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Munication

The document discusses the significance of communication in organizations, highlighting its definitions, functions, and processes. It emphasizes the importance of effective communication for management and outlines barriers that can hinder it, as well as strategies for improvement. Additionally, it covers the impact of technology on communication and the future trends in organizational communication.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
34 views54 pages

Munication

The document discusses the significance of communication in organizations, highlighting its definitions, functions, and processes. It emphasizes the importance of effective communication for management and outlines barriers that can hinder it, as well as strategies for improvement. Additionally, it covers the impact of technology on communication and the future trends in organizational communication.

Uploaded by

mohasja0320
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Communication in Organizations

M.P.S.Ishari

M.Sc in Management (USJP), BBM (Hons) Spl. in Accountancy & Finance (UOJ),
MAATSL
Assistant Lecturer in Accountancy
Head/Department of Project Management
Advanced Technological Institute (SLIATE)
Kegalle, Sri Lanka

1
Communication is a very basic
activity for human beings
Communication in
Organizations
Organizational Communication

The most challenging task for managers


Contents
 Definition
 Functions of communication
 Importance of communication
 Communication process
 Effective communication
 Forms and types of communication
 Barriers to effective communication
 Communication skills of managers
 Communication in turbulent times
 Future of the communication
Manager in an organization

 78% of the activities


managers do is
Communication

 Out of that 90% is verbal


Communication
What is Communication ?
Communication ?
Process of exchanging ideas, opinions, symbols, data
or information between two or more parties.
The process by which an idea is effectively transferred
from one mind to another.
The process by which people attempt to share meaning
via the transmission of symbolic messages.
The process by which information is exchanged and
understood by two or more people.
Communication- Definitions
 The transfer and understanding of meaning.
(Robbins,2012)

 Communication is the process by which information is


exchanged and understood by two or more people, usually
with the intent to motivate or influence behavior.
(Daft.,2012).

 The process of transmitting information from one person to


another.
(Griffin,2012).
Three important characteristics

Communication involves

 People

 Shared meaning

 Media
Functions of Communication
 Informational role

 Controlling Role

 Motivational Role

 Coordinating Role

 Emotional Role (changing ideas and emotions)


Importance of Communication
Essential for all management functions
 to collect relevant information to make effective decisions
 to inform about the decisions made to the relevant parties for
implementation
 to evaluate , recruitment performance and training and
development of employees
 to division of work and allocating resources effectively
 to give advices and orders to employees
 to motivate employees
 to control
Process of
Communication
Process of Communication
Symbolic Interaction Model

Idea Message Reception Behaviour

Encoding Media Decoding Understanding

Sender Transmission Receiver

Noise

Feedback
Communication Terms
• Communication
– The transfer and understanding of a message between two
or more people.
• Sender
– Establishes a message, encodes the message, and chooses
the channel to send it.
• Receiver
– Decodes the message and provides feedback to the
sender.
Communication Terms
• Encoding
– Converting a message to symbolic form.
• Decoding
– Interpreting a sender’s message.
• Message
– What is communicated.
• Channel
– The medium through which a message travels.
Organizational Communication
Organizational Communication
All the patterns, networks and systems of communication
within an organization

Important aspects of organizational Communication

 Formal Vs Informal Communication


 Direction of communication Flow
 Communication networks
Formal Vs Informal Communication
 Formal Communication refers to communication
that take place within prescribed organizational
work arrangements.

 Informal communication is organizational


communication not defined by the organization’s
structural hierarchy.
(Robbins,2012)
Formal Communication

A means of communication that is


endorsed, and probably controlled
by managers.
Formal Channels of Communication
Superior

Written and verbal reports Written and verbal dissemination


of plans, policies, procedures,
evaluations

Written and verbal Written and verbal


Peers Manager information for Peers
information for
coordination coordination

Written and verbal dissemination


of plans, policies, procedures,
Written and verbal reports
evaluations

Subordinates
Organizational Communication
Direction of Communication
• Downward
– Communication that flows from one level of a group to a
lower level.
• Managers to employees
• Upward
– Communication that flows to a higher level of a group.
• Employees to manager
• Lateral
– Communication among members of the same work group,
or individuals at the same level.
Downward communication
• Job instructions
• Information about job task and its relation
to other organizational tasks
• Information about organizational
procedures and practices
• Feedback information about employee
performance
• Information about mission and goals
Upward communication
• Problems faced by them
• Their job performance
• Attitudes towards organizational policies,
procedures etc.
• Feedback on the downward communication and
so on.
Horizontal communication
• Coordinating the activities of different
departments
• solve interdepartmental problems
• Providing emotional and social support to
employees
• Reducing the strain on vertical communication
channels
Informal communication

 Fulfills the social need of individuals to


communicate with one another.
 Transfer information faster than through
formal communication channels
 Possibility of false rumors to be transmitted
Organizational Communication Net
works
The vertical and horizontal flows of
communication can be combined into a
variety of patterns called communication
network.
 Formal Networks
 Informal networks (Grapevine)
Formal and Informal Communication
Networks in an Organization
Formal Vs Informal Networks
• Connections by which information flow.
– Formal Networks.
• Task-related communications that follow the
authority chain
– Informal Networks.(The Grapevine)
• Communications that flow along social and
relational lines
Formal Communication Networks
Informal Communication
Communication within an organization that is not
officially established.

