Chapter # 2 - 1Copyright © 2013 Pearson Canada Inc. Chapter # 7- 1Copyright © 2013 Pearson Canada...

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Chapter # 2 - 1 Copyright © 2013 Pearson Canada Inc. Chapter # 7- 1 Copyright © 2013 Pearson Canada Inc. 7

Transcript of Chapter # 2 - 1Copyright © 2013 Pearson Canada Inc. Chapter # 7- 1Copyright © 2013 Pearson Canada...

Page 1: Chapter # 2 - 1Copyright © 2013 Pearson Canada Inc. Chapter # 7- 1Copyright © 2013 Pearson Canada Inc. 7.

Chapter #

2 - 1Copyright © 2013 Pearson Canada Inc.

Chapter #

7- 1Copyright © 2013 Pearson Canada Inc.

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Chapter Outline• The Communication Process– Choosing a Channel

• Barriers to Effective Communication– Filtering– Selective Perception– Defensiveness– Emotions– Information Overload– Language– Silence– Nonverbal Communication– Stress

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Chapter Outline• Organizational Communication– Direction of Communication– Small-Group Networks– The Grapevine– Electronic Communications

• Managing Information– Dealing with Information Overload– Being Always on Call– Information Security

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1. How does communication work?

2. What are the barriers to communication?

3. How does communication flow in organizations?

4. How is information managed?

Learning Outcomes

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The Communication Process

• People spend nearly 70 percent of their waking hours communicating—writing, reading, speaking, listening.

• Communication is a foundation for many things that happen among groups and within the workplace – from motivating, to providing information, to controlling behaviour, to expressing emotion.

• Good communication skills are very important to your career success.

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Communication Terms

• Communication– The transfer and understanding of a message

between two or more people.

• Sender – Establishes a message, encodes the message, and

chooses the channel to send it.

• Receiver – Decodes the message and provides feedback to

the sender.

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Communication Channels

• Formal channels– Traditionally follow the authority chain within the

organization– Transmit messages related to the professional

activities of members

• Informal channels– Personal or social messages which are

spontaneous and emerge as a response to individual choices

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Communication Terms

• Encoding– Converting a message to symbolic form.

• Decoding– Interpreting a sender’s message.

• Message– What is communicated.

• Channel– The medium through which a message travels.

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Communication Terms

• Noise– Communication barriers that distort the clarity of

the message

• Feedback – Checks how successful we have been in

transferring our messages as originally intended. – Has an understanding been achieved?

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Exhibit 7-1 The Communication Process Model

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Choosing Channels

• Communication apprehension – Undue tension and anxiety about oral

communication, written communication, or both.

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Choosing Channels

• Channels differ in their capacity to convey information.

• Rich channels have the ability to:

– Handle multiple cues simultaneously.

– Facilitate rapid feedback.

– Be very personal.

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Exhibit 7-2 – Information Richness of Communication Channels

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Barriers to Effective Communication

• Filtering– The sender manipulates information so that it will

be seen more favourably by the receiver.

• Selective Perception– The receivers selectively sees and hears based on

their needs, motivations, experience, background, and other personal characteristics.

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Barriers to Effective Communication• Defensiveness– When individuals interpret a message as threatening, they

often respond in ways that retard effective communication. • verbally attacking others, making sarcastic remarks, being overly

judgmental and questioning others’ motives.

• Emotions– Individuals may interpret the same message differently when

you are angry or distraught than when you are happy• Depression will most likely hinder effective communication

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Barriers to Effective Communication

• Information Overload– Occurs when the information we have to work with

exceeds our processing capacity.• With emails, phone calls, faxes, meetings, and the need to

keep current in one’s field, more employees are suffering from too much information.

• Language– Words mean different things to different people.• Age and context are the two biggest factors that influence

such differences

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Barriers to Effective Communication• Silence• Defined as an absence of speech or noise.• Not necessarily inaction—can convey:– Thinking or contemplating a response to a question. – Anxiety about speaking. – Agreement, dissent, frustration, or anger.

• Individuals should be aware of what silence might mean in any communication.– Can be problematic and is common in the workplace– Employees who are silent about important issues may

also experience psychological stress.

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Barriers to Effective Communication• Nonverbal Communication– Includes body movements, facial expressions,

and the physical distance between sender and receiver.• Two important messages body language conveys

– Extent to which an individual likes another and is interested in his or her views

– Relative perceived status between a sender and receiver (i.e. how emotionally close they are to each other)

– Proxemics• The study of physical space in interpersonal

relationships.

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Communicating Under Stress

• Speak clearly.

• Be aware of the nonverbal part of communicating.

• Think carefully about how you state things.

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Organizational Communication – Direction of Communication

• Downward– Communication that flows from one level of a group to

a lower level.• Managers to employees

• Upward– Communication that flows to a higher level of a group.

• Employees to manager• Becoming increasingly difficult

• Lateral– Communication among members of the same work

group, or individuals at the same level.

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Small- Group Networks• Connections by which information flow.

