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    ORGANISATIONAL COMMUNICATION

    INTRODUCTION

    Organizational Communication can be defined as a process

    through which organizations are created and in turn create and shape

    events. The process can be understood as a combination of process,

    people, message, meaning and purpose.

    Functions of Organizational Communication:

    It is the means by which a manager ensures co-operation of

    subordinates.

    It is the exchange of meanings among members of an organization.

    It is the glue which binds the elements of an organization

    together.

    It builds the very structure of an organization i.e. who

    communicates with whom about what.

    Can misunderstanding of a few words literally mean the difference

    between life and death? They can in airlines business. A number of

    aviation disasters have been largely attributed to problems in

    communication. There are other fields also in which there are examples toillustrate how miscommunication can have deadly consequences. Good

    communication is essential to any groups or organizations effectiveness.

    T.Y.B.M.S1

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    ORGANISATIONAL COMMUNICATION

    Research indicates that poor communication is probably the most

    frequently cited source of interpersonal conflict. Because individuals

    spend nearly 70 percent of their working hours communicating-writing,

    reading, speaking, listening-it seems reasonable to conclude that one of

    the most inhibiting forces to successful group performance is a lack of

    effective communication.

    No group can exist without communication: the transference of

    meaning among its members. It is only through transmitting meaning

    from one person to another that information and ideas can be conveyed.

    Communication, however, is more than merely imparting meaning. It

    must also be understood. In a group in which one member speaks only

    German and the others do not know German, the individual speaking

    German will not be fully understood. Therefore, communication must

    include both the transference and the understanding of meaning.

    An idea, no matter how great, is useless until it is transmitted and

    understood by others. Perfect communication, if there were such a thing,

    would exist when a thought or an idea was transmitted so that the mental

    picture perceived by the receiver was exactly the same as that envisioned

    by the sender. Although elementary in theory, perfect communication isnever achieved in practice, due to unavoidable reasons.

    T.Y.B.M.S2

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    ORGANISATIONAL COMMUNICATION

    2.1 What is Communication?

    The term communication has been derived from the Latin

    word communis which means common. It was Aristotle who, for

    the first time, brought about a systematic study of the

    communication process. According to him, there are three essential

    elements in a communication system, namely, the speaker, the

    speech, and the audience. Communication strictly stands for sharingof ideas in common. The word communication, however, has

    many and varied meanings. Popularly speaking, it refers to the

    various means of transmitting information from individual to

    individual, individual to a group of individuals or from one place to

    another. It is a transmission of messages, ideas, methods, skills, and

    thoughts between two or more persons. It is a mutual exchange offacts, thoughts, opinions or emotions by the use of symbols, words,

    pictures, figures, graphs and so on.

    Communication is the chain of understanding which

    permeates an organization from top to bottom, from bottom to top,

    and from side to side, and which moves the organization ahead

    towards its stated objectives. It is the cohesive force which holds the

    group together.

    Vardaman and Halterman opine: Communication is the flow

    of material, information, perception and understanding between

    various parts and members of an organization.

    T.Y.B.M.S3

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    ORGANISATIONAL COMMUNICATION

    In the words of Allen, Communication is the transfer of

    meaning from one person to another. Mitchell goes a step further

    and observes, Communication involves more than just having the

    right information the information should be believed, weighed

    correctly, reach the right decision-makers and result in the

    appropriate action. Rogers and Rogers have reiterated this point of

    view. They opine Communication is a process by which an idea is

    transferred from a source to the receiver with the intention of

    changing behaviour.. ..Communication is made with the intention of

    achieving results/change in knowledge, attitude and overt

    behaviour.

    Communication is a process in which senders and receivers of

    messages interact in a given social context. Interpersonal

    communication refers to the exchange of information andtransmission of meaning between two people. Organizational

    communication is the subject that deals with the exchange of

    information and transmission of meaning throughout the

    organizational hierarchy.

    Since the leader or the manager accomplishes organizationalobjectives through people, it is essential to communicate what the

    leader or the manager wants people to accomplish, how to

    accomplish, where to accomplish and more important, why to

    accomplish. To communicate the organizational philosophy,

    objectives, procedures, and practices to all employees is not easy,

    because communication is a very complex phenomenon.

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    ORGANISATIONAL COMMUNICATION

    In communication, the people must understand what they are

    trying to communicate; they must be willing and able to understand

    them; they must accept their communication or message or

    information or goals. Thus, all social phenomena are a function of

    communication.

    2.2 FUNCTIONS OF COMMUNICATION:

    Communication serves four major functions within a group or

    organization: Control, motivation, emotional expression and information.

    Communication acts to controlmember behaviour in several ways.

    Organizations have authority hierarchies and formal guidelines that

    employees are required to follow. When employees, for instance are

    required to first communicate any job related grievance to their

    immediate boss, to follow their job description, or to comply with

    company policies, communication is performing a control function. But

    informal communication also controls behaviour. When work groups

    tease or harass a member who produces too much (and makes the rest of

    the group look bad), they are informally communicating with, and

    controlling, the members behaviour

    T.Y.B.M.S5

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    Communication fosters motivation by clarifying to employees

    what is to be done, how well they are doing, and what can be done to

    improve performance if its supbar. The formation of specific goals,

    feedback on progress toward the goals, and reinforcement of desired

    behaviour all stimulate motivation and require communication.

    For many employees, their work group is a primary source for

    social interaction. The communication that takes place within the group is

    a fundamental mechanism by which members show their frustrations and

    feelings of satisfaction. Communication, therefore, provides a release for

    the emotional expression of feelings and for fulfillment of social needs.

    The final function that communication performs relates to its role

    in facilitating decision making. It provides the information that

    individuals and groups need to make decisions by transmitting the data toidentify and evaluate alternative choices.

    No one of these functions should be seen as being more important

    than the others. For groups to perform effectively, they need to maintain

    some form of control over members, stimulate members to perform,

    provide a means for emotional expression, and make decision choices.Almost every communication interaction that takes place in a group or

    organization performs one or more of these four functions.

    T.Y.B.M.S6

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    2.3 THE COMMUNICATION PROCESS:

    Before communication can take place, a purpose, expressed as a

    message to be conveyed, is needed. It passes between a source (sender)

    and a receiver. The message is encoded (converted to a symbolic form)

    and passed by way of some medium (channel) to the receiver, who

    retranslates (decodes) the message initiated by the sender. The result is a

    transference of meaning from one person to another.

    The exhibit above depicts this communication process. This

    model is made up of seven parts: (1) the communication source, (2)

    encoding, (3) the message, (4) the channel, (5) decoding, (6) the receiver,

    and (7) feedback.

    The source initiates a message by encoding a thought. The

    message is the actual physical product from the source encoding. When

    we speak, the speech is the message. When we write, the writing is the

    message. When we gesture, the movements of our arms and the

    expression on our face are the message. The channel is the medium

    through which the message travels. It is selected by the source, who must

    determine whether to use a formal or informal channel. Formal channelsare established by the organization and transmit message that are related

    to the professional activities of the members. They traditionally follow

    the authority chain within the organization. Other forms of messages,

    such as personal or social, follow the informal channels in the

    organization. The receiveris the object to whom the message is directed.

    T.Y.B.M.S7

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    ORGANISATIONAL COMMUNICATION

    But before the message can be received, the symbols in it must be

    translated into a form that can be understood by the receiver. This step is

    the decodingof the message. The final link in the communication process

    is a feedback loop. Feedback is the check on how successful we have

    been in transferring our messages as originally intended. It determines

    whether understanding has achieved.

