Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Communication Skills OVERVIEW • • • • • • What is Communication? The Process of Human Communication Some truths about Communication The role of adaptation Communication channels in Business Challenges & Barriers to Communication What is Communication? “There may be no single thing more important in our efforts to achieve meaningful work and fulfilling relationships than to learn and practice the art of communication.” --Max De Pree, Author The Art of Leadership The Communication Process Phase 1: Sender Has an Idea Channel And Medium Phase 2: Sender Encodes Idea Phase 3: Sender Transmits Message Phase 6: Receiver Sends Feedback Phase 5: Receiver Decodes Message Six-Phase Process Situation Phase 4: Receiver Gets Message --medium-- A Model of the Communication Process Kelly Justin Some Basic Truths about Communication • Meanings sent are not always received. • Meaning is in the mind. • The symbols of communication are imperfect. Adaptation Usage of Business Communication Channels Speaking 30% Reading 16% Listening 45% Receiving Sending Writing 9% Communication Challenges in Today’s Workplace Advances in Technology Globalization Workforce Diversity Team-Based Organizations Communication Barriers • Perception and language • Restrictive environments • Distractions • Deceptive tactics • Information overload • Types of Communication • Internal and External Communication • Communication Channels Internal Communication Official Structure The Grapevine Formal Chain of Command Informal Networking Up, Down, Across Formal Power Lines Unofficial Lines of Power External Communication Formal Contacts Informal Contacts Marketing Employees Public Relations Managers Communication Climate Overall Structure Corporate Culture Level of Feedback Flat More Open High Tall Less Open Low • Basic communication • Verbal & Non Verbal Communication • Body language Intent Less Structured Harder to Classify More Spontaneous Less Control More Structured Easier to Study Conscious Purpose More Control Verbal Verbal Structure Nonverbal Nonverbal Basic Communication Verbal and Non verbal Communication Verbal: Communication with words Non verbal: Communication without words Areas of NV Communication • Kinesics • Proxemics • Time language • Paralanguage • Physical context Kinesics: body’s physical movements • Face and Eyes • Gestures • Posture • Appearance A person can stop speaking, but he cannot stop communicating with his body NON-VERBAL symbols are four times more effective than VERBAL ones Body movements include: Facial expression Eye movement Body movements include : Hands Feet Whole body The meaning of gestures. Examples Doubt: we raise an eyebrow Scratching one’s nose: puzzled Masking • Method by which we control our body so that it will not send out messages that our mind wants to hide Posture • Posture is not only a way of punctuating a conversation, but it is also the way individuals relate with each other when they are in a group. Recommendations • The greeting: a good starting point (show openness) • Don’t blink constantly • Try to keep a direct look and establish eye contact with the people you are talking to Recommendations (Continued) • Maintain an appropriate position and avoid constant abrupt movements • Control the movements of your hands and keep them visible • Do not allow any object to come between you and your audience Recommendations (Continued) • Do not cross your arms over your chest • Do not cover your mouth with your hand while you are speaking • Maintain a relaxed posture Proxemics: how and what we arrange in personal space • Intimate: physical contact to 18 inches • Personal: 18 inches to 4 feet • Social: 4 to 12 feet • Public: 12 feet to range of eyesight and hearing Time language • The meaning and value we give to time • Time was equated with money/time and management is important • Culture specific • Everyone culture has its own time language Paralanguage: how we say things • Is speech fast, slow, high pitched, deep, smooth, disjointed? • All convey different meanings • I practice good business communication • I practice good business communication • I practice good business communication • I practice good business communication • I practice good business communication Physical context: Refers to colour and layout/design • Colours are associated with moods e.g. Black & grey convey negative feelings, blue & yellow positive feelings • Layout/design of surroundings communicate something e.g. carpeting, arrangement of desks/chairs • THE SEVEN C’s of EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION CLARITY • Apply the K.I.S.S formula.