Search
Recommended Products
Related Links


 

 

Informative Articles

Buying New Construction...How Do I Begin?
The prospect of shopping for a new construction residence can be quite daunting, but the rewards of owning a brand new home out-weight the disadvantages if you know the potential pitfalls. The following are important considerations: Overall Dollar...

Global communications enhance offshore incorporation
With the advent of global communications come many opportunities to expand and enhance your business, never before have we had the ability to do so much from so far. Modern communications methods and offsourcing are part and parcel of many...

Is Your Communication Causing You Problems At Work?
Is Your Communication Causing You Problems at Work or Home? It's said that in life we get what we communicate. We think all of our communication is with words when in reality only 7% is the words we use! Tone of voice is 38% and the rest, 55% is...

Powerful Tips to Improve Communication with Your Boss
One of the loudest, longest complaints that folks have concerning their work often focuses around their relationship with their boss. After years -- why even decades -- pass by and the details of the everyday aspects of the job are a neutral memory,...

Professional Transcription and Your Business
Got stacks of audio tapes that need to be converted to a more user-friendly format? Professional transcription services may be the answer. Professional transcriptionists can take standard or micro cassette tapes and produce a typed...

 
from our sponsors
Internet Home Business Training Course
First Name:

Email Address:


Your privacy is safe.

Click Here To Tell A Friend
Dialogue: The Four Dialogic Principles For Successful Communication


"But you don't understand!" exclaimed the manager, "this new initiative is vital for our team. If it doesn't work we could all be out of a job!"

"Uh-huh... Really... Explain to me again how this new initiative is so different from previous initiatives that were also going to cost me my job if they didn't work" asked the long-term employee.

"Look; we have to do this. Can't you see?"

"Why do we have to do this? No-one has explained to me yet 'why'."

And therein lies the fundamental problem of most management initiatives. They leave one small, seemingly insignificant cog unattended—letting the person at the 'sharp end' know why a new initiative has been launched and what their own personal role is expected to be.

Even those companies who do let the employees know the what and why very often fail to elicit anything other than tacit compliance and eventual failure of the initiative.

The reason is simple—the employees are given no part in the discussion about why a new initiative is needed, the business case for it, what shape the initiative should take to meet the business need, and what their individual role and responsibility is in order to bring the initiative to a successful conclusion.

At the heart of the issue lies communication:

Successful communication is not a one-to-one or one-to-many transaction, but a dialogue between interested parties

...and successful dialogues rely on four principles: Reality, Reaction, Co-ordination and Purposefulness.

1. Being real

"Do not say things. What you are stands over you the while, and thunders so that I cannot hear what you say to the contrary" Charles Darwin, 1859.

For employees (and customers, too!) 'reality' will be those things that most directly affect them. Yes, 'reality' is a perceptive subjectivity, but don't expect someone to change their perception of 'reality' just because you have a different viewpoint.

Internal and external customers of your communication are extremely adapt at seeing 'beyond the rhetoric', at exploiting any gap between rhetoric and their 'reality'.

If you are going to promise something, even just manage an expectation, ensure that what you are promising or managing is actually deliverable in the vast majority of instances.

2. React to what is said

How many managers or salespeople have we ourselves had to endure who listened politely to what you say, nodded their head and gave assuring "ah ha's" even, yet completely and utterly fail to act on what you have said? How many times have such interactions left you feeling like you had just spoken to a smiling and amiable wall?

Dialogue is not dialogue if the other person or persons don't react or show they actually understood what you said.

3. Co-ordinate your communication

Too often the communication is 'lost' on the recipients because the language used is jargon, or their are just too many implicit and explicit messages. Given a hundred different messages, which one should the recipient attend to first? Second? Last?

All communication should be in harmony to the strategic framework—that is, the vision and the support documentation—so that it responds to the vision, objectives and values; so that the links between the vision and the messages are clear; and so that the

CONTINUE BELOW...