– Formal Networks• Task-related communications that follow the

authority chain, and are typically vertical

– The Grapevine – Informal Networks• Communications that flow along social and

relational lines

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Formal Networks

• Three common formal small-group networks:–Chain–Wheel–All-channel

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Exhibit 7-3 Three Common Small-Group Networks and Their Effectiveness

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The Grapevine• 75 percent of employees hear about matters first

through rumours (the grapevine).

• The grapevine has three main characteristics:

– Not controlled by management.– Most employees perceive it as being more believable and

reliable than formal communication.– Largely used to serve the self-interests of those people within

it.

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Electronic Communications

• Email

• Instant Messaging and Text Messaging

• Social Networks

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Electronic Communications: Significant Limitations of E-mail

• Misinterpreting the message.

• Communicating negative messages.

• Time-consuming nature of email.

• E-mail emotions.

• Privacy concerns.

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Time Saving Strategies to Keep Email Under Control

• Do not check email in the morning.

• Check email in batches.

• Unsubscribe.

• Stop sending email.

• Declare email bankruptcy.

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Exhibit 7-4 Showing Emotions in Emails

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Instant Messaging (IM) & Text Messaging (TM)

• Instant Messaging (IM) and Text Messaging (TM)– Rapidly gaining popularity in business.– Fast and inexpensive way for managers to stay in touch with

employees and peers with each other.– IM is better for short messages that will be quickly deleted.

• Despite exponential growth in usage, IM and TM are not likely to replace email.– Email is better for long messages that need to be saved. – There are additional security fears in using IM/TM

• More easily intercepted

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Social Networking

• Nowhere has communication been more transformed than in social networking.

• Social media platforms– Facebook– LinkedIn– XING– ZoomInfo

• All professional websites that allow users to set up lists of contacts and do everything from casually posting updates to hosting chat rooms

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Blogs

• Web log – Website about a single person or company that

are usually updated daily.

• Most blogs are written by individuals, but many organizations and organizational leaders have blogs that speak for the organization

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Managing Information• Dealing with information overload– Limiting information overload

• Being always on call– Balancing the need for constant communication

with their own personal need for breaks from work

• Information security– Companies monitor employee Internet use and

email records, and some even use video surveillance and record phone conversations

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Managing Information• Cultural Barriers to Communication

• Sources of barriers:– Semantics –Word connotations– Tone differences–Differences in tolerance for conflict and

methods for resolving conflicts

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Managing Information• Cultural Context• Cultures differ in the importance of the

context in influencing the meaning that individuals take from what is actually said or written vs. who the other person is..– High-context cultures • Cultures that rely heavily on nonverbal and subtle

situational cues in communication.

– Low-context cultures• Cultures that rely heavily on words to convey meaning

in communication.

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Exhibit 7-5 High- vs. Low-Context Cultures

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A Cultural Guide• Assume differences until similarity is proven.

• Emphasize description rather than interpretation or evaluation.

• Practise empathy.

• Treat your interpretations as a working hypothesis.

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Summary and Implications

1. How does communication work?• Communication works through choosing the correct channel, being

an effective listener, and using feedback.

2. What are the barriers to communication?• Errors arise from filtering, selective perception, defensiveness,

information overload, and language.

3. How does communication flow in organizations?• Communication can flow vertically and laterally, and by formal and

informal channels in organizations.

4. How is information managed?• Reducing the amount of time spent on emails, social networking,

text messaging, and instant messaging by connecting to technology less frequently is one way of minimizing interruptions and being able to stay productive.

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OB at Work: For Review1. Describe the communication process and identify its key

components. Give an example of how this process operates with both oral and written messages.

2. Contrast encoding and decoding.

3. What does the expression “sometimes the real message in a communication is buried in the silence” mean?

4. What is nonverbal communication? Does it aid or hinder verbal communication?

5. Identify three common formal small-group networks and give the advantages of each.

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OB at Work: For Review

6. What conditions stimulate the emergence of rumours?

7. What are the advantages and disadvantage of email? Of instant messaging?

6. What are the key challenges in managing information?

7. List four specific problems related to language difficulties in cross-cultural communication.

8. Contrast high- and low-context cultures. What do the differences mean for communication?

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OB at Work: For Critical Thinking

1. “Ineffective communication is the fault of the sender.” Do you agree or disagree? Discuss

2. What can you do to improve the likelihood that your message will be received and understood as you intended?

3. How might managers use the grapevine for their benefit?4. Using the concept of channel richness, give examples of

messages best conveyed by email, by face-to-face communication, and on the company bulletin board.

5. “Most people are poor listeners.” Do you agree or disagree? Defend your position.

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Breakout Group Exercises• Form small groups to discuss the following

topics:

1. What differences have you observed in the ways that men and women communicate?

2. How do you know when a person is listening to you? When someone is ignoring you?

3. Describe a situation in which you ignored someone. What impact did it have on that person’s subsequent communication behaviours?

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Effective Listening

If you want to improve your listening skills, look to these behaviours as guides

1. Make eye contact.2. Exhibit affirmative head nods and appropriate facial

expressions.3. Avoid distracting actions or gestures.4. Ask questions.5. Paraphrase.6. Avoid interrupting the speaker.7. Don’t over-talk.8. Make smooth transitions between the roles of speaker and

listener.