Management of Engineers and Technology Person-to-Person Communication Communicating to an Audience
Principle 4: Communicating Effectively Effective communication is a cornerstone of management Not just delivery – listening and understanding A manager is like a “hub” in a communication network Communication within the group Communication with the outside world
Person-to-Person Communication Face-to-face Telephone Live Voice mail Written Instant messaging Letters/memos Notes
Bad Communication Mistakes Misunderstandings Mistrust People are Offended Uninformed or misinformed Confused Frustrated
Good Communication Informs Facilitates Motivates Persuades People are Aware Confident Productive
Communication Theory Encode Decode Channel Do you need guidance?
When to put it in writing Technical Specifications Drawings Legalese Formal Avoid misunderstanding For the record “If it’s not in writing, it didn’t happen” Whenever editing is an advantage
When to be face-to-face Performance assessment Follow up in writing Rewards/punishment Whenever the richness of face-to-face communication is an advantage
Beyond the Written or Spoken Word “Between the lines” content Tone Emotion Gestures Body language Match – reinforces content Mismatch – puts content into doubt
Good Practices Be the initiator Be a good listener (feedback) Include redundancy Appropriate emotional content Be simple, direct, clear, interesting Be human (anecdotes, humor)
Themes Engineers are not famous for their business communication skills Communication is a cornerstone of good management Communication skills can be learned, practiced, and improved
Communicating to an Audience Purpose (business communication) Pass on information Persuade the audience to believe something Motivate the audience to do something Entertain the audience?
Types of Communication Static Written word Drawings/graphics Dynamic Oral presentation Multimedia
Oral Presentation Skills Have a goal Know your audience Know your time limit Know availability of equipment
Three Most Important Things Preparation
Preparation Keep goal and audience in mind Outline the presentation Know your material Practice in mirror or to audience Critique and modify Find something to get excited about
Presentation Organization Intro-Body-Summary Body Problem or goal statement Background, related material Method used Results Conclusions and recommendations Ask for questions
Shock value/far out Suspense, privileged information Humor Audience participation Props Demonstration Getting Attention
Visual Aids Overheads Common, easy, interactive Some fumbling Computer Projection Effective graphics/sound/video, interactive Uncommon equipment, compatibility, dim Problems are going away
Visual Aids Video Tape Very descriptive, small screen Poor sound, equipment delays, non- interactive 35mm Slides Professional Hard to prepare, equipment problems, dark room, non-interactive
Visual Aids Black/White Board Interactive, history remains, color Time consuming, messy, disorganized, talk into it Flip charts Good ordering, color/graphic, interactive Small, can get messy
Props Three-dimensional visual aids Pass around Touch/feel Add interest Problems Distracting Get dropped/lost
Rules for Overheads/PPT Simple - 6 bullet items or less Good color combinations Readable - ‘at your feet’ rule Consistent style Professional preparation if appropriate Number or order them
Working with Visual Aids Be sure of equipment availability Cover or shut off when not in use Visible to everyone in room Use pointer only when necessary Touch-turn-talk Have a backup
Handling Questions Ask, raise hand, limit number Identify questioner Repeat or rephrase question Keep answer to the point Ask if answer is adequate Don’t be afraid to say “I don’t know”
Personal Habits Don’t use podium, minimize pointer Keep focus on speaker Look good but don’t distract Effective hand gestures, no fidgeting Speak to audience, project (microphones) Eye contact
Working Within Time Limits Difficult to do Count number of visuals Watch the clock Have a ‘helper’ in the audience Practice to determine time
On Presentation Day Look good Visit room, check equipment Be introduced (or introduce yourself) Review your presentation Remind yourself of presentation skills Be confident!
Things to Remember Intro/body/summary Touch-turn-talk Eye contact Body language Vocal projection Question handling
Summary Oral presentations are very important in business You are competing for a very busy communication channel, and with internal thoughts The audience is the customer, so be audience-oriented