    2.4 DIRECTION OF COMMUNICATION:

    Communication can flow vertically and laterally. The vertical

    dimension can be further divided into downward and upward directions.

    Downward

    Communication that flows from one level of a group or

    organization to a lower level is a downward communication. When we

    think of managers communicating with employees, the downward pattern

    is the one we are usually thinking of. Its used by group leaders and

    managers to assign goals, provide job instructions, inform employees of

    policies and procedures, point out problems that need attention, and offer

    feedback about performance. But downward communication doesnt have

    to be oral or face-to-face contact. When management sends letters to theemployees homes to advise them of the organizations new sick leave

    policy, it is using downward communication. So is an e-mail from a team

    leader to the members of her team, reminding them of an upcoming

    deadline.

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    ORGANISATIONAL COMMUNICATION

    Upward

    Upward communication flows to a higher level in the group or

    organization. Its used to provide feedback to higher-ups, inform them of

    progress toward goals, and relay current problems. Upward

    communication keeps managers aware of how employees feel about their

    jobs, co-workers, and the organization in general. Managers also rely on

    upward communication for ideas on how things can be improved.

    Some organizational examples of upward communication are

    performance reports prepared by lower management for review by middle

    and top management, suggestion boxes, employee attitude surveys,

    grievance procedures, superior-subordinate discussions, and informal

    gripe sessions in which employees have the opportunity to identify and

    discuss problems with their boss or representatives of higher

    management. For example, FedEx prides itself on its computerized

    upward communication program. All its employees annually completeclimate surveys and reviews of management. This program was cited as a

    key human resources strength by the Malcolm Baldrige National Quality

    Award examiners when FedEx won the honor.

    Lateral

    When communication takes place among members of the samework group, among members of work groups at the same level, among

    managers at the same level, or among any horizontally equivalent

    personnel, we describe it as lateral communications.

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    ORGANISATIONAL COMMUNICATION

    Why would there be a need for horizontal communications if a

    group or organizations vertical communications are effective? The

    answer is that horizontal communications are often necessary to save

    time and facilitate co-ordination. In some cases, these lateral relationships

    are formally sanctioned. More often, they are informally created to short-

    circuit the vertical hierarchy and expedite action. So lateral

    communications can, from managements viewpoint, be good or bad.

    Since strict adherence to the formal vertical structure for all

    communications can impede the efficient and accurate transfer of

    information, lateral communications can be beneficial. In such cases, they

    occur with the knowledge and support of superiors.

    But they can create dysfunctional conflicts when the formal

    vertical channels are breached, when members go above or around their

    superiors to get things done, or when bosses find out that actions have

    been taken or decisions made without their knowledge.

    Diagonal Communication

    This occurs when communication occurs between workers in a

    different section of the organisation and where one of the workers

    involved is on a higher level in the organisation. For example in a bank

    diagonal communication will occur when a department manager in headoffice converses with a cashier in a branch of the bank based on the high

    street.

    T.Y.B.M.S10

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    ORGANISATIONAL COMMUNICATION

    2.5 INTERPERSONAL COMMUNICATION:

    How do group members transfer meaning between and among

    each other?There are three basic methods. People basically rely on oral,

    written and non-verbal communication.

    Oral Communication

    The chief means of conveying messages is oral communication.

    Speeches, formal one-on-one and group discussions, and the informal

    mill or grapevine are popular forms of oral communication.

    The advantages of oral communication are speed and feedback. A

    verbal message can be conveyed and a response received in a minimal

    amount of time. If the receiver is unsure of the message, rapid feedback

    allows for early detection by the sender and, hence, allows for earlycorrection.

    The major disadvantage of oral communication surfaces in

    organizations or whenever the message has to be passed through a

    number of people. The more people a message must pass through, the

    greater the potential distortion. For example, if you ever played the gametelephone at a party, you know the problem. Each person interprets the

    message in his or her own way. The messages content, when it reaches

    its destination, is very often different from that of the original. In an

    organization, where decisions and other communiqus are verbally

    passed up and down the authority hierarchy, there are considerable

    opportunities for messages to become distorted.

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    Written Communication.

    Written communications include memos, letters, electronic mail, fax

    transmissions, organizational periodicals, notices placed on bulletin

    boards, or any other device that is transmitted via written words or

    symbols.

    Why would a sender choose to use written communications?They

    are tangible and verifiable. Typically, both the sender and the receiver

    have a record of the communication. The message can be stored for aindefinite period. If there are questions concerning the content of the

    message, it is physically available for later reference. This feature is

    particularly important for complex and lengthy communications. The

    marketing plan for a new product, for instance, is likely to contain a

    number of tasks spread out over several months. By putting it in writing,

    those who have to initiate the plan can readily refer to it over the life ofthe plan. A final benefit of written communication comes from the

    process itself. You are usually more careful with the written word than

    the oral word. You are forced to think more thoroughly about what you

    want to convey in a written message than in a spoken one. Thus, written

    communications are more likely to be well thought out, logical and clear.

    Of course, written messages have their drawbacks. They are time

    consuming. You could convey far more information to a college

    instructor in a one-hour oral exam than in a one-hour written exam. In

    fact, you could probably say the same thing in 10 to 15 minutes that it

    would take you an hour to write. So, although writing may be more

    precise, it also consumes a great deal of time.

    T.Y.B.M.S12

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    The other major disadvantage is feedback, or lack of it. Oral

    communication allows the receiver to respond rapidly to what he thinks

    he hears. Written communication, however, does not have a built-in

    feedback mechanism. The result is that the mailing of a memo is no

    assurance it has been received, there is no guarantee the recipient will

    interpret it as the sender intended. The latter point is also relevant in oral

    communiqus, except it is easy in such cases merely to ask the receiver to

    summarize what you have said. An accurate summary presents feedback

    evidence that the message has been received and understood.

    Employees Handbook: As business grows in size, management often

    turns to the use of an employee handbook as a communication tool to

    inform employees on issues such as company history and products,

    human resource policies, employee compensation and benefits, training

    assistance, health services, safety, security, employee responsibilities, and

    work standards. Handbooks are also useful to supervisors andadministrators for ensuring consistent implementation and enforcement of

    company policies.

    These are intended to help in the induction of newcomers and to

    provide all the employees with a clear-cut understanding not only of the

    general policies of the management but also of the nature of the business,its sources of supplies, its customers, its products and the range of

    benefits and services available to its employees. Many organizations

    publish illustrated handbooks, depicting cartoons, charts and

    photographs.

    T.Y.B.M.S13

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    House Magazines and Newspapers: Some organizations maintain one

    or more employee magazines or journals. These are meant to keep

    employees well informed of the development in the business and to

    acquaint them with the personalities and activities of the organisation. It

    can explain the policies of the management in easily understood terms.

    House magazines contain news, and personal and social items. There may

    be references to parties, marriages, births, retirements, honours and

    awards.

    Financial Reports: Such reports describe the essential facts concerning

    the conduct of business, its expenses and profits, its income and

    distribution of financial standing. of the organisation and create

    understanding between the management and its employees.

    Bulletin Boards: Usually, big organizations keep a bulletin board for 50

    to 100 employees in attractive colours, types and formats. These boards

    contain a wide range of material such as someones choice of cartoons

    from newspapers and magazines, pin-up photographs, events in the lives

    of present or former employees and other items of common interest.

    Audio-Visual Aids: Sound films, movies, slides, tapes may be played

    back to the workers. Such audio-visual aids have an obvious advantage of

    describing a companys range of operations and products, in illustrating

    how financial and other decisions are made, or in explaining work rules.

