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Organizational Communication

Organizational Communication. I/O Psychology in My Life. Exercise 11.1 Think of a situation in which you and another person did not communicate effectively. Describe what happened. Why you think the miscommunication took place?. Types of Organizational Communication. Upward Downward

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Organizational Communication

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  1. Organizational Communication

  2. I/O Psychology in My Life Exercise 11.1 Think of a situation in which you and another person did not communicate effectively. Describe what happened. Why you think the miscommunication took place?

  3. Types of Organizational Communication • Upward • Downward • Business • Informal • Interpersonal

  4. Organizational CommunicationUpward Communication • Serial communication • MUM effect • open-door policy • Attitude surveys • Focus groups • Exit interviews • Suggestion boxes • Third party facilitators • Liaison • Ombudsperson

  5. Organizational CommunicationDownward Communication • Bulletin boards • Policy manuals • Newsletters • Intranets

  6. Organizational CommunicationBusiness Communication • Memos • Telephone calls • Email • Voice mail • Business meetings

  7. Email Etiquette • Include a greeting • Included a detailed subject line • Don’t write in all caps • Delete unnecessary information when forwarding email • Avoid grammar and spelling mistakes • Don’t spend company time on personal email • Allow ample time for a person to respond

  8. Voice Mail Etiquette • Speak slowly • Give your name at the beginning of the message and then repeat it at the end • Spell your name • Leave your phone number • Indicate good times for the person to return your call • Don’t ramble • Don’t include information you don’t want others to hear

  9. Office Design • Designs • Open (landscaped) offices • bullpen design • uniform design • Cubicles • Private offices • Research on open designs • decreased satisfaction • increased socialization • decreased costs

  10. Office Layout • Furniture type • Desk placement • Neatness/clutter • Artifacts • Windows

  11. Organizational CommunicationInformal Communication • Grapevine • single-strand pattern • gossip pattern • probability pattern • cluster pattern • Gossip • Rumor

  12. Grapevine Patterns Single Strand Jones Smith Brown Tinker Evers Gossip Tinker Brown Evers Frey Smith Chance Martin Austin Jones

  13. Probability Brown Alston Evers Chance Frey Martin Smith Jones Tinker Cluster Brown Smith Frey Alston Martin Tinker Evers Chance Jones

  14. Informal CommunicationExercise 11.2

  15. Interpersonal Communication • The exchange of a message across a communication channel from one person to another • Three problem areas • Intended message versus message sent • Message sent versus message received • Message received versus message interpreted

  16. Sender Receiver Encodes Message Sends Message Receives Message Decodes Message I hear her say I think she means What I want to say What I say

  17. Problem Area I: Intended Message Versus Message Sent • Think about what you want to communicate • Practice what you want to communicate • Learn better communication skills

  18. Problem Area II: Message Sent Versus Message Received • Actual words used • Communication channel • Noise • Nonverbal cues • Paralanguage • Artifacts • Amount of information

  19. Actual Words Used • The word “fine” • to describe jewelry • to describe the weather • to describe food or sex • The applicant was a: • female • girl • babe • woman

  20. Use concrete words and ask how the other person might interpret your message • Avoid such words as: • as soon as possible • I’ll be back soon • I’ll be out for a while • Why not be specific? • Avoid confrontation • “test the water” • Avoid being the bad guy (MUM effect)

  21. Men Talk about major events Tell the main point Are more direct Use “uh-huh” to agree Are comfortable with silence Concentrate on the words spoken Sidetrack unpleasant topics Women Talk about daily life Provide details Are more indirect Use “uh-huh” to listen Are less comfortable with silence Concentrate on nonverbal cues and paralanguage Focus on unpleasant topics Gender Differences in Communication(Tannen, 1986 & 1990)

  22. Going Hollywood Men are from Mars, Women are from Venus

  23. Communication Channels • Oral • in-person • word-of-mouth • answering machine • Nonverbal • Written • personal letter/memo • general letter/memo • email

  24. Noise • Actual noise • Appropriateness of the channel • Bias • Feelings about the person communicating • Mood • Perceived motives

  25. Nonverbal Cues • Are ambiguous • Those that aren’t, are called emblems • Gender and cultural differences are common • Nonverbal cues are thought to be 80% of the message received

  26. Nonverbal Cues Include • Eye contact • Expressions • Micro-expressions • Posture • Arm and leg use • Motion • Touching

  27. Nonverbal CuesExercise 11.3

  28. Use of Space • Intimacy zone • 0 to 18 inches • close relationships • Personal distance zone • 18 inches to 4 feet • friends and acquaintances • Social distance zone • 4 to 12 feet • business contacts and strangers • Public distance zone • 12 to 25 feet

  29. Use of Time • Being late • Leaving a meeting early • Setting aside time for a meeting • Multi-tasking (working while talking)

  30. Basic Assumptions About Nonverbal Cues & Paralanguage • People are different in their use of nonverbal cues and paralanguage • Standard differences among people reveal information about the person • Changes in a person’s style reveal new messages

  31. Paralanguage • Rate of speech • Loudness • Intonation • Amount of talking • Voice pitch • Pauses

  32. The Importance of Inflection • Idid not say Bill stole your car. • I did not say Bill store your car. • I did not say Bill stole your car. • I did not say Billstole your car. • I did not say Bill stole your car. • I did not say Bill stoleyour car. • I did not say Bill stole yourcar.

  33. Artifacts • Our office • décor • desk placement • What we wear • clothing • accessories • hair styles • tattoos • The car we drive • The house we live in

  34. Going Hollywood Office Space Clip (DVD Scene 2)

  35. Class Demonstration

  36. The Amount of InformationWhen we have too much information, we tend to: • Assimilate • Sharpen • Level

  37. The Amount of InformationReactions to Information Overload • Omission • Error • Queuing • Escape • Use of a gatekeeper • Use of multiple channels

  38. Exercise 11.4Communication Overload

  39. Problem Area III: Message Received Versus Message Interpreted • Listening Skills • Listening Style • Emotional State • Cognitive Ability • Bias

  40. The Importance of Listening • 70% of a manager’s job is spent communicating • Of that time • 9% is spent writing • 16% is spent reading • 30% is spent speaking • 45% is spent listening

  41. Stop talking and listen Show the speaker you want to listen Empathize with the speaker Don’t ask excessive questions Remove distractions Keep an open mind Use appropriate nonverbal cues Let the other person finish speaking Try to understand what the other person means Listening Skills

  42. Listening Styles(Geier & Downey, 1980) • Leisure • Inclusive • Stylistic • Technical • Empathic • Nonconforming

  43. What is Your Listening Style?Exercise 11.5

  44. Exercise 11.6Dealing with Different Listening Styles

  45. How Good Are Your Listening Skills?Exercise 11.7

  46. Other Factors • Emotional State • Anger • Fear • Anxiety • Excitement • Love • Bias • Cognitive Ability • Drugs and Alcohol

  47. Writing is easiest to read when it: • has short sentences • uses simple rather than complicated words • uses common rather than unusual words

  48. Comparison of Readability Scales

  49. Determining ReadabilityExercise 11.8

  50. Answer to Exercise 11-5

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