Irwin/McGraw-Hill [Modified by EvS] Mgt-485 8-1 Additional Internet Sites   

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Adler/Rodman Copyright © 2006 by Oxford University Press, Inc.
Advertisements

Cross-Cultural Communication and Negotiation
Chapter 8 INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION.
Nonverbal Communication
1 MGTO120s Managing Communications Jian Liang MGTO, HKUST.
OUR COMMUNICATION : -Words -How we say these words (our tone, pitch, volume, etc.) -Non-verbal communication.
Understanding the Communication Process
COMMUNICATING ACROSS CULTURES
Understanding Non- Verbal Communication MRS. DOBBINS.
NONVERBAL COMMUNICATION AND INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION BY SANTJIE VOSLOO.
DEVELOPED BY: CPUC LEARNING & DEVELOPMENT GROUP PRESENTED BY: MM/DD/YYYY Communication Series: Non-Verbal Communication Rev Date: 3/1/11.
Cross-cultural Communication and Negotiation
1 PowerPoint slides by R. Dennis Middlemist, Professor of Management, Colorado State University.
Copyright 1998 by Prentice Hall, Inc., adapted by Prof.Dr. vom Kolke 4-1 Chapter 4 Communication.
Communication and Its Components
Intercultural Communication
Amity International Business School Communication and International Negotiation Major Obstacles to Intercultural Communication BY KP Kanchana.
COMMUNICATION AND CONSUMER BEHAVIOUR
Cross-cultural Communication and Negotiation
McGraw-Hill/Irwin International Management © 2005 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc., All Rights Reserved. International Management Phatak, Bhagat, and Kashlak.
BASICS OF COMMUNICATION DIVISION-C.E Roll No-21 Prepared By- Akabari Viral M. Guided By-Rahul Sir Chanu.
NON VERBAL COMMUNICATION NOTES. What is communication? Definition Types:  Verbal communication  Nonverbal communication.
Nonverbal Communication
Communicating Effectively
Communication Process and Verbal Communication Styles
Chapter 10, Stephen P. Robbins, Mary Coulter, and Nancy Langton, Management, Ninth Canadian Edition Copyright © 2009 Pearson Education Canada 10-6 Exhibit.
Maria Neophytou Communication And Internet Studies ENG270 – English for Communication Studies III
How necessary is it to use and interpret it?. Non-verbal Communication  Nonverbal communications is the process of communication through sending and.
Professor H. Michael Boyd, Ph.D. INTERNATIONAL MANAGEMENT GLOBAL Business and People Management Professor H. Michael Boyd, Ph.D.
COPYRIGHT 2001 PEARSON EDUCATION CANADA INC. CHAPTER 10 1 CHAPTER 10 COMMUNICATION.
1 Understanding the Communication Process “The art of communication is the language of leadership.” ― James C. Humes, American author and presidential.
Communication, Conflict and Negotiation
High Context Communication  Communication that relies more heavily on attention to contextual details and less explicit language to transmit its message.
1 Administrative Office Management, 8/e by Zane Quible ©2005 Pearson Education, Inc. Pearson Prentice Hall Upper Saddle River, NJ The Communicating.
Interpersonal Communication Chapter 2. Introduction Most employees spend 75 percent of each workday communicating  75 percent of what we hear we hear.
7-1 McGraw-Hill/Irwin Human Relations, 3/e © 2007 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.
4-1Copyright 1998 by Prentice Hall, Inc. Communication Chapter 4.
Define the nature and function of communication
Welcome! Nonverbal Communication
BA 4216 Cross-cultural Studies in Organizations Communication Instructor: Ça ğ rı Topal 1.
Communication Though Nonverbal Behavior. Def.- bodily actions and vocal qualities that typically accompany a verbal message. They are usually interpreted.
1 Understanding the Communication Process “The art of communication is the language of leadership.” ― James C. Humes, American author and presidential.
Chapter 14 – Managerial Communication
COMMUNICATION SKILLS.
Managers and Communication BUS 206 Erlan Bakiev, Ph. D. Zirve University Spring 2012.
Learning Objectives Functions of communication. Communication process.
Copyright 2005 Talent Connections. All Rights Reserved. COMMUNICATION AND HUMAN REASOURCE CHAPTER 13 BY Miranda.
Copyright © 2013, 2010, 2007 Pearson Education, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
© 2005 Prentice-Hall, Inc. 4-1 Chapter 4 Communication.
Understanding Nonverbal Messages
COMMUNICATION SKILLS CHAPTER 9
Chapter One Communication and Its Components. What is Communication? CommunicationCommunication is a process of transmitting and receiving verbal and.
Chapter 7 Cross-Cultural Communication and Negotiation Mike Perez, Cole Underwood, Sarah Torp.
Unit 2 Communication Process. Components of Comm. Process Context - The people, occasion, & task. Physical Environment - Your surroundings are. Affects.
Chapter 7 Cross-Cultural Communication & Negotiation.
McGraw-Hill/Irwin Copyright © 2009 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. The Importance and Skill of Listening “If you think.
Organizational Behavior (MGT-502) Lecture-20. Summary of Lecture-19.
Copyright © 2012 Pearson Education, Inc. Publishing as Prentice Hall Management, Eleventh Edition, Global Edition by Stephen P. Robbins & Mary Coulter.
Verbal And Non-Verbal Communication
Lecture 3. Verbal Communication
International Management, 5th ed.
Exploring Communication as a Behavioural Process
Cross-Cultural Communication and Negotiation
Understanding the Communication Process
INTERNAL AUDIT IN-HOUSE TRAINING PROGRAMME - COMMUNICATION
What Is Communication? Communication - the transfer and understanding of meaning. Transfer means the message was received in a form that can be interpreted.
Communicating Chapter Fifteen.
Understanding the Communication Process
Cross-Cultural Communication and Negotiation
Presentation transcript:

Irwin/McGraw-Hill [Modified by EvS] Mgt Additional Internet Sites    rts.html  ULTURE/CULTDIM.HTM  

Mgt 485 Chapter 8 Intercultural Communication Mgt Irwin/McGraw-Hill [Modified by EvS]

Mgt The Communication Process Sender Meaning EncodingMedium Decoding Receiver Interpretation Feedback

Irwin/McGraw-Hill [Modified by EvS] Mgt Overview of Communication Communication is the process of transferring meanings from sender to receiver Examples DO:It is appropriate to talk about History, Architecture, or Gardening in Great Britain DON’T: In Great Britain, do not talk about Politics, Money, or Prices See Table 8-1, p. 196

Irwin/McGraw-Hill [Modified by EvS] Mgt External and Internal Communications External Internal Ex.) gov’t attempts to secure agreements with other nations regarding international trade US & China Ex.) Russian factory managers make greater use than US managers of direct, face-to-face communications

Irwin/McGraw-Hill [Modified by EvS] Mgt Verbal Communication Styles  Context  Indirect and Direct  High context = implicit & direct  Low-context = objective  Elaborate and Succinct  Elaborate / exacting / succinct  Contextual and Personal  Contextrual : speaker / relationship of parties  Personal: speaker / reduction of barriers  Affective and Instrumental  Affective = requires listener to listen & observe  Instrumental = goal-oriented See Table 8-2, p. 199

Irwin/McGraw-Hill [Modified by EvS] Mgt Interpretation of Communications The effectiveness of communication is determined by how closely the sender and receiver have the same meaning for the same message Ex.) Using individual incentive plans in collective cultures

Irwin/McGraw-Hill [Modified by EvS] Mgt Downward Flow of Communications The transmission of information from manager to subordinate CEO V.P. xyzxyz

Irwin/McGraw-Hill [Modified by EvS] Mgt Upward Communication The transmission of information from subordinates to managers  to provide feedback, ask questions, or obtain assistance from higher-level management

Irwin/McGraw-Hill [Modified by EvS] Mgt Communication Barriers Language ex.) Someone on a foreign assignment that does not know the language that is spoken at the headquarters of the MNC Culture ex.) The differences between how a native and nonnative U.S. person write a letter

Irwin/McGraw-Hill [Modified by EvS] Mgt Barriers to Effective Communication Filtering The deliberate manipulation of information to make it appear more favorable to the receiver. Selective Receiving communications on the basis of what one selectively Perception sees and hears depending on his or her needs, motivation, experience, background, and other personal characteristics. Emotions Messages will often be interpreted differently depending on how happy or sad one is when the message is being communicated Language Words have different meanings to different people. Receivers will use their definition of words communicated, which may be different from what the sender intended. Nonverbal Body language or intonation that sends the receiver another Cues message. When the two are not aligned, communication is distorted.

Irwin/McGraw-Hill [Modified by EvS] Mgt Communication Barriers Perceptual Using words that are misinterpreted by others ex.) Ford released a truck called “Fiera” into Spanish-speaking countries...it meant “ugly old woman” in Spanish! View of Others ex.) Some U.S. managers view their foreign subordinates as being less qualified than their US peers.

Irwin/McGraw-Hill [Modified by EvS] Mgt The Impact of Culture Cultural Values ex.) People in the Middle Eastern countries do not relate to and communicate with one another in a loose, general way as do those in the U.S. Misinterpretation ex.) U.S. managers doing business in Austria often misinterpret the fact that local business people always address them in formal terms...Sir, Mr., Mrs., Miss...

Irwin/McGraw-Hill [Modified by EvS] Mgt U.S. Proverbs Representing Cultural Values ProverbCultural Value Time is money Don’t cry over spilt milk Waste not, want not Early to bed, early to rise, makes- one healthy, wealthy, and wise A stitch in time saves nine If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again Take care of today, and tomorrow will take car of itself

Irwin/McGraw-Hill [Modified by EvS] Mgt U.S. Proverbs Representing Cultural Values ProverbCultural Value Time is moneyTime Thriftiness Don’t cry over spilt milkPracticality Waste not, want notFrugality Early to bed, early to rise, makes-Diligence; one healthy, wealthy, and wisework ethic A stitch in time saves nineTimeliness If at first you don’t succeed,Persistence; try, try againwork ethic Take care of today, andPreparation- tomorrow will take car of itselffor the future

Irwin/McGraw-Hill [Modified by EvS] Mgt Non-Verbal Communication  Rich in meaning / complex –Dress (clothing, physical appearance) –Proxemics (use of physical space) –Paralinguistics (language forms; qualities, volume, pitch, hesitations) –Kinesics / body language (gestures, expressions, body movements, posture) –Haptics: (touching; pat, handshake, arm around the shoulder) –Chronemics: (use of time) –Chronomics (use of colors) –Iconics: (use of physical objects: e.g. trophies, decorating style) See Table 8-7, p. 211

Irwin/McGraw-Hill [Modified by EvS] Mgt Achieving Communication Effectiveness NEED TO: Improve Feedback Systems Provide Language Training Provide Cultural Training Increase Flexibility and Co- operation

Irwin/McGraw-Hill [Modified by EvS] Mgt Footware International  Contentious society –Extremists?  John Carlson –One of only 4 foreigners working for company  Mgr. of Production, marketing, and sales  All employees in Development and marketing department were Moslem

Irwin/McGraw-Hill [Modified by EvS] Mgt

Irwin/McGraw-Hill [Modified by EvS] Mgt

Irwin/McGraw-Hill [Modified by EvS] Mgt