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    Notice Boards: Notices are often pasted o the factory walls or gates or

    placed in glass covered notice boards, and these are hung at appropriate

    places in the premises of an organisation, near the canteens or factory

    gates. These notices usually depict abstracts as desired under the various

    statutes as well as notices of the various institutions in the establishment

    such as the sports club.

    Suggestion System: The suggestion system is designed to enlist the co-

    operation of subordinates in effecting improvements and in eliminating

    waste and to provide an avenue for a working communication with the

    management. Rewards are offered for suggestions which results in greater

    productive efficiency. In some organizations, suggestion boxes are

    located at convenient places throughout the plant.

    Communication with Public and Government: Organisations educatethe public about their various activities through advertising, campaigns,

    meetings and conferences. Organisations also establish and organize

    special groups to communicate with the important segments of

    government.

    Proper communication plays an important role in a largeorganization, and there has to be a proper balance between the oral and

    written forms of communication. It need hardly be said that the choice of

    any method depends upon the purpose to be accomplished and the

    likelihood of its success. Quite often, it is better to use more than one

    method to convey the same information so that one can reinforce the

    other.

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    Nonverbal Communication

    Every time we verbally give a message to someone, we also impart

    a nonverbal message. In some instances, the nonverbal component may

    stand alone. For example, in a singles bar, a glance, a stare, a frown, and

    a provocative body movement all convey meaning. As such, no

    discussion of communication would be complete without consideration of

    nonverbal communication-which includes body movements, the

    intonations or emphasis we give to words, facial expressions, and the

    physical distance between the sender and receiver.

    It can be argued that every body movementhas a meaning and no

    movement is accidental. For example, through body language we say,

    Help me, Im lonely; Take me, Im available; Leave me alone, Im

    depressed. And rarely do we send our messages consciously. We act out

    our state of being with nonverbal body language. We lift one eyebrow fordisbelief. We rub our nose for puzzlement. We clasp our arms to isolate

    ourselves or to protect ourselves. We shrug our shoulders for

    indifference, wink one eye for intimacy, tap our fingers for impatience

    and slap our forehead for forgetfulness.

    The two most important messages that body language conveys are

    (1) The extent to which an individual likes another and is interested in his

    or her views and

    (2) The relative perceived status between a sender and receiver. For

    instance, we are more likely to position ourselves closer to people we like

    and touch them more often.

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    Similarly, if you feel that youre higher status than another, youre

    more likely to display body movements-such as crossed legs or a

    slouched seating position-that reflect a casual and relaxed manner.

    Body language adds to, and often complicates, verbal

    communication. A body position or movement does not by itself have a

    precise or universal meaning, but when it is linked with spoken language,

    it gives fuller meaning to a senders message.

    If you read the verbatim minutes of a meeting, you wouldnt grasp

    the impact of what was said in the same way you would if you had been

    there or saw the meeting on video. Why? There are no records of

    nonverbal communication. The emphasis given to words or phrases is

    missing.

    Facial expressions also convey meaning. A snarling face sayssomething different from a smile. Facial expressions, along with

    intonations, can show arrogance, aggressiveness, fear, shyness, and other

    characteristics that would never be communicated if you read a transcript

    of what had been said.

    The way individuals space themselves in terms of physicaldistance also has meaning. What is considered proper spacing is largely

    dependent on cultural norms. For example, what is considered a

    businesslike distance in some European countries would be viewed as

    intimate in many parts of North America. If someone stands closer to you

    than is considered appropriate, it may indicate aggressiveness or sexual

    interest; if farther away than usual, it may mean disinterest or displeasure

    with what is being said.

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    Its important for the receiver to be alert to these nonverbal aspects

    of communication. You should look for nonverbal cues as well as listen

    to the literal meaning of senders words. You should particularly be

    aware of contradictions between the messages. Your boss may say she is

    free to talk to you about a pressing budget problem, but you may see

    nonverbal signals suggesting that the is not the time to discuss the subject

    regardless of what is being said, an individual who frequently glances at

    her wristwatch is giving the massage that she would prefer to terminate

    the conversation. We misinform others when we express one message

    verbally, such as trust, but nonverbally communicate a contradictory

    message that reads, I dont have confidence in you.

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    3.1 COMMUNICATION TYPES:

    Internal/Organizational Communication

    This is communication that takes place within (or across) an

    organization. In addition to the usual face to face, telephone, fax or mail;

    modern organizations may use technology to communicate internally.

    Technology may be used for e-mails or a linked internal communication

    system such as the intranet which is an internet system designed solely

    for use by those working for the organization.

    External communications

    Conversely external communication is communication between the

    organization and those outside the organization. Modern organizations

    may design technological systems so that they can communicate with

    customers and undertake e-Commerce. Alternatively they communicate

    with other businesses through the internet or similar systems and

    undertake e-Business.

    Functions of Internal and External Communications;

    Technology has rapidly expanded the types of internal and external

    communication available to organizations. The diagram illustrates the

    vast array of internal and external communication available. Combined

    together internal and external types of communications allow various

    sectors of the local, national and international community to interact,

    liaise and conduct business.

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    3.2 OBJECTIVES OF COMMUNICATION

    Communication is not an end in itself. There is no use of

    communicating just for the sake of communicating. It is a means and

    a very effective means for the solution of managerial problems and for

    attainment of managerial objectives. Since managers work through

    others, all their acts, policies, rules, orders and procedures must pass

    through some sort of communication channel. The purposes of

    communication are:

    1. To develop information and understanding which are necessary

    for group effort?

    2. To provide an attitude which is necessary for motivation, co-

    operation and job satisfaction?

    3. To discourage the spread of misinformation, rumours, gossip,

    and to release the emotional tensions of workers

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    4. To prepare workers for a change by giving them the necessary

    information in advance.

    5. To encourage ideas, suggestions from subordinates for an

    improvement in the product and work conditions, for a

    reduction in time or cost involved and for the avoidance of the

    waste of raw material.

    6. To improve labour-management relations by keeping both in

    contact with each other.

    7. To satisfy the basic human needs like recognition, self-

    importance and sense of participation.

    8. To serve auxiliary functions such as entertainment and the

    maintenance of social relations among human beings.

    The purpose of communication is to establish asocial

    environment that supports effective interaction and to ensure that the

    workforce has the skills to share information and co-ordinate their

    achievements efficiently

    3.3 IMPORTANCE OF COMMUNICATION

    Organizations cannot exist without communication. If there is

    no communication, employees cannot know what their respective

    associates are doing, management cannot receive information on

    inputs, and management cannot give instructions. Co-ordination of

    work is impossible, and the organisation will collapse for lack of it.

    Co-operation also becomes impossible, because people cannot

    communicate their needs and feelings to others. Every act of

    communication influences the organisation in some way or the other.

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    As such effective communication tends to encourage better

    performance, improves job satisfaction, creates proper understanding,

    and develops feeling of involvement among the people.

    Chester Bernard (1938) has considered communication to be the

    very first function of a manager and has viewed it as the shaping

    force which links people and purposes together in any co-operative

    system. In the practice of management, Peter Drucker (1954) has

    observed that the managers main instrument for operating his affairs

    is information. The management process has widely been discussed as

    one which embraces the functions of planning, organizing, leading

    and controlling, which are intimately involved with and dependant on,

    communication. Organisational structure is definitely tied to the

    communication systems. Communication is the key to effective

    teamwork, for both are based on the common fundamentals of

    information, understanding, consultation and participation.

