are you alienating your audience?
Always explain terms and acronyms. The number of smart executives who aren't up on the latest
terminology would surprise you.
8. Simple Slides: Beware of the PowerPoint presentation. Many corporate brains will turn off at the
sight of yet another PowerPoint presentation. Over 400 million desktops currently have the
PowerPoint application. If you want your business to stand out, don't be like everyone else. Use
slides in your knockout presentation to highlight and emphasize key points. Don't rely on your slide
projector to run the show.
It all comes down to what your audience walks away with in the end. Did you deliver another
boring business presentation? Or did you persuade or motivate everyone to action?
"Why does he talk like that? I wish he would get straight to the point instead of beating around the
bush that way."
"Doesn't he know that it's rude to keep people waiting like this? He's an hour late!"
We often hear remarks like the above made by people around us. In fact, we may even have made
some of these remarks ourselves. Sometimes these remarks are justifiable; at other times they may not
be so. But what actually triggers such remarks? Usually we make such remarks about other people
when they display behaviors that we consider inappropriate or unacceptable in our culture. But what is
deemed acceptable in our culture may be considered strange or totally inappropriate in other cultures.
So when the target of the above remarks are people who come from cultures different from ours, there
may actually be no justification at all for making such remarks because the behaviors displayed may
be perfectly acceptable in their cultures.
With more and more companies going global in today's changing business environment, it is not at all
uncommon to walk into an office and to find ourselves looking at a multinational multicultural
workforce. In fact, this is becoming more and more the norm these days. Gone are the days when
developing intercultural communication skills was relevant only to business executives who had to
cross national borders for overseas assignments. Today, you don't even have to leave your own
country to find yourself in face-to-face contact with people whose cultures are markedly different from
Culture:
Before we delve further into the subject of intercultural communication, let us first take a look at what
we mean by culture. Iris Varner and Linda Beamer, in Intercultural communication in the global
workplace, define culture as "the coherent, learned, shared view a group of people has about life's
concerns that ranks what is important, instills attitudes about what things are appropriate, and
prescribes behavior, given that some things have more significance than others."
In living our lives and communicating with each other our perception of reality is less important than
reality itself. Some would argue that there IS no ultimate reality, only the illusion of our perceptions.
Our perceptions are influenced by:
1. Physical elements -- what information your eye or ear can actually take in, how your brain
processes it.
2. Environmental elements -- what information is out there to receive, its context.
3. Learned elements -- culture, personality, and habit: what filters we use to select what we take
in and how we react to it.
Let's say that you're walking down the street, and you see a lady walking toward you. As she passes
you, you say, "Nice dress!"
Let's say that the lady responds to your comment by giving you a dirty look. That look is your
feedback. The feedback allows you to know that the lady received your compliment as sarcasm. If you
meant the compliment sincerely, you now have an opportunity to clarify your message, so that she
understands what you truly intended to say. Of course, if you meant the compliment to be taken as
sarcasm, the look she gave you as feedback should let you know that your message was received
Pooja Kharwar 21 MFM – Sem – III (2007-10)
correctly.
Without feedback, the person who speaks or otherwise sends a message can never know whether or
not that message is actually understood.
"the quality or process of entering fully, through imagination, into another's feelings or motives." In
the fullest sense, it implies putting yourself into the other person's shoes, or even getting into his or her
skin, so that you really understand and feel his pain, fear - or more positively -his joys.
The opposite of empathy - in communication terms - is invalidation. This is what happens when you
express a feeling oridea and the person you are speaking to contradicts or rejects it. And when the
emotion happens to be anxiety, sorrow, fear or the like, the rejection can be very painful.
Interestingly, the pain of rejection can be even more profound when the other party bears no ill will
towards you. Indeed, the person you have confided in may sincerely believe she is offering you
encouragement. But she fails miserably, because there is no empathy.
1. Cover Sheet
Title of Project
Your Name
Course Number, Course Title, Type of Report
Date
2. Executive Summary
Forward (example)
o Problem Statement
State the organizational problem: the conflicts at issue in the organization.
Describe the organizational context: names of persons and departments involved
in the issue
State the technical problem: the technical investigation needed to resolve the
organizational issue
o Assignment Statement
State the assignment, specifically what the writer of the report was asked to do.
State the technical questions, task, and perhaps the hypothesis or solution.
o Rhetorical Purpose
State what the instrumental purpose of the report is.
Summary (example)
o Objective and Background
State the Objective of the Project or Hypothesis
Describe the methodology or experimental procedure
Summarize the results
o Conclusions
Concisely state the conclusions reached as a result of the project
o Recommendations
State your recommendations for organizational action
o Implications for the organization
Describe subsequent actions that should be taken
Describe the costs and benefits
3. Table of Contents
The Problem
o Give an explanation of the organizational problem that gave rise to the investigation
being presented in the report
The Objective
o Write a statement of the assignment that forms the basis of this report.
The Method of the Report
o Forecast the structure of this report. Your letting the reader know what to expect.
5. Background
Previous Work
o Explain what has already been done about the problem
Provide a literature review for material that is relevant to this problem
Describe previous efforts and other ongoing investigations
Describe how the approach being taken in the investigation under consideration
fits into the existing literature and efforts of others
o Specifications
Provide an explanation of detailed instructions or specifications that serve as the
basis for your work
6. Experimental Procedures
Materials
o Describe the materials and test specimens used in the investigation
o Describe the experimental setup used in the investigation
Methods
o Provide a step by step description of the procedures followed in the experimental
investigation
o Summarize the data analysis performed
o Summarize the raw experimental results
Figures and tables should be used to supplement discussion, not in stead of discussion. Large
volumes of data should be summarized in an appendix.
8. Discussion of Results
Problem Restated
- A restatement of the report's objective and of the problem that gave rise to the report
Summary
Recommendations
10. References
11. Appendices
Lower case items are not headings. Headings are in capital letters. Lettered items are not headings
either, but are simply descriptive labels for the content of the report. The Introduction,
Apparatus/Results, and Discussion sections make up the main body of the report.
Introduction
a. Purpose/ overview
b. Why important to field
c. Objective(s) for this particular experiment
Description of Apparatus/Results
a. Apparatus: understanding + description
b. Schematic of apparatus
c. Procedure followed for obtaining results
d. Important governing equations
e. Description of results
f. Tables and graphs presenting results
g. Uncertainties
h. Relevant comparisons with theory
Discussion
a. Brief review of results, if necessary
b. Discussion (trends in results, comparison with theory, answers to discussion questions in
Report Requirements section)
c. Conclusions supported by data
Appendices
a. Sample calculations
b. Uncertainty analysis
c. Data acquisition program with a list of channel assignments
d. Original data
An executive summary is a brief overview of a report designed to give readers a quick preview of its
contents. Its purpose is to consolidate the principal points of a document in one place. After reading
the summary, your audience should understand the main points you are making and your evidence for
those points without having to read every part of your report in full. That's why they are called
executive summaries — the audience is usually someone who makes funding, personnel, or policy
decisions and needs information quickly and efficiently.
An Executive summary summarizes the content of the different sections of a report which is situated
before the main content of a report. The executive summary allows the reader of a report to scan the
most import elements of a full length report. It provides the main contents of a report in a nutshell and
is the first part of a report that a reader will read.