Ex. Grapevine
The various paths through which informal
communication is passed through an organization.
There are four types:
Single stand, gossip, probability and cluster
The Grapevine/ informal
communication
• 75 percent of employees hear about matters first
through rumours on the grapevine.
• Grapevine has three main characteristics:
– Not controlled by management.
– Most employees perceive it as being more believable and
reliable than formal communiqués issued by top
management.
– Largely used to serve the self-interests of those people
within it.
Grapevine Patterns

Y E C
I
J

K B
G I
C G X
E I
B
F D
B F H
D J
D
K J
C F
C

A B A A A

Single Strand Gossip Probability Cluster


Each tells One tells all Each randomly Some tell
one another tells others selected others

Source: K. Davis and J. W. Newstrom, Human Behavior at Work: Organizational Behavior, 7th ed. (New York: McGraw-Hill, 1985), p. 317. Reprinted by permission.
Effective Communication ?

The effectiveness of communication is


measures by the degree of understanding
and an appropriate response that the
recipient ultimately effect regarding the
message intended by the sender.
Required Conditions for Effective Communication

 The recipient should understand the message as


intended by the sender.
 The recipient should respond and behave in the
manner intended by the sender
 The senders communication objectives should be
realized
 The sender and recipient should be satisfied with regard
to their communication effort.
Why communication is so
crucial ?
 Increasing Competition

 Advancement of Information
Technology

 Recognition of Information as a
strategic resource
Forms of communication
• Written
• Verbal
• Non verbal
Written Versus Verbal
Communications
Written Verbal
 Tangible  Less secure
 Verifiable  Known receipt
 More permanent  Quicker response
 More precise  Consumes less time
 More care is taken  Quicker feedback
with the written
word
Non-verbal Communication

Messages conveyed through body


movements, facial expressions, and the
physical distance between the sender and
the receiver
Sources of non-verbal communication

 Body Language
 Paralanguage
 Interpersonal distance zone
 Color
 Dress
 Physical environment
 Silence
Body Language
• Facial expressions
• Postures
• Movements
• Gestures
• Eye contacts
• Touch
Paralanguage

Voice Quality
Volume
Speech rate
Pitch
Channel Richness
Refers to the capability of the medium of communication to
transmit information including the abilities to;

• Handle different cues simultaneously


• Encourage feedback
• Focus personally on the receiver

E-mail Face to
Formal
Face
report
Verbal

Low High
Channel Channel
Richness Richness

Memos Telephones
Letters

44
Barriers to Effective Communication
 Perceptual barriers,
 Semantic barriers,
 Serial transmission barriers
 Information over load.
 Lack of planning to communication
 Purpose
 Content
 Channel
 Time
 Receiver
 Emotional influences
 Poor communication skills
 Poor attitudes and beliefs
 Poor knowledge of the subject
Barriers to Effective Communication (Cont….)

 Hearing the message with preconceived ideas


 Perceptions about the communicator.
 Premature evaluations
 Large span of controls
 Higher number of levels in the hierarchy
 Geographical dispersion
 Centralization
 Formalization (Bureaucratic rules and regulations)
 Organizational culture
 Defects in channel/media
Barriers to Effective Communication
Categorized into

 Barriers with the sender


 Barriers with the process
 Barriers with the recipient
How To Improve Communication

 Two-way communication
 Careful listening
 Sharing of information aggressively
 Honesty and sincerity
 Appropriate channel selection

 Prior planning
How To Improve Communication(Cont….)
• Use different channels
• Adjust the message to the receiver
• Be mindful when communicating
• Be sure your action support communication
• Follow up your communication
• Use face to face communication wherever possible
• Take the opportunity
• Use direct, simple language
• Reducing span of management
• Cutting down the number of levels of the hierarchy.
• Decentralizing authority
• Etc..
Implications in Communication

 Communication barriers between


women and men?

 Cross-Cultural communication
difficulties
Communication Skills
 Managing conflicts
The use of communication skills and bargaining
to manage conflict and reach mutually satisfying
outcomes

 Empowerment skills

 Negotiation skills
Communication in turbulent
times
 Open communication
 Dialogue
 Crisis communication
 Feedback and learning
Information Technology (IT)
 E-mail
 Instant messaging (IM)
 Voice mail
 Fax
 Electronic data interchange EDI
 Teleconferencing
 Video-conferencing
 Intranets
 Extranets
 Wireless communications
Future of the Communication

 Communication will be more and more crucial in


future
 Advancement of technology changes how we
communicate
 Improvement in communication may even
change the fundamentals of the business world

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