    Communication is an essential skill at every level of organisational

    functioning and for organisations of all types, whether social,

    governmental, or commercial.

    According to Miner and Miner there Ware four basic types of

    communication network: (a) the regulative network ensures security,

    conformity to plans and the achievement of productivity through the

    communication of policy statements, procedures, and rules; (b) the

    innovative network is concerned with problem-solving and change

    through such techniques as suggestion systems and meetings; (c) the

    integrative network is directly related to consideration of employee

    morale and organisational maintenance; and (d) the informative

    network relates to employees effectiveness and productivity througha direct dissemination of information and training programmes.

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    3.4 RULES FOR COMMUNICATION:

    A few basic rules should be followed in planning for and

    carrying out communications of all kinds, written and oral, regardless

    of form or format.

    Clarity: To be effective, communications must be understood,

    and to be understood, they must be clear.

    Brevity : It makes both written and oral communications easier

    to understand. Only one idea should be used in a sentence.

    Simplicity: Short, simple words, phrases, and sentences should

    be used. Every word should count. Extra words only serve to

    confuse.

    Precision: Precise words should be used.

    Integrity: Communication should always be used as a means,

    never as an end.

    During any major change programme, internal communication

    in an organisation is extremely. Important. It must be borne in mind in

    this context that communication is more than a dialogue. It builds on

    trust and openness among colleagues, and results in common

    understanding of the organisational issues that have a long-term

    bearing on the future of the organisation.

    3.5 FORMAL AND INFORMAL COMMUNICATION

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    Basically, the two most important media of communication in

    an organisation are formal and informal communications. Formal

    communications are those that are official, that are a part of the

    recognized communication system of the organisation. A formal

    communication can be from a superior to a subordinate, from a

    subordinate to a superior, intra-administrative, or external. These

    communications may be oral or written. Informal communication is

    those that are outside the formal, recognized communication

    system. Informal communication originates spontaneously outside the

    formal channels and is the natural responses to the need for social

    interaction.

    Within the organisation, whatever its style or form, cohesive

    informal groups develop. Extensive research has shown that these

    informal work groups have tremendous power in shaping attitudes,

    behaviour, and consequently, production. They share a set of beliefs,

    values, and socially acceptable behaviours. In other words, group

    members come to think and act in similar ways, and this encourages

    feelings of closeness among them.

    In industry, at every level of organisational life, employees are

    bound together in informal groups and develop a common set of

    norms. It is important to remember that these groups are not

    established by the management. They are generally beyond the

    control of the management, and they do not appear on the

    organisation charts. The influence of informal work groups is

    pervasive, and they are vital parts of the total organisational

    environment. They can work for or against the management, by

    encouraging cooperation and increasing production or by sabotaging

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    management and slowing production. A major finding of Hawthorne

    studies was the revelation of the ways in which these groups operate.

    One of the characteristics of informal work groups is leadership.There are many opportunities for conflict between the needs and goals

    of the informal work group and the needs and goals of the

    organisation. If management is to deal effectively with the informal

    groups, it must recognize their existence and try to understand them.

    The informal group serves many needs of the workers. It can serve the

    needs of the organisation as well, or it can defeat them. Often, the

    ideals and standards of these groups conflict with those of the formal

    organisation. New employees who do not conform to the group norms

    may be ostracized.

    The information actually transmitted through the informal

    channels may be inaccurate, distorted, a half-truth, a rumour, a gossip,

    or a private interpretation. It spreads with an amazing speed like a

    wild fire. Davis observes: It (grapevine) cannot e abolished, rubbed

    out, hidden under the basket, chopped down, tied up, or stopped.

    If we suppress it at one place, it will pop up in another If we cut

    off one of its sources, it merely moves to another one quite similar

    to the way we change from one channel to another on a television

    set....In a sense, the grapevine is mans birthright, because wherever

    men congregate into groups, the grapevine is sure to develop. It may

    use smoke signals, jungle toms, taps on the prison wall, or ordinary

    conversation, or some other method, but it will always be there. No

    management can fire it because it does not hire it. It is simply there.

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    Though the grapevine thrives on rumours, it does serve some

    useful purpose. A manager can utilize the grapevine as a positive aid,

    for a grapevine may turn out to be a barometer for the management as

    to what is ailing the employees and what ought to be done about it. It

    may be utilized to clarify and spread messages which the management

    wishes to convey to its employees and to counter rumours and half-

    truths by feeding them the real facts. Though they serve many useful

    functions, at times, they become detrimental to the organisation.

    3.6 FORMAL SMALL GROUP NETWORKS:

    Formal organization networks can be very complicated. They can,

    for instance, include hundreds of people and half-dozen or more

    hierarchical levels. To simplify our discussion, weve condensed these

    networks into three common small groups of five people each (as shown

    in the exhibit below). These three networks are the chain, wheel and all-

    channel. Although these three networks have been extremely simplified,

    they do not allow us to describe the unique qualities of each.

    The chain rigidly follows the formal chain of command. This

    network approximates the communication channels you might find in a

    rigid three-level organization. The wheelrelies on a central figure to act

    as the conduit for the entire groups communication. It stimulates the

    communication network you would find on a team with a strong leader.

    The all-channel network permits all group members to actively

    communicate with each other. The all channel network is most often

    characterized in practice by self-managed teams, in which all group

    members are free to contribute and no one person takes on a leadership

    role.

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    As the exhibit below demonstrates, the effectiveness of each

    network depends on the dependent variable youre concerned about. For

    instance, the structure of the wheel facilitates the emergence of a leader,

    the all-channel network is best if you are concerned with having high

    member satisfaction, and the chain is best if accuracy is most important.

    The exhibit below leads us to the conclusion that no single network will

    be best for all occasions.

    3.7 GRAPEVINE:

    The grapevine is used by nearly everyone in an organisation at

    one time or another. It can convey accurate messages with amazing

    speed. It can also distort and filter messages beyond recognition.

    Rumours as well as facts are carried by the grapevine. Good managers

    pay attention to grapevine. Even though the grapevines reliability can

    never be determined with complete certainty, it does serve some

    useful functions:

    1. It satisfies a need employees have to enjoy friendly relations

    with their fellow employees.

    2. It helps workers to make sense out of their work environment

    especially in interpreting unclear orders from supervisors.

    3. It acts as a safety valve. When people are confused and unclear

    about what is going to happen to them, they use grapevine to let out

    their anxieties. Passing a rumour along the grapevine is a way of

    expressing and releasing negative energy.

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    4. When people gossip about someone who is not present, they

    often pass judgments. Some people pass judgment on others to find

    out where they stand. It is a way of dealing with self-doubt and

    insecurity.

    Grapevine thrives on information, not openly or generally

    available to an employee, either because of its confidential or secret

    nature or because of the defective or inadequate formal

    communication lines. Grapevine is inevitable but at the same time,

    valuable and an intelligent manager uses this form of communication

    by feeding accurate information at the right places and thus gains very

    quick communication around the establishment. Grapevine properly

    used is a great help. Neglecting grapevine is likely to lead to serious

    consequences in an establishment.

    The best way to dispel grapevine is to give people the facts. If

    there is no truth to a rumour or no information concerning it that

    should be said? Above all workers should be asked to never repeat a

    rumour. Supervisors must show their people that they intend to do

    everything possible to keep them fully informed.

