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Copyright © 2012 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Communicating in Teams and Organizations
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8-2 Receiver Encodefeedback Formfeedback Sender Formmessage Encodemessage Transmit Message Transmit Feedback Noise Communication Process Model DecodemessageReceiveencodedmessage DecodefeedbackReceivefeedback
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8-3 Improving Communication Coding/Decoding Both parties have motivation and ability to communicate through the channel Both parties have similar “codebooks” Both parties share similar mental models of the communication context Sender is experienced at communicating the message topic
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8-4 Problems with Email Communicates emotions poorly Reduces politeness and respect (increased cyber bullying) Inefficient for ambiguous, complex, novel situations Increases information overload
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8-5 Emotional Contagion The automatic process of sharing another person’s emotions by mimicking their facial expressions and other nonverbal behavior Serves three purposes: 1. Provides continuous feedback to speaker 2. Increases emotional understanding of the other person’s experience 3. Communicates a collective sentiment -- sharing the experience as part of drive to bond
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8-6 Choosing Channels: Social Acceptance How well the communication channel is approved and supported by others: 1. Communication channel norms 2. Individual communication channel preferences 3. Symbolic meaning of the communication channel
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8-7 Choosing Channels: Media Richness The channel’s data-carrying capacity needs to be aligned with the communication activity High richness when channel: 1. conveys multiple cues 2. allows timely feedback 3. allows customized message 4. permits complex symbols Use rich communication media when the situation is nonroutine and ambiguous
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8-8 Computer-Mediated Exceptions to Media Richness Media richness theory less applicable to computer-mediated media because: Able to multi-communicate through lean channels More varied proficiency levels Less social distraction than with rich channels
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8-9 Persuasive Communication Changing another person’s beliefs and attitudes. Spoken communication is more persuasive because: accompanied by nonverbal communication has high quality immediate feedback has high social presence
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8-10 Managing Information Overload Solution 1: Increase info processing capacity Learn to read faster Scan through documents more efficiently Remove distractions Time management Temporarily work longer hours Solution 2: Reduce information load Buffering Omitting Summarizing
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8-11 Cross-Cultural Communication Verbal differences Language Voice intonation Silence/conversational overlaps Nonverbal differences Interpreting nonverbal meaning Importance of verbal versus nonverbal
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8-12 Gender Communication Differences Men consider more power, status, functionality Report talk Give advice quickly Dominate conversation Women consider more interpersonal relations Rapport talk Indirect advice/requests Sensitive to nonverbal cues
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8-13 ActiveListening Active Listening Process & Strategies Sensing Postpone evaluation Avoid interruptions Maintain interest Evaluating Empathize Organise informationResponding Show interest Clarify the message
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8-14 Communicating in Hierarchies Workspace design Clustering people in teams Open office arrangements Web-based organizational communication Wikis -- collaborative document creation Blogs -- personal news/opinion for sharing E-zines -- rapid distribution of company news Direct communication with management Management by walking around (MBWA) Town hall meetings
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8-15 Grapevine Benefits/Limitations Benefits Fills in missing information from formal sources Strengthens corporate culture Relieves anxiety Signals that problems exist Limitations Distortions might escalate anxiety Perceived lack of concern for employees when company info is slower than grapevine
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