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ninth edition

                                STEPHEN P. ROBBINS          MARY COULTER




                             Chapter
                                       Communication
                             11        and Information
                                       Technology

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc.                           PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook
All rights reserved.                                         The University of West Alabama
LEARNING OUTLINE
Follow this Learning Outline as you read and study this chapter.

   Understanding Communications
     • Differentiate between interpersonal and organizational
       communication.
     • Discuss the functions of communication.
   The Process of Interpersonal Communications
     • Explain all the components of the communication process.
     • List the communication methods managers might use.
     • Describe nonverbal communication and how it takes
       place.
     • Explain the barriers to effective interpersonal
       communication and how to overcome them.
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                        11–2
L E A R N I N G O U T L I N E (cont’d)
Follow this Learning Outline as you read and study this chapter.

  Organizational Communication
     • Explain how communication can flow in an organization.
     • Describe the three common communication networks.
     • Discuss how managers should handle the grapevine.

  Understanding Information Technology
     • Describe how technology affects managerial
       communication.
     • Define e-mail, instant messaging, blogs and wikis, voice-
       mail, fax, EDI, teleconferencing, videoconferencing, web
       conferencing, intranet, and extranet.
    • Explain how information technology affects
© 2007organizations. All rights
       Prentice Hall, Inc.
reserved.                                        11–3
L E A R N I N G O U T L I N E (cont’d)
Follow this Learning Outline as you read and study this chapter.

   Communication Issues in Today’s Organization
     • Discuss the challenges of managing communication in an
       Internet world.
     • Explain how organizations can manage knowledge.
     • Explain why communicating with customers is an
       important managerial issue.
     • Explain how political correctness is affecting
       communication.




© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                         11–4
What Is Communication?
• Communication
     The transfer and understanding of meaning.
         Transfer means the message was received in a form that can
          be interpreted by the receiver.
         Understanding the message is not the same as the receiver
          agreeing with the message.
     Interpersonal Communication
           Communication between two or more people
     Organizational Communication
           All the patterns, network, and systems of communications
            within an organization



© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                            11–5
Four Functions of Communication



           Control
           Control                             Motivation
                                               Motivation



                               Functions of
                                Functions of
                              Communication
                              Communication


                                               Emotional
                                                Emotional
         Information
          Information                          Expression
                                               Expression

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                      11–6
Functions of Communication
• Control
     Formal and informal communications act to control
      individuals’ behaviors in organizations.
• Motivation
     Communications clarify for employees what is to
      done, how well they have done it, and what can be
      done to improve performance.




© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                 11–7
Functions of Communication (cont’d)
• Emotional Expression
     Social interaction in the form of work group
      communications provides a way for employees to
      express themselves.
• Information
     Individuals and work groups need information to
      make decisions or to do their work.




© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                  11–8
Interpersonal Communication
• Message
     Source: sender’s intended meaning
• Encoding
     The message converted to symbolic form
• Channel
     The medium through which the message travels
• Decoding
     The receiver’s retranslation of the message
• Noise
     Disturbances that interfere with communications

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                  11–9
Exhibit 11–1 The Interpersonal Communication Process




© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                       11–10
Distortions in Communications
• Message Encoding
     The effect of the skills, attitudes, and knowledge of
      the sender on the process of encoding the message
     The social-cultural system of the sender
• The Message
     Symbols used to convey the message’s meaning
     The content of the message itself
     The choice of message format
     Noise interfering with the message

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                   11–11
Distortions in Communications (cont’d)
• The Channel
     The sender’s choice of the appropriate channel or
      multiple channels for conveying the message
• Receiver
     The effect of skills, attitudes, and knowledge of the
      receiver on the process of decoding the message
     The social-cultural system of the receiver
• Feedback Loop
     Communication channel distortions affecting the
      return message from receiver to sender