    3.8 STYLES OF COMMUNICATION

    A communication style may be defined as a specialized set of

    interpersonal behaviours which are used in a given situation. Since

    communication is at the heart of effective managerial functioning, it is

    imperative to identify and to analyze the styles of communication

    which are used in an organisation. Four basic communication styles

    may be characterized in the organisational situation in terms of the

    communicators concern for self and concern for others.

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    1. The Controller Style of Communication: In this style, the

    manager has a high concern for himself and a low concern for the

    person with whom he communicates; he, therefore, represents an

    unbalanced exchange relationship. In business organisations, the

    existence of an unbalanced exchange, as in the controller style of

    communication, causes strains in inter-personal relationships. The

    production- oriented manager often expects loyalty from workers in

    exchange for money. In this case, there is usually a transaction from

    the critical parent-ego state to the child-ego state with the life

    position. I am O.K., You are not O.K. The controller

    communication thus jeopardizes the interpersonal trust which is

    essential for effective communication.

    2. The Withdrawn Communicator: In withdrawn communication,

    there is the least amount of actual communication, for it involves the

    avoidance of interaction. The communicator prefers to withdraw

    because he neither wishes to influence others nor wishes to be

    influenced.

    The withdrawn communicator has the least concern, both for him and

    for others, and feel that other people in the organisation are not

    interested in them. They, therefore, have a life position of I am not

    O.K., You are not O.K. The withdrawn style is rarely effective in

    communication, because it blocks interaction.

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    3. The Relinquisher Communicator: Here the communicator takes

    up a receptive rather than a directive position and evinces interest in

    others. Here, too, there is an unbalanced exchange, for the

    relinquishing communicator tends to be passive in an interchange. It is

    possible that, for a relinquishing manager, his subordinates take the

    lead in decision-making and discussion. The relinquishing manager

    has the life position of I am not O.K., You are O.K., which is

    characteristic of the child. Being humble and unsure, the relinquisher

    believes ithas nothing worthwhile to contribute.4. The Developmentor Communicator: The ideal type of

    communication is, of course, that of the developmentor, which

    involves a high concern for both himself and for others. The

    Developmentor is an adaptable social type who can be a high or low

    participator in a group, depending upon the situation. Since they have

    the life position of I am O.K., You are O.K., they neither feel it

    necessary to constantly assert their competence, nor do they refrain

    from leadership positions when the need arises. The developmentor-

    communicator understands the need for a two way communication by

    not assuming that he is always right. He is the one who, unlike the

    controller, allows the subordinate to make some mistakes in the

    process of learning, and builds in him self-confidence and esteem.

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    3.9 SUPERVISORY COMMUNICATION:

    Supervisory Communication is an important dimension of

    management communication for proper functioning of an

    organisation. It is mainly the supervisor who is constantly in touch

    with the workers and, therefore, it is necessary for him to acquaint

    himself with the importance of communication and the principles to

    be followed for effective communication. Talking it over is very

    important to an employee. Employees have asserted that where

    communication is lacking, frustration and misunderstanding exist, andthat this condition not only reduces their productivity, but also has an

    adverse effect on the total working of the establishment. Supervisors,

    therefore, should always: (a) discuss problems immediately with the

    subordinates; (b) keep the discussion frank and open; (c) choose a

    proper place; (d) be fair and impartial; and (e) develop good attitudes

    and maintain good relations.

    Four aspects of interpersonal relationships influence

    communication in organisations :

    (1) The senders and receivers trust of each other;

    (2) The senders and receivers influence over each other;

    (3) The senders mobility aspirations; and

    (4) The norms and sanctions of the groups(s) to which the

    sender and receiver belong. When people trust each other, their

    communication tends to be more accurate and open; when they

    distrust each other, they are more likely to be secretive or

    hesitant to talk openly.

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    3.10 EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION

    The key to effective communication is reception of messages. It

    then implies that the transmission of message sent and received does

    not presuppose that communication has occurred. Only on receiving

    the intended message that one can conclude that communication has

    occurred. The touchstone of effective communication is hearing of the

    meaning intended and to carry out the message. It then appears that

    communication to be effective not only needs the skill of self-

    expression but also the skill of effective listening. Listening is moreintricate and complicated than the physical process of hearing.

    Effective listening habits prevent misunderstanding and rumours.

    There are four factors affecting reception of messages:

    (1) Attention

    (2) Perception

    (3) Comprehension

    (4) Acceptance

    Attention refers to situations when individuals become

    voluntarily interested in the message. Once attention has been drawn

    to the message, the perception of the same begins. It means that the

    messages must be recognised in an unbiased manner. Comprehension

    is to understand the message received. Acceptance of message results

    in effective communication.

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    An effective communication serves several purposes, and

    benefits an organisation in many ways. First, it acts as a basic

    foundation for management. Since communication provides the key to

    facilitate the exchange of ideas, information as well as meeting of

    minds, it can aptly be described as the ears and eyes of the

    management.

    Second, it plays a vital role in planning. The making of a plan

    requires facts and figures which can only be made available through

    effective communication. Third, it integrates the formal organisation

    structure and is responsible for holding together the members of a

    primary social group. Fourth, it also plays a pivotal role in national

    decision-making, organisational control, as well as building and

    maintaining employee morale.

    The transformation of an organisation is conditional on the

    employees involvement with commitment, common goals and shared

    purpose and vision. Communication as a continuous process ensures

    this. The climate of communication in an organisation, therefore,

    needs constant nurturing by a well- meaning and transparent

    management that has the manifest image that it cares for its

    stakeholders.

    In many organizations, communication occupies a central place

    because the structure, extensiveness, and scope of the organisation are

    almost entirely determined by communication techniques. It is said

    that communication gives life-blood to an organisation. If

    organisation fail to provide careful attention to communication, a

    defensive climate prevails.

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    Experts have laid down several guidelines to improve communication.

    They are:

    Seek to clarify your ideas before communicating.

    Be sure your actions support your instructions.

    Consider the total physical and human situations whenever you give

    instructions.

    Do not over communicate but just enough for the purpose in view.

    Listen attentively and develop the skill of listening, be a good

    listener.

    Use simple language as understood by the receiver.

    Follow-up on your communication: get feedback.

    Concentrate on the problem rather than the people involved.

    When people are being emotional, other people should try to be

    rational.

    When people are misunderstanding and getting confused, others

    should try to be sympathetic and understanding.

    Consult everyone affected, even though they are not concentrating

    at present (because they will resent not being consulted afterwards).

    When people are being manipulative or deceptive, this can be

    openly acknowledged, but others should be honest and open rather

    than trying to pay them back in their own coin.

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    There are four fundamental rules of communicating which can

    help anyone to get across messages more accurately:

    1. Choose your words carefully and do not include unnecessary

    words.

    2. Do not leave out important information. An incomplete

    message is sometimes more dangerous than no message at all.

    3. Be concise in your message. The message has to be received

    accurately.

    4. Be correct in your message. If the information conveyed is

    false or misleading, even the best technique cannot save the

    message.

    Other techniques for improving communication include

    transaction analysis and active listening. Transactional Analysis (TA)

    is a technique aimed at helping interpersonal transactions or

    communication between superior and subordinate. It assumes that

    there are three ego states adult, parent, and child - and that the way

    a person communicates depends on the state he or she is in. TA helps

    to identify ones own state and the state of the person with whom he

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    or she is talking to and helps to improve communication between the

    two. Active listening is another technique that can help to improve

    interpersonal communication.

    Communicating Better at Work:

    Experience shows there are many ways managers can improve

    internal communication. Here are some tips for them:

    Understand that communication is a two-way street. It involves

    giving information and getting feedback from employees. It is not

    complete simply when information is given.