Didn't Find What You Were Looking For?
Try a Specialized Search HERE



MOST RECENT ARTICLES
Article Dashboard: Self Improvement | Motivation
Motivation articles from Article Dashboard

Make Easy Money In Spite of The Economic Downturn Posted By : Cheryl Janecky
Are You Trading Getting Rich, For "Treats" You Want In The Moment? Although it may feel like youre speeding through life and everything is beyond your control - it's not. Change your mind and everything changes. Build a new wealthy habit today. Change begins with a new understanding. You can make easy money no matter what the financial conditions - it's all about your mind-set and choices. Without it - nothing you can do will work. Begin now to create a financially secure future.
Learn How to Boost Employee Motivation Posted By : Lucile Taylor
There is no single solution to increase employee motivation simply because what motivates one person may not be the same for another. Hence, if you are a business manager or a human resource manager, it is important that you identify first what factors motivate each of your employees.
Mastering Your Mind Power - Overcoming Fear Posted By : Former Retiree
The overcoming of fear is not as difficult as it might sound, and I am not suggesting that you overcome all of your fears. Remember, some of them may be so deep seated that the services of a qualified, professional therapist might be required.
Two Powerful Books That Give The Best Motivational and Inspirational Tips Pos...
One way or another, we all come to a point in life when things just start becoming mundane, questioning just what we are doing with our lives, reaching up to this point. If you happen to be asking such questions, then it is safe to say that you have come to a point in life when you simply have lost the drive, the motivation, to live on.
Please pause for this interruption Posted By : Rhonda Scharf (Finniss), CSP
In this article Rhonda Scharf describes what interrupting habit is and gives some tips on how we can break this habit. Stop your sentence mid-stream and apologize for being rude when you cut someone off. Ask for help from your loved ones. Place a sign on your phone desk and other places of your workspace and home that has some positive message. Count how many times a day you interrupt others. Set the goal daily until you can get to the point where you are not interrupting anyone.

Newsfeed display by CaRP
CONTINUE HERE...


language used is common to all stakeholders.

4. Understanding the purpose of the message

Before even beginning a communication process, it is vital to understand what the customer or employee knows and feels about you and the ideas you represent. Knowing this helps you decide the purpose of the message.

Akin to Maslow's psychological heirarchy, there are four levels of purpose, each of which pre-supposes and relies on the existence of the previous level. They are sequential and it is not possible to achieve an objective until all levels are completed, in order and fully.

The levels, in ascending order are:

Awareness > Understanding > Conviction > Action

4.1: Awareness

Let's take as an example a company attempting to differentiate itself in the marketplace, with the end goal of bringing someone to make a purchase of their service.

Without bringing your existence to the attention of the prospective customer you cannot move on to the higher levels. Indeed, even internal communications often fall short on this point: they fail to restate the context of the communication, which is in effect 'awareness'.

4.2: Understanding

Once a prospect has gained awareness, they are then ready to move on to understanding what it is that differentiates you from the 'noise' of your competitors. They will need to understand what specific qualities YOU bring to the marketplace.

This level is vital to internal communication: the biggest block I come across in assessing why an internal communication has failed is not that the staff don't know 'what' is going on, but that they don't understand 'why' it is going on.

4.3: Conviction

Customers now have awareness and understanding; they now need convincing that your service is right for them.

Even more importantly, they must be convinced that YOU must be their supplier, because YOU have a distinctive competence that meets THEIR specific needs.

4.4: Action

Finally, this conviction in you must be turned into action. It is up to you to decide what action they should ideally take -— a phone call into a sales office, perhaps, or a request for a consultant to visit; even a request for further supporting literature.

In internal communication the primary level is all to obvious —- action. Yet unless those who are to deliver the service are made aware, helped to understand and are convinced they will not deliver effectively or efficiently.

Conclusion

At the heart of all management lies communication, and successful communication is not a one-to-many transaction, but a dialogue between interested parties. Successful dialogues rely on four principles: Reality, Reaction, Co-ordination and Purposefulness.

Understanding what the other's 'reality' is, giving and receiving appropriate reactions to feedback, co-ordinating coherent messages and understand the purpose of each message are the four key principles for successful communication.

Lee Hopkins is a management psychologist, marketer and author of over 50 articles and ebooks on how to communicate better for better business results. Subscribe to his monthly newsletter at www.hopkins-business-communication-training.com