(Keep it short and simple) • Choose short ,familiar, conversational words. • Construct effective sentences and paragraphs. • Avoid unfamiliar words ,abbreviations, Slang or Jargon. Clarity and Short Sentences Writing short sentences. (16-18 words/sentence = mid level). You can write short sentences in two ways: 1 by limiting content, 2 by using words economically. Cut surplus words. • You are hereby instructed to send all daily reports directly to this office as promptly as possible. Send all reports to this office promptly. • Your attention is directed to paragraph 3, which summarizes the findings of this study. Paragraph 3 summarizes the findings of this study. Use Short, Familiar words Long Unfamiliar Word • Abbreviate • Accomplish • Approximately • Ascertain • Commence • Considerable • Determine • Detrimental Short, Familiar Words Shorten Do About Find out Begin Much Decide Harmful COMPLETENESS • Answer all questions asked: Who? What? Where? When? Why? How? • Give something extra, when desirable. CONCISENESS • Shorten or omit wordy expressions: Use single word substitutes; avoid redundancy • Include only relevant statements. • Avoid unnecessary repetition, long sentences, relative pronouns, expletives and passive verbs. CORRECTNESS • Use the right level of Language. • Include only accurate facts, words and figures. • Maintain acceptable writing mechanics. CONCRETENESS • Use specific facts and figures. • Put action in your verbs. • Choose vivid image-building words. Prefer the concrete to the abstract. We have found that this technique is successful. Our research shows that 87 percent of those using this technique are successful Your department may hire some new employees. Your department may hire three new stock clerks. Prefer strong verbs to verbs camouflaged as nouns. Camouflaged Verb Strong Verb make a classification make a computation conduct an exploration provide information engage in negotiation make an observation provide representation classify compute explore inform negotiate observe represent Consider the strength and vigor of words. • complete failure fiasco • untruth lie • put an end to destroy • upraise boost CONSIDERATION • Focus on “you” instead of “ I “ and “WE”. • Emphasize positive, pleasant facts. • Avoid negative words. Accenting positive language Negative: Your misunderstanding of your policy prompts your accusation that we are at fault. Positive: Section 3 of your policy makes us responsible only when we service the equipment. Negative: We must refuse your request to use our equipment. Positive: As we are a state office, our equipment can be used for government purposes only. Emphasizing the you viewpoint. We: Our policy requires that you pay by the 10th of the month in order to earn the discount. You: You can earn the discount by paying by the 10th of the month. We: We are offering a special discount to all our loyal customers. You: As a loyal customer, you will receive a special discount. COURTESY • Be sincerely tactful. • Omit expressions that might irritate, hurt or belittle. • Apologize good-naturedly. • Use phrases and words that positive tone • Avoid discriminatory language • Types of biases • Avoiding discriminatory language • Examples Types of biases • Gender • Culture/ethnicity • Race • Disability • Age Reword to eliminate discriminatory words: Sexist Nonsexist If a customer pays promptly, he is placed on our preferred list. A customer who pays promptly is placed on our preferred list. A physician should treat his patients with respect. A physician should treat patients with respect. Culture/ethnicity For an Afghan, Ahmed Shah can speak Urdu well. Nowadays, many Mexicans and Indians are working in US companies. Ahmed Shah can speak Urdu well. Nowadays, US companies have multi-cultural workforce. Race Two well groomed black women applied for the jobs. Lee is very tall for a Chinese. Two well groomed women applied for the jobs. Lee is very tall. Disability & Age Inappropriate Appropriate Crippled Physically challenged Disabled Handicapped Blind Visually impaired Our 59 year-old manager Our Manager • Written Communication • Letters and memos • Letter formats LETTERS FULL BLOCK LETTER FORMAT MODIFIED BLOCK FORMAT SUBJECT: ABCD…………X Y Z SEMIBLOCK LETTER FORMAT Conclusion THANK YOU ALL