    Put more emphasis on face-to-face communication with

    employees. Dont rely mainly on bulletin boards, memos and other

    written communication.

    Ask each time when an instruction is given whether the

    message is clear. Most vagueness is caused by failing to be specific.

    View information as service to employees and not power

    over them.

    Listen to employees; show respect for them when they speak.

    They will feel part of the team and will tend to be more dedicated and

    productive.

    Dont just talk open-door policy. Practice it by walking around

    and talking to employees. Allow people to disagree and to come up

    with new ideas.

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    Conduct one-on-one meetings, ask employees how

    management can help them to do a better job, and emphasize current

    issues that employees care about.

    Concentrate on building credibility with employees. Managers

    who lack credibility and fail to create a climate of trust and openness

    are not believed - no matter how hard they try to communicate.

    3.11 LISTENING

    Listening can be described as a combination of:

    (i)Hearing the physical reception of sound;(ii) Comprehending the interpretation and understanding of themessage; and

    (iii) Remembering the ability to retain what has been heard.Hearing is with ears, but listening is with the mind. Effective

    listening helps receiver to take the exact intended message. Good

    listeners save time because they learn more within a given period of

    time and they learn about the person talking, as well as what the

    person is saying. Good listening is also good manners; people think

    more of us when we listen to them attentively.

    Nature has given people two ears but only one tongue,

    which is

    Gentle hint that they should listen more than they talk.

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    Listening requires two ears, one for meaning and one for

    feeling.

    Decision-makers who do not listen have less information

    for making sound decisions.

    The Bureau of National Affairs has developed a laundry list

    of the important concepts related to effective listening:

    1. Everyone likes to feel important.

    2. people perform better when they know that their opinions andsuggestions are heeded

    3. Supervisors must use their expertise and experience of

    employees and be able to get them to exercise this expertise.

    4. Attention paid to gripes often prevents their blossoming into

    big grievances.

    5. Supervisors who jump to conclusions lose the respect of their

    subordinates.

    6. To do a good job of listening, supervisors must plan time for it

    in their busy schedules.

    7. Listening requires full attention to the speaker; it is impossible

    to listen intelligently while the mind is preoccupied with

    something else.

    8. Listening habits are deeply embedded in the personality and

    are related to other personality traits, such as obstinacy,

    empathy, and so on.

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    9. The correction of bad habits is a slow process and must be

    self-motivated.

    10. Supervisors who dont get all the facts often make poor

    decisions.

    The following guidelines are suggested in respect of listening:

    Put the talker at ease. Help a person feel free to talk.

    Show a talker that you want to listen. Look and Remove

    distractions. Dont doodle, tap, or shuffle papers. Will it not be

    quieter if you shut the door?

    Empathize with the talker. Try to help yourself see the other

    persons point of view.

    Be patient. Allow plenty of time. Do not interrupt a talker.

    Dont start for the door or walk away.

    Hold your temper. An angry person takes the wrong meaning

    from words.

    Go easy on arguments and criticisms. These put people on

    the defensive, and they may calm up or become angry. Do not

    argue.

    Even if you win, you lose.

    Ask questions. This encourages a talker and shows that you

    are listening. It helps to develop points further.

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    Stop talking. This is first and the last, because all other

    guides depend upon it. You cannot do effective listening job

    while you are talking.

    One must develop the art of listening. The higher you go up in

    the organisational set-up, the more successful you are likely to be if

    you listen to others. Some of the listening gains are:

    You get information that may help you.

    You get ideas that you might never have thought. (Ideas haveno pride. They are willing to be born to anyone willing to have

    them).

    You develop understanding of people who are different from

    you in many ways.

    You get co-operation from people who know that you valuetheir thinking and ideas.

    You motivate action from people who have a part in your

    success.

    You get good listening on the part of others to what you have

    to say.

    Listening Tips:

    1. Listen for ideas, not just for facts.

    2. Control your emotional reactions.

    3. Overcome personal prejudgments and distractions.

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    4. Keep an open mind.

    5. Listen more than you talk.

    6. Hear the other person out; dont interrupt.

    7. Learn to practice active listening.

    8. Keep your mouth shut (literally, keep your lips closed).

    9. Paraphrase frequently in your mind, and aloud to the speaker.

    10. Focus on the person speaking.

    3.12 HR ROLE IN COMMUNICATION.

    Strengthening formal communication through

    departmental/cross functional meetings along the suggested lines.

    Providing linkages with annual appraisals as a mode of

    facilitating meetings.

    Ensuring proper dissemination of information, other than

    through departmental meetings.

    Conducting training programmes on

    (a) effective listening skills, and

    (b) conducting meetings.

    Developing a system of open communication policy to facilitate

    more openness and trust.

    Involving line personnel in conducting training classes to

    improve understanding of each other, and for creating healthy

    interaction at shop floor level.

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    Organizing informal gatherings such as annual day, sports

    meets, and the like to promote free interaction and exchange of

    views.

    Advising departments to maintain circulars and flies relating to

    their working for general consumption.

    Exploring avenues for establishing a library which would act as

    a central point of information.

    Facilitating greater clarity of job role and relationships through

    job descriptions.

    Facilitating upward communication through personal contacts,

    fact finding surveys, and soon.

    Issuing manuals/guidelines detailing policies, procedures, rules,

    and other personnel related matters to ensure clarity.

    Frequent interaction with employees tells them theyre

    important. The way you communicate with your employees

    demonstrates you care about them as people not just as employees.

    Sometimes you have to go out of your way to interact with your

    employees, but they always will notice how much effort you put forth

    to communicate with them.

    Self-check Communication

    Are you making the most of your opportunities to communicate

    with your employees? Answer the questions below in YES or NO to

    see how well youre doing.

    1. Do you try to greet your employees every day?

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    2. Do you go out of your way to interact with your employees at least

    once each day?

    3. Do you speak to your employees before they speak to you?

    4. Do you go to your employees work areas to talk to them?

    5. Do you talk to your employees about non-work activities?

    6. Are your employees welcome at your office at any time?

    7. Do you have lunch with your employees from time to time?

    8. Do you know what your employees like to do when they arent at

    work?

    9. Do you understand your employees needs, wants, goals and

    aspirations?

    10. Do you give frequent positive reinforcement?

    11. Do you frequently review goals and expectations?

    12. Do you ask your employees personal goals and aspirations?

    13. Do you ask about your employees problems, fears and concerns?

    14. Do you ask yourself what you can do to help improve your

    employees performance?

    For any questions that you answered no, list below things you can

    do to increase your interaction with your employees.

    3.13 COMPUTER-AIDED COMMUNICATION

    Communication in todays organizations is enhanced and enriched

    by computer-aided technologies. These include electronic mail, for

    instance, has dramatically reduced the number of memos, letters, and

    phone calls that employees historically used to communicate among

    themselves and with suppliers, customers, or other outside stakeholders.

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    E-Mail:

    Electronic mail (or e-mail) uses the Internet to transmit and receive

    computer-generated text and documents. Its growth has been spectacular.

    Most white-collar employees now regularly use e-mail. In fact, a recent

    study found that the average U.S. employee receives 31 e-mail messages

    a day. And organizations are recognizing the value of e-mail for all

    workers. Ford Motor Company, for instance, recently made a computer,

    modem, printer and email account available for $5 a month to all of its

    more than 3,00,000 employees worldwide.