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                    11–12
Interpersonal Communication Methods
•   Face-to-face                        •   Hotlines
•   Telephone                           •   E-mail
•   Group meetings                      •   Computer conferencing
•   Formal presentations                •   Voice mail
•   Memos                               •   Teleconferences
•   Traditional Mail                    •   Videoconferences
•   Fax machines
•   Employee publications
•   Bulletin boards
•   Audio- and videotapes

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                            11–13
Evaluating Communication Methods
• Feedback                              • Time-space constraint
• Complexity capacity                   • Cost
• Breadth potential                     • Interpersonal warmth
• Confidentiality                       • Formality
• Encoding ease                         • Scanability
• Decoding ease                         • Time consumption




© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                         11–14
Exhibit 11–2 Comparison of Communication Methods




  Note: Ratings are on a 1–5 scale where 1 = high and 5 = low. Consumption time refers to who
  controls the reception of communication. S/R means the sender and receiver share control.




© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
Source: P. G. Clampitt, Communicating for Managerial Effectiveness (Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications, 1991), p. 136.
reserved.                                                                                                       11–15
Interpersonal Communication (cont’d)
• Nonverbal Communication
     Communication that is transmitted without words.
           Sounds with specific meanings or warnings
           Images that control or encourage behaviors
           Situational behaviors that convey meanings
           Clothing and physical surroundings that imply status
     Body language: gestures, facial expressions, and
      other body movements that convey meaning.
     Verbal intonation: emphasis that a speaker gives to
      certain words or phrases that conveys meaning.

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                           11–16
Interpersonal Communication Barriers

                                    Filtering
           National
           Culture                               Emotions




  Language                       Interpersonal        Information
                                Communication           Overload




                                 Defensiveness

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                         11–17
Barriers to Effective Interpersonal
Communication
• Filtering
     The deliberate manipulation of information to make it
      appear more favorable to the receiver.
• Emotions
     Disregarding rational and objective thinking processes
      and substituting emotional judgments when
      interpreting messages.
• Information Overload
     Being confronted with a quantity of information that
      exceeds an individual’s capacity to process it.
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                    11–18
Barriers to Effective Interpersonal
Communication (cont’d)
• Defensiveness
     When threatened, reacting in a way that reduces the
      ability to achieve mutual understanding.
• Language
     The different meanings of and specialized ways
      (jargon) in which senders use words can cause
      receivers to misinterpret their messages.
• National Culture
     Culture influences the form, formality, openness,
      patterns and use of information in communications.
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                  11–19
Overcoming the Barriers to Effective
Interpersonal Communications



                                                • Use Feedback
                                            • Simplify Language
                                                • Listen Actively
                                           • Constrain Emotions
                                        • Watch Nonverbal Cues

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                         11–20
Exhibit 11–3 Active Listening Behaviors




© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
Source: Based on P.L. Hunsaker, Training in Management
Skills (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2001).
reserved.                                                11–21
Types of Organizational Communication
• Formal Communication
     Communication that follows the official chain of
      command or is part of the communication required to
      do one’s job.
• Informal Communication
     Communication that is not defined by the
      organization’s hierarchy.
           Permits employees to satisfy their need for social interaction.
           Can improve an organization’s performance by creating
            faster and more effective channels of communication.


© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                               11–22
Communication Flows




                                              iD
                     U                      oga    D
                     p                  l an       o
                     w     Lateral                 w
                     a                             n
                                                   w
                     r                             a
                     d                             r
                                                   d




© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                          11–23
Direction of Communication Flow
• Downward
     Communications that flow from managers to
      employees to inform, direct, coordinate, and evaluate
      employees.
• Upward
     Communications that flow from employees up to
      managers to keep them aware of employee needs
      and how things can be improved to create a climate
      of trust and respect.




© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                   11–24
Direction of Communication Flow
(cont’d)
• Lateral (Horizontal) Communication
     Communication that takes place among employees
      on the same level in the organization to save time and
      facilitate coordination.
• Diagonal Communication
     Communication that cuts across both work areas and
      organizational levels in the interest of efficiency and
      speed.



© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                    11–25
Types of Communication Networks
• Chain Network
     Communication flows according to the formal chain of
      command, both upward and downward.
• Wheel Network
     All communication flows in and out through the group
      leader (hub) to others in the group.
• All-Channel Network
     Communications flow freely among all members of
      the work team.



© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                  11–26
Exhibit 11–4 Three Common Organizational Communication Networks
             and How They Rate on Effectiveness Criteria




© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                      11–27
The Grapevine
• An informal organizational communication
  network that is active in almost every
  organization.
     Provides a channel for issues not suitable for formal
      communication channels.
     The impact of information passed along the grapevine
      can be countered by open and honest communication
      with employees.




© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                  11–28
Understanding Information Technology
• Benefits of Information Technology (IT)
     Increased ability to monitor individual and team
      performance
     Better decision making based on more complete
      information
     More collaboration and
      sharing of information
     Greater accessibility
      to coworkers




© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                  11–29
Information Technology (cont’d)
• Networked Computer                    • E-mail
  Systems                               • Instant messaging (IM)
     Linking individual
                                        • Blogs
      computers to create an
      organizational network for        • Wikis
      communication and                 • Voice-mail
      information sharing.
                                        • Fax machines
                                        • Electronic Data Exchange
                                          (EDI)
                                        • Teleconferencing
                                        • Videoconferencing
                                        • Web conferencing
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                          11–30
Information Technology (cont’d)
• Types of Network Systems
     Intranet
           An internal network that uses Internet
            technology and is accessible only to
            employees.
     Extranet
           An internal network that uses Internet
            technology and allows authorized users
            inside the organization to communicate
            with certain outsiders such as customers
            and vendors.
     Wireless (WIFI) capabilities


© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                              11–31
How IT Affects Organization
• Removes the constraints of time and distance
     Allows widely dispersed employees to work together.
• Provides for the sharing of information
     Increases effectiveness and efficiency.
• Integrates decision making and work
     Provides more complete information and participation
      for better decisions.
• Creates problems of constant accessibility to
  employees
     Blurs the line between work and personal lives.

© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                   11–32
Current Communication Issues
• Managing Communication in an Internet World
     Legal and security issues
         Inappropriate use of company e-mail and instant messaging
         Loss of confidential and proprietary information due to
          inadvertent or deliberate dissemination or to hackers.
     Lack of personal interaction
         Being connected is not the same as face-to-face contact.
         Difficulties occur in achieving understanding and
          collaboration in virtual environements.




© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                          11–33
Current Communication Issues
• Being connected versus being concerned
     Managing Internet gripe sites as a valuable resource
      for unique insights into the organization.
         Employee complaints (“hot-button” issues)
         Customer complaints

     Responding to Internet gripe sites
         Recognized them as a valuable source of information.
         Post messages that clarify misinformation.
         Take action to correct problems noted on the site.
         Set up an internal gripe site.
         Continue to monitor the public gripe site.




© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                             11–34
Current Communication Issues (cont’d)
• Managing the Organization’s Knowledge
  Resources
     Build online information databases that employees
      can access.
     Create “communities of practice” for groups of people
      who share a concern, share expertise, and interact
      with each other.




© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                  11–35
Communication and Customer Service
• Communicating Effectively with Customers
     Recognize the three components of the customer
      service delivery process:
         The customer
         The service organization
         The service provider

     Develop a strong service culture focused on the
      personalization of service to each customer.
         Listen and respond to the customer.
         Provide access to needed service information.




© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                          11–36
“Politically Correct” Communication
• Do not use words or phrases that stereotype,
  intimidate, or offend individuals based on their
  differences.
• However, choose words carefully to maintain as
  much clarity as possible in communications.




© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                               11–37
Terms to Know
 • communication                        •   body language
 • interpersonal                        •   verbal intonation
   communication                        •   filtering
 • organizational                       •   selective perception
   communication                        •   information overload
 • message                              •   jargon
 • encoding                             •   active listening
 • channel                              •   formal communication
 • decoding                             •   informal communication
 • communication process                •   downward communication
 • noise                                •   upward communication
 • nonverbal communication
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                           11–38
Terms to Know (cont’d)
•  lateral communication                •   teleconferencing
•  diagonal communication               •   videoconferencing
•  communication networks               •   web conferencing
•  grapevine                            •   intranet
•  e-mail                               •   extranet
•  instant messaging (IM)               •   communities of practice
•  blog
•  wiki
•  voice mail
•  fax
•  electronic data
   interchange (EDI)
© 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights
reserved.                                             11–39

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Robbins9 ppt11

  • 1. ninth edition STEPHEN P. ROBBINS MARY COULTER Chapter Communication 11 and Information Technology © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. PowerPoint Presentation by Charlie Cook All rights reserved. The University of West Alabama
  • 2. LEARNING OUTLINE Follow this Learning Outline as you read and study this chapter. Understanding Communications • Differentiate between interpersonal and organizational communication. • Discuss the functions of communication. The Process of Interpersonal Communications • Explain all the components of the communication process. • List the communication methods managers might use. • Describe nonverbal communication and how it takes place. • Explain the barriers to effective interpersonal communication and how to overcome them. © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–2
  • 3. L E A R N I N G O U T L I N E (cont’d) Follow this Learning Outline as you read and study this chapter. Organizational Communication • Explain how communication can flow in an organization. • Describe the three common communication networks. • Discuss how managers should handle the grapevine. Understanding Information Technology • Describe how technology affects managerial communication. • Define e-mail, instant messaging, blogs and wikis, voice- mail, fax, EDI, teleconferencing, videoconferencing, web conferencing, intranet, and extranet. • Explain how information technology affects © 2007organizations. All rights Prentice Hall, Inc. reserved. 11–3
  • 4. L E A R N I N G O U T L I N E (cont’d) Follow this Learning Outline as you read and study this chapter. Communication Issues in Today’s Organization • Discuss the challenges of managing communication in an Internet world. • Explain how organizations can manage knowledge. • Explain why communicating with customers is an important managerial issue. • Explain how political correctness is affecting communication. © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–4
  • 5. What Is Communication? • Communication  The transfer and understanding of meaning.  Transfer means the message was received in a form that can be interpreted by the receiver.  Understanding the message is not the same as the receiver agreeing with the message.  Interpersonal Communication  Communication between two or more people  Organizational Communication  All the patterns, network, and systems of communications within an organization © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–5
  • 6. Four Functions of Communication Control Control Motivation Motivation Functions of Functions of Communication Communication Emotional Emotional Information Information Expression Expression © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–6
  • 7. Functions of Communication • Control  Formal and informal communications act to control individuals’ behaviors in organizations. • Motivation  Communications clarify for employees what is to done, how well they have done it, and what can be done to improve performance. © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–7
  • 8. Functions of Communication (cont’d) • Emotional Expression  Social interaction in the form of work group communications provides a way for employees to express themselves. • Information  Individuals and work groups need information to make decisions or to do their work. © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–8
  • 9. Interpersonal Communication • Message  Source: sender’s intended meaning • Encoding  The message converted to symbolic form • Channel  The medium through which the message travels • Decoding  The receiver’s retranslation of the message • Noise  Disturbances that interfere with communications © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–9
  • 10. Exhibit 11–1 The Interpersonal Communication Process © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–10
