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Chapter 1 The Communication Process: An Introduction Communicating for Results, 10th edition Chapter 1 Objectives • Define communication • Identify and describe each element of the transactional model of communication • Identify how Americans view the honest and ethical standards of several professions Communicating for Results, 10th edition The Communication Process • Communication skills are important to success in business and professional settings – Despite evidence communication skills are necessary for success in the workplace, individuals continue to have problems in this area – Fortunately, communication is a skill that can be learned Communicating for Results, 10th edition Communication Defined • Latin root of communicate is communicare – To impart, share, make common • Communication is the process of people sharing thoughts, ideas, and feelings with each other in commonly understandable ways Communicating for Results, 10th edition Models of Communication • Key to success is being able to identify cause for misunderstandings and figure out how to keep them from occurring again – This is where communication models prove helpful – Allow us to pinpoint where in communication process misunderstandings occur so that we can correct them • Models have evolved from early one-way models to more accurate transactional models Communicating for Results, 10th edition One-Way Model • Communication viewed as linear process going from Person A to Person B – Shows communication occurs in presence of internal and external noise and message is carried by code traveling through a channel • No response or feedback Communicating for Results, 10th edition Circular Model • Communication is viewed as circular or interactive process – Sender communicates message to receiver who interprets it and sends reply back to sender – Includes feedback – Implies communication occurs in step-by-step process • Rarely happens – Addition of frame of reference Communicating for Results, 10th edition Transaction Model • Communication viewed as simultaneous, transactional process between senders and receivers – Simultaneous • Persons involved may be sending and receiving at same time – Transactional • Both persons responsible for creating meaning and both influence and are influenced by the other • Addition of environment and stimulus/motivation Communicating for Results, 10th edition The Basic Transaction Model Expanded • Transaction model includes the following elements: – – – – – – – – – Person A/Person B Stimulus and motivation Encoding and decoding Frames of reference Code Channel Feedback Environment Noise Communicating for Results, 10th edition Person A/Person B • Either person could be sender or receiver • During most of communication, both send and receive simultaneously Communicating for Results, 10th edition Stimulus and Motivation • Two things must happen before sender even wants to send message – Sender must be stimulated • Internal or external stimulus triggers thought, which triggers desire to communicate – Second requirement is sufficient motivation Communicating for Results, 10th edition Encoding and Decoding • Sender must decide how best to convey message to receiver – Process of putting message into form in which it will be communicated is encoding • Sender often referred to as encoder – When encoder’s message picked up, receiver tries to make sense of it – Decoding is process receiver goes through in trying to interpret exact meaning of message Communicating for Results, 10th edition Frame of Reference • Communication breakdowns occur because we use our own background and experience to encode and decode – An invisible window • Unless backgrounds and experiences of both sender and receiver are identical, messages may not be accurately encoded or decoded – Only when our frames of reference overlap can we expect real understanding Communicating for Results, 10th edition No Identical Frame of Reference • Managers and employees have different frames of reference – Frame of reference differences play role in international business confusion • Individualistic/collectivistic cultures • Low context/high context cultures Communicating for Results, 10th edition No Identical Frame of Reference • Communicator needs to remember that message that counts is the one received – As sender you need to be concerned with what your receiver thought you said • Burden of communication lies with sender – It is a good idea to check reception of your message by asking receivers to paraphrase what they think you meant Communicating for Results, 10th edition Communication and Ethics • Ethical rules: – – – – Utilitarian rule Moral rights rule Justice rule Practical rule Communicating for Results, 10th edition Communication and Ethics • As an employee, watch for following ethics traps: – – – – – Trap of necessity Trap of relative filth Trap of rationalization Trap of self-deception Trap of end justifying the means Communicating for Results, 10th edition Communication and Ethics • Practical reasons for being ethical: – If people lose faith in you, or in your company, failure is inevitable – Not only do people enjoy dealing with honest people, they also prefer working for ethical companies – Unethical behavior weighs heavily on your conscious Communicating for Results, 10th edition