    As a communication tool, e-mail ahs a long list of benefits. E-mail

    messages can be quickly written, edited and stored. They can be

    distributed to one person or thousands with a click of a mouse. They can

    be read, in their entirety, at the convenience of the recipient. And the cost

    of sending formal e-mail to employees is a fraction of what it would cost

    to print, duplicate and distribute comparable letter or brochure.

    E-mail, of course, is not without its drawbacks. At the top of the

    list is information overload .Its not unusual for employees to get a

    hundred or more e-mails a day. Reading, absorbing and responding to

    such an inflow can literally consume an employees entire day.

    In essence e-mails is of use has become its biggest negative.

    Employees are finding it increasingly difficult to distinguish important e-

    mails from junk mails and irrelevant messages. Another drawback of e-

    mail is that the lack emotional content. The nonverbal quest in a face to

    face message or the tone of voice from a phone call convey important

    information that come across an e-mail, although efforts have been made

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    to create emotional icons. Finally e-mails tend to be cold and impersonal.

    As such its the ideal means to convey information like lay-offs, plant

    closings or other messages that might evoke emotional responses or

    social support.

    Intranet and extranet links:

    Intranets are private. Organization worldwide information

    networks that look and act like a web-site, but to which only people in an

    organization have access. Intranets are rapidly becoming the profferedmeans for employees within the companies to communicate with each

    other. IBM recently bought together 52 thousand of its employees online

    for what it called Worldjam.Using companies intranet IBMers must

    everywhere swapped ideas on everything from how to retain employees

    to how to work faster without undermining quality.

    In addition organisations are creating extra net links that connect

    internal employees with selected suppliers, customers and strategic

    partners. For instance an extranet allows GM employees to send

    electronic messages and documents to its steel and rubber supplier as well

    as to communicate with its dealers. Similarly all Wall Mart vendors are

    linked into its extranet system, allowing Wall Mart buyers to easily

    communicate with its suppliers and for suppliers to monitor the inventory

    status of its product at Wall Mart stores.

    Videoconferencing:

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    Videoconferencing is an extension of intranet or extranet system. It

    permits employees in an organization to have meetings with people at

    different locations. Live audio and video images of members allow them

    to see, hear and talk with each other. Videoconferencing in effect allows

    employees to conduct interactive meetings without the necessity of all

    physically being in the same location.

    In the late 1990s videoconferencing was basically conducted from

    special rooms equipped with television cameras located at company

    facilities. More recently cameras and microphones are being attached to

    individual computers allowing people to participate in videoconferences

    without leaving their desks. As the cost of this technology drops in price

    videoconferencing is likely to be increasingly seen as an alternative to

    expensive and time consuming travel.

    3.14 CHOICE OF COMMUNICATION CHANNEL

    Neal .L. Patterson, CEO at medical software maker Cerner

    Corporation likes e-mails. May be too much so. Upset with his staffs

    work ethics he recently sent an e-mail to his firms 400 managers. Here

    are some of those e-mails highlight:

    Hell with freeze over before this CEO implements ANOTHER

    EMPLOYEE benefit in this culture.. We are getting less those 40 hours

    of work from a large number of our Kansa City based employees. The

    parking is sparsely used at 8am likewise at 5pm. As managers-you eitherdo not know what your EMPLOYEES are doing or YOU do not CARE

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    .we has a problem and we will fix it or will replace you. ..What are you

    doing as managers with this companies makes me sick.

    Pattersons e-mail additionally suggested that managers schedule

    meetings at 7 Am., 6pm., and Saturday mornings promised a staff

    reduction of 5% an institution of a time clock system and Pattersons

    intention to charge unapproved absences to employees vacation time.

    Within hours of this e-mail, copies of it had made its way on to a

    Yahoo website. And within three days Corners stock price has

    plummeted 22%. Although one can argue about whether such harsh

    criticism should be communicated at all, one thing is certainly clear

    Patterson erred selecting the wrong channel for his message. Such an

    emotional and sensitive would have been better received in a face to face

    meeting.

    Why do people choose one channel of communication overanother-for instance a phone call instead of face you face talk? Is there

    any general insight we might be able to provide regarding choice of

    communication channel? The answer to the later question is a qualified

    Yes. A model of media richness has been developed to explain channel

    selection among managers.

    Research has found that channels differ in their capacity to convey

    information some are rich in that they have ability to:

    (1) handle multiple quest simultaneously

    (2) Facilitate rapid feed back.

    (3) be very personal .Others are lean in that they score low on these

    three factors.

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    communication and regularly leaving the sanctuary of their executives

    offices to manage by walking around. These executives are relying on

    rich channels of communication to transmit the more ambiguous

    messages they need to convey. The past decade has been characterized by

    organisations closing facilities, merging, consolidating and introducing

    new products and services at an accelerated pace-all no routine messages

    in high ambiguity and requiring the use of channels that convey a large

    amount of information .It is not surprising, therefore to see the most

    effective managers expanding their use of rich channels .

    4.1 BARRIERS TO EFFECTIVE COMMUNICATION

    A number of barriers can retard or distort effective communication.

    In this section, we highlight the more important of these barriers.

    Filtering

    Filtering refers to a senders purposely manipulating information

    so it will be seen mare favorably by the receiver. For example, when a

    manager tells his boss what he feels his boss wants to hear, he is filtering

    information.

    The major determinant of filtering is no. of levels in the

    organization structure .The more vertical levels in the organizations

    hierarchy, the more opportunities there are for filtering. But you can

    expect some filtering to occur whenever there are status differences.

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    Factors such as fear of conveying bad news and the desire to please ones

    boss often lead employees to tell their superiors what they think those

    superiors want to hear, thus distorting upward communications.

    Selective Perception

    We have mentioned it earlier. It appears again here because the

    receivers in the communication process see and hear based on their needs,

    motivations, experience, background and other personal characteristics.

    Receivers also project their interests and expectations into

    communications as they decode them. The employment interviewer who

    expects a women job applicant to put her family ahead if her career is

    likely to see that female applicants, regardless of whether the applicants

    feel that way or not

    Information Overload

    Individuals have a fine capacity for processing data. As noted inour previous discussion of e-mail, when the information we have to work

    with exceeds our processing capacity, the result is information

    overload .And with e-mails, phone calls, faxes, meetings and the need to

    keep current in ones field, more and more managers and professionals

    are complaining that theyre suffering overload.

    What happens when individuals have more information than they

    can sort out and use? They tend to select out, ignore, pass over or forget

    information. Or they may put off further processing until the overload

    situation is over. Regardless, the result is lost information and less

    effective communication

    Emotions

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    How the receiver feels at the time of receipt of a communication

    will influence how he or she interprets it. The same message received

    when you are angry is often interpreted differently from when youre

    happy. Extreme emotions such as jubilation or depression are most likely

    to hinder effective communication.

    In such instances, we are most prone to disregard our national and

    objective thinking processes and substitute emotional judgments.

    Language

    Words mean different thing to different people. Age, education and

    cultural background are three of the more obvious variables that influence

    the language a person uses and the definitions he or she gives to words.

    In an organization, employees usually come from diverse

    backgrounds. The grouping of the employees into departments createsspecialists who develop their own buzzwords or technical jargon. In

    large organizations, members are also frequently widely dispersed

    geographically-even operating in different countries. The existence of

    vertical levels can also cause language problems.

    There point is that although you and I probably speak a commonlanguage-English our use of that language is far from uniform. If we

    knew how each of us modified the language, communication difficulties

    could be minimized. There problem is that the members in an

    organization usually dont know how those the words and terms they use

    mean the same to the receiver as they do to them This assumption is often

    incorrect.