  • 11. Distortions in Communications • Message Encoding  The effect of the skills, attitudes, and knowledge of the sender on the process of encoding the message  The social-cultural system of the sender • The Message  Symbols used to convey the message’s meaning  The content of the message itself  The choice of message format  Noise interfering with the message © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–11
  • 12. Distortions in Communications (cont’d) • The Channel  The sender’s choice of the appropriate channel or multiple channels for conveying the message • Receiver  The effect of skills, attitudes, and knowledge of the receiver on the process of decoding the message  The social-cultural system of the receiver • Feedback Loop  Communication channel distortions affecting the return message from receiver to sender © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–12
  • 13. Interpersonal Communication Methods • Face-to-face • Hotlines • Telephone • E-mail • Group meetings • Computer conferencing • Formal presentations • Voice mail • Memos • Teleconferences • Traditional Mail • Videoconferences • Fax machines • Employee publications • Bulletin boards • Audio- and videotapes © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–13
  • 14. Evaluating Communication Methods • Feedback • Time-space constraint • Complexity capacity • Cost • Breadth potential • Interpersonal warmth • Confidentiality • Formality • Encoding ease • Scanability • Decoding ease • Time consumption © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–14
  • 15. Exhibit 11–2 Comparison of Communication Methods Note: Ratings are on a 1–5 scale where 1 = high and 5 = low. Consumption time refers to who controls the reception of communication. S/R means the sender and receiver share control. © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights Source: P. G. Clampitt, Communicating for Managerial Effectiveness (Newbury Park, CA: Sage Publications, 1991), p. 136. reserved. 11–15
  • 16. Interpersonal Communication (cont’d) • Nonverbal Communication  Communication that is transmitted without words.  Sounds with specific meanings or warnings  Images that control or encourage behaviors  Situational behaviors that convey meanings  Clothing and physical surroundings that imply status  Body language: gestures, facial expressions, and other body movements that convey meaning.  Verbal intonation: emphasis that a speaker gives to certain words or phrases that conveys meaning. © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–16
  • 17. Interpersonal Communication Barriers Filtering National Culture Emotions Language Interpersonal Information Communication Overload Defensiveness © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–17
  • 18. Barriers to Effective Interpersonal Communication • Filtering  The deliberate manipulation of information to make it appear more favorable to the receiver. • Emotions  Disregarding rational and objective thinking processes and substituting emotional judgments when interpreting messages. • Information Overload  Being confronted with a quantity of information that exceeds an individual’s capacity to process it. © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–18
  • 19. Barriers to Effective Interpersonal Communication (cont’d) • Defensiveness  When threatened, reacting in a way that reduces the ability to achieve mutual understanding. • Language  The different meanings of and specialized ways (jargon) in which senders use words can cause receivers to misinterpret their messages. • National Culture  Culture influences the form, formality, openness, patterns and use of information in communications. © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–19
  • 20. Overcoming the Barriers to Effective Interpersonal Communications • Use Feedback • Simplify Language • Listen Actively • Constrain Emotions • Watch Nonverbal Cues © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–20
  • 21. Exhibit 11–3 Active Listening Behaviors © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights Source: Based on P.L. Hunsaker, Training in Management Skills (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 2001). reserved. 11–21
  • 22. Types of Organizational Communication • Formal Communication  Communication that follows the official chain of command or is part of the communication required to do one’s job. • Informal Communication  Communication that is not defined by the organization’s hierarchy.  Permits employees to satisfy their need for social interaction.  Can improve an organization’s performance by creating faster and more effective channels of communication. © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–22
  • 23. Communication Flows iD U oga D p l an o w Lateral w a n w r a d r d © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–23
  • 24. Direction of Communication Flow • Downward  Communications that flow from managers to employees to inform, direct, coordinate, and evaluate employees. • Upward  Communications that flow from employees up to managers to keep them aware of employee needs and how things can be improved to create a climate of trust and respect. © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–24
  • 25. Direction of Communication Flow (cont’d) • Lateral (Horizontal) Communication  Communication that takes place among employees on the same level in the organization to save time and facilitate coordination. • Diagonal Communication  Communication that cuts across both work areas and organizational levels in the interest of efficiency and speed. © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–25
  • 26. Types of Communication Networks • Chain Network  Communication flows according to the formal chain of command, both upward and downward. • Wheel Network  All communication flows in and out through the group leader (hub) to others in the group. • All-Channel Network  Communications flow freely among all members of the work team. © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–26
  • 27. Exhibit 11–4 Three Common Organizational Communication Networks and How They Rate on Effectiveness Criteria © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–27
  • 28. The Grapevine • An informal organizational communication network that is active in almost every organization.  Provides a channel for issues not suitable for formal communication channels.  The impact of information passed along the grapevine can be countered by open and honest communication with employees. © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–28
  • 29. Understanding Information Technology • Benefits of Information Technology (IT)  Increased ability to monitor individual and team performance  Better decision making based on more complete information  More collaboration and sharing of information  Greater accessibility to coworkers © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–29
  • 30. Information Technology (cont’d) • Networked Computer • E-mail Systems • Instant messaging (IM)  Linking individual • Blogs computers to create an organizational network for • Wikis communication and • Voice-mail information sharing. • Fax machines • Electronic Data Exchange (EDI) • Teleconferencing • Videoconferencing • Web conferencing © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–30
  • 31. Information Technology (cont’d) • Types of Network Systems  Intranet  An internal network that uses Internet technology and is accessible only to employees.  Extranet  An internal network that uses Internet technology and allows authorized users inside the organization to communicate with certain outsiders such as customers and vendors.  Wireless (WIFI) capabilities © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–31
  • 32. How IT Affects Organization • Removes the constraints of time and distance  Allows widely dispersed employees to work together. • Provides for the sharing of information  Increases effectiveness and efficiency. • Integrates decision making and work  Provides more complete information and participation for better decisions. • Creates problems of constant accessibility to employees  Blurs the line between work and personal lives. © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–32
  • 33. Current Communication Issues • Managing Communication in an Internet World  Legal and security issues  Inappropriate use of company e-mail and instant messaging  Loss of confidential and proprietary information due to inadvertent or deliberate dissemination or to hackers.  Lack of personal interaction  Being connected is not the same as face-to-face contact.  Difficulties occur in achieving understanding and collaboration in virtual environements. © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–33
  • 34. Current Communication Issues • Being connected versus being concerned  Managing Internet gripe sites as a valuable resource for unique insights into the organization.  Employee complaints (“hot-button” issues)  Customer complaints  Responding to Internet gripe sites  Recognized them as a valuable source of information.  Post messages that clarify misinformation.  Take action to correct problems noted on the site.  Set up an internal gripe site.  Continue to monitor the public gripe site. © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–34
  • 35. Current Communication Issues (cont’d) • Managing the Organization’s Knowledge Resources  Build online information databases that employees can access.  Create “communities of practice” for groups of people who share a concern, share expertise, and interact with each other. © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–35
  • 36. Communication and Customer Service • Communicating Effectively with Customers  Recognize the three components of the customer service delivery process:  The customer  The service organization  The service provider  Develop a strong service culture focused on the personalization of service to each customer.  Listen and respond to the customer.  Provide access to needed service information. © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–36
  • 37. “Politically Correct” Communication • Do not use words or phrases that stereotype, intimidate, or offend individuals based on their differences. • However, choose words carefully to maintain as much clarity as possible in communications. © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–37
  • 38. Terms to Know • communication • body language • interpersonal • verbal intonation communication • filtering • organizational • selective perception communication • information overload • message • jargon • encoding • active listening • channel • formal communication • decoding • informal communication • communication process • downward communication • noise • upward communication • nonverbal communication © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–38
  • 39. Terms to Know (cont’d) • lateral communication • teleconferencing • diagonal communication • videoconferencing • communication networks • web conferencing • grapevine • intranet • e-mail • extranet • instant messaging (IM) • communities of practice • blog • wiki • voice mail • fax • electronic data interchange (EDI) © 2007 Prentice Hall, Inc. All rights reserved. 11–39