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    Communication Apprehension

    Another major barrier to effective communication is that some

    people- an estimated 5-20% of the population-suffer from debilitating.

    Although lots of people speaking in front of a group, communication

    techniques.

    People who suffer from it experience undue tension and anxiety in

    oral apprehensive may find it extremely difficult to talk with others face

    to face or become extremely anxious when they have to use the

    telephone. As a result, they may rely on memos or faxes to convey

    messages when a phone call would be not only faster but more

    appropriate.

    Studies demonstrate that oral-communication apprehensive avoid

    situations that require them to engage in oral communication. We should

    expect to find some self-selection in jobs so that such individuals donttake positions such as teacher. But almost all jobs require some oral

    communication is a dominant requirement. And of greater concern is the

    evidence that high oral communication apprehensive distort the

    communication demands of their jobs in order to minimize the need for

    communication. So we need to be aware that there is a set of people in

    the organization who severely limit their oral communication andrationalize this practice by telling that more communication isnt

    necessary for them to do their job effectively.

    Poor structure to the communication

    The structure of a communication is an essential factor in how well

    a business communication is received by an audience.

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    It doesn't matter whether that audience is an audience of one or one

    million, good structure is essential if a communication is to be 'heard'

    amongst the advertising and marketing 'noise' of today's business

    environment.

    So a poor structure to your message or delivery is therefore a major

    barrier to effective communication.

    Weak delivery

    It doesn't matter how important or impressive the subject of yourcommunication is, if you deliver it without any 'punch' you will not get as

    many people to take your desired action as you would like.

    A weak delivery is like the very funny joke with the badly-told

    punch line --- it is not as funny or as memorable as you remember the

    original to be. It's all in the delivery. It is important to not get confused

    between delivery and presenter.

    Several businessmen are extremely confident in the public's gaze,

    very happy to be in front of an audience. But because their presentations

    and communications lack a suitable structure, they 'lose' their audience

    within minutes, the audience becomes increasingly confused and

    eventually frustrated by not being able to understand clearly and easily

    what on earth these businessmen are on about.

    The use of the wrong medium

    You have to announce a temporary hold on non-essential stationery

    spending in your department. How do you communicate this?

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    An advertising campaign on local radio would be a highly

    ineffective way of reaching the desired audience if the message was

    complex and really intended for a narrow niche audience.

    Similarly, a public presentation, with 'obligatory' PowerPoint TM

    slideshow full of complex charts and data, would be the wrong medium if

    the message you were trying to communicate would be better served by a

    white paper, or some similar print-based format that allowed the audience

    to digest the complexities at their own pace.

    suggested

    When considering which medium to use for which type of message

    you wish to communicate, it is wise to analyze the following:

    What is the fixed cost of production? Are there ad agency fees,broadcast or print fees that must be paid, irrespective of the number

    or volume of items produced?

    What are the variable costs -- such as CDs, DVDs, audio cassettes

    and printing costs?

    How long will it take to write, edit and produce your

    communication in your chosen medium?

    What percentage of your target audience is likely to have access to

    your chosen medium at the time you choose to publish/play/present

    it?

    What percentage of your target audience will be likely to pay

    attention to your chosen medium?

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    Is your message a complex one? Would your message be more

    easily and readily comprehended through auditory, tactile or visual

    (e.g. reading or images) modalities?

    How quickly do you need your audience to comprehend and take

    action on your message?

    A mixed message

    It is very hard for an audience -- whether an audience of 1 or 1

    million to understand your communication if you unnecessarily confuse

    the audience.

    If you deliberately, or otherwise, confuse them. A HUGE barrier to

    business communication is the ability of 'business-speak' to confuse and

    alienate its audience.

    It does this in two ways:

    1. By using terms and phrases that are 'jargon', the meaning of which are

    possibly recognized but probably not fully understood

    2. By trying to 'save time/paper' by rolling several different

    communication messages into one.

    Another barrier arising from mixed messages is when a previously-held stance is lightly overturned to meet some political or business

    expediency, then upheld again. An example of this would be where the

    acceptance of corporate gifts is not allowed, but then allowed if it a brand

    new client who has contracted a large amount of money to your business,

    then not allowed again after the gift-giving and receiving season is over.

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    Or a company-wide budget cut that stops all business-class travel,

    but the very senior management is found to be traveling first class.

    Be very careful of mixing your messages, as mixed messages are avery real barrier to effective business communication.

    The wrong audience

    Presenting your message to the wrong audience for your business

    communication is a complete waste of your time and money. Don't do it

    -- pick your audience then pick the medium that will best find them.

    A distracting environment

    There's nothing worse than trying to communicate your message to

    a group of people who cannot 'hear' you.

    Whether their inability to 'hear' you is because of:

    Your voice not being strong enough

    Too many others talking in the room at the same time

    Police and ambulance sirens outside the venue

    Too many phone calls coming in to their office while they're trying

    to read your memo

    Interruptions while they try to read your report

    Incoming emails keep popping up while they are reading your

    web-based communication

    Their minds are full of other pressing matters

    They are supposed to be somewhere else at that moment

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    Their mobile phone keeps ringing, or vibrating if they've set it to

    'silent' instead of switching it off

    Their internet connection is slow

    Their internet connection keeps dropping out

    There are too many interesting people to look at while they are on

    the bus trying, in vain, to concentrate on your report

    The room's air-conditioning is not working and the room is hot and

    stuffy

    The room's heating is not working and the room is cold and

    clammy

    Well, there are of course a thousand possible distracting reasons

    why they cannot or will not attend to your business communication.

    The point is to do whatever you can, whilst acknowledging that

    this might be next to nothing, to reduce the number of distractions your

    chosen audience might be subjected to.

    4.2 CURRENT ISSUES IN COMMUNICATION

    In this section we discuss four current issues relating to

    communication in organization. Why do men and women often have

    difficulty communicating with each other? What role does silence play in

    communication? What are implications of the politically correct

    movement on communications in organizations? And how individuals

    can improve their cross culture communication?

    Communication Barriers between Women and Men

    Research by experts provides us with some important insights into

    the differences between men and women in terms of their conversational

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    styles. The essence of the research is that men use talk to emphasize

    status, whereas women use it to create connection. The conclusion, of

    course, doesnt apply to every woman. Thus it , means a larger % of

    women or men as a group talk in a particular way, or individual women

    and men are more likely to talk one way or the other.

    Communication is a continual balancing act, juggling the

    conflicting needs for intimacy and independence. Independence emphasis

    separateness and differences. But heres the kick Women speak and hear

    a language of connection and intimacy men speak and hear a language of

    status power and independence. So for many men conversations are

    primarily a means to preserve independence ands maintain status in a

    hierarchical social orders few examples will illustrate this:

    Men frequently complain that women talk on and on about their

    problem. Women criticize men for not listening. Whats happening is thatwhen men hear a problem, they frequently assert their for independence

    and control by offering solutions .Many women, on other hand view

    telling a problem as a means to promote closenesss e women present the

    problem to gain support and connection ,not to get the mans advise.

    Mutual understanding is symmetrical. But giving advise is asymmetrical

    it sets up the advise giver as more knowledge, more reasonable, and morein control. This contributes to distancing men and women in their efforts

    to communicate

    Men are often more direct than women in conversation. A man

    might say I think you are wrong at that point. Women might say Have

    you looked at the marketing research report on that point? Men

    frequently see female indirections as covert or sneaky but women are

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    not vas concerned as men with the status and one-upmanship that

    directness often creates.

    Women tend to be less boastful than men. They often downplay

    their authority or acco