Management 11e John Schermerhorn - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 32
About This Presentation
Title:

Management 11e John Schermerhorn

Description:

Chapter 17: Communication and Interpersonal Skills Author: Susan Verhulst Last modified by: z Created Date: 8/22/1998 10:27:34 PM Document presentation format: – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:269
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 33
Provided by: SusanVe7
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Management 11e John Schermerhorn


1
Management 11e John Schermerhorn
  • Chapter 17
  • Communication and Collaboration

2
Planning Ahead Chapter 17 Study Questions
  • What is the communication process?
  • How can collaboration be improved by better
    communication?
  • How can we deal positively with conflict?
  • How can we negotiate successful agreements?

3
Study Question 1 What is the communication
process?
  • Communication
  • An interpersonal process of sending and receiving
    symbols with messages attached to them
  • Key elements of the communication process
  • Sender
  • Message
  • Communication channel
  • Receiver
  • Interpreted meaning
  • Feedback

4
Figure 17.1 The interactive two-way process of
interpersonal communication
5
Study Question 1 What is the communication
process?
  • Effective and efficient communication
  • Effective communication
  • Occurs when the intended meaning of the sender is
    identical to the interpreted meaning of the
    receiver
  • Efficient communication
  • Occurs at a minimum resource cost
  • Potential trade-offs between effectiveness and
    efficiency must be recognized

6
Study Question 1 What is the communication
process?
  • Persuasion and credibility in communication
  • Communication is used for sharing information and
    influencing other people
  • Persuasion is getting someone else to support the
    message being presented
  • Horizontal structures and empowerment are
    important contexts for persuasion

7
Study Question 1 What is the communication
process?
  • Persuasion and credibility in communication
  • Expert power and referent power are essential for
    persuasion
  • Credibility involves trust, respect, and
    integrity in the eyes of others
  • Credibility can be built through expertise and
    relationships
  • Communication Barrier
  • Information filtering
  • Poor choice of channels
  • Poor written or oral expression
  • Failure to recognize nonverbal signals
  • Physical distractions

8
Study Question 1 What is the communication
process?
  • Information filtering
  • Intentional distortion to make it more favorable
    to the recipient
  • Subordinates may hide unfavorable news from the
    manager or make it sound better than it really is
  • Poor choice of channels
  • Choose the channel that works best
  • Written channels work for messages that
  • Are simple and easy to convey
  • Require extensive dissemination quickly
  • Convey formal policy or authoritative directives
  • Spoken channels work best for messages that
  • Are complex or difficult to convey where
    immediate feedback is needed
  • Attempt to create a supportive, even
    inspirational, climate

9
Study Question 1 What is the communication
process?
10
Study Question 1 What is the communication
process?
  • Failure to recognize nonverbal signals
  • Nonverbal communication takes place through
    gestures, facial expressions, body posture, eye
    contact, and use of interpersonal space
  • Mixed messages occur when a persons words and
    nonverbal signals communicate different things
  • The growing use of communication technologies
    causes important nonverbal communication to be
    lost

11
Study Question 1 What is the communication
process?
  • Physical distractions
  • Include interruptions from telephone calls,
    drop-in visitors, a lack of privacy, etc
  • Can interfere with the effectiveness of a
    communication attempt
  • Can be avoided or at least minimized through
    proper planning
  • Cross-cultural communication
  • Global economy frequently creates the need to
    communicate with colleagues in other countries
    with different cultures
  • Ethnocentrism
  • Tendency to consider ones culture superior to
    any and all others

12
Study Question 2 How can collaboration be
improved by better communication?
  • Effective communication is necessary for
    successful collaboration
  • Reduce noise
  • Overcome communication barriers
  • Improve interpersonal connections
  • Management openness
  • Effective use of electronic media
  • Active listening
  • Feedback

13
Study Question 2 How can collaboration be
improved by better communication?
  • Transparency and openness
  • Communication transparency involves sharing
    honest and complete information about the
    organization and workplace
  • Open book management Managers provide employees
    with important financial information about their
    companies.
  • Ways to keep communication channels open through
    interactive management
  • Management by wandering around (MBWA)
  • Open office hours
  • Regular employee group meetings
  • Computer-mediated meetings and video conferences
  • Employee advisory councils
  • Communication consultants
  • 360-degree feedback

14
Study Question 2 How can collaboration be
improved by better communication?
  • Using electronic media
  • Information technologies facilitate communication
  • The electronic grapevine speeds messages and
    information from person to person
  • Functional if information is accurate and useful
  • Dysfunctional if information is false, distorted,
    or based on rumor
  • E-mail privacy
  • Employers policy on personal e-mail
  • Dont assume that e-mail privacy exists at work
  • Use of communication channels
  • Channel richness is the capacity of a
    communication channel to carry information in an
    effective manner
  • Low channel richness is impersonal, one-way, and
    fast
  • High channel richness is personal, two-way, and
    slow
  • Managers need to choose a channel with the
    appropriate richness for the communication

15
Figure 17.3 Channel richness and the use of
communication media
16
Study Question 2 How can collaboration be
improved by better communication?
17
Study Question 2 How can collaboration be
improved by better communication?
  • Active listening
  • The process of taking action to help someone say
    exactly what he or she really means
  • Rules for active listening
  • Listen for message content
  • Listen for feelings
  • Respond to feelings
  • Note all cues, verbal and nonverbal
  • Paraphrase and restate
  • Five rules for good listening
  • Listen for message content
  • Listen for feelings
  • Respond to feelings
  • Note all cues
  • Paraphrase and restate

18
Study Question 2 How can collaboration be
improved by better communication?
  • Feedback
  • The process of telling others how you feel about
    something they did or said, or about the
    situation in general
  • Constructive feedback guidelines
  • Give it directly
  • Make it specific
  • Give it when the receiver is willing/able to
    accept it
  • Make sure it is valid
  • Give it in small doses

19
Study Question 2 How can collaboration be
improved by better communication?
  • Valuing culture and diversity
  • Ethnocentrism is the tendency to consider ones
    culture superior to any and all others
  • Ethnocentrism can cause people to
  • Not listen to others
  • Address or speak to others in ways that alienate
    them
  • Use inappropriate stereotypes in dealing with
    someone from another culture
  • Space design
  • Proxemics is the use of interpersonal space
  • Interpersonal space is an important nonverbal cue
  • Workspace layout is often overlooked as a form of
    nonverbal communication but is being increasingly
    recognized for its impact on communication and
    behavior

20
Study Question 3 How can we deal positively with
conflict?
  • Conflict
  • A disagreement between people on
  • Substantive issues regarding goals and
    tasks, allocation of resources, distribution of
    rewards, policies and procedures, and job
    assignments
  • Emotional issues arising from feelings of
    anger, distrust, dislike, fear, and resentment,
    as well as personality clashes
  • Conflict that is well managed can help promote
    creativity and high performance
  • Functional conflict Moderately intense
    conflict, Constructive and stimulates people
    toward greater work efforts, cooperation, and
    creativity
  • Dysfunctional conflict Low-intensity and very
    high-intensity conflict
  • Destructive and hurts task performance

21
Figure 17.4 The relationship between conflict and
performance
22
Study Question 3 How can we deal positively with
conflict?
23
Study Question 3 How can we deal positively with
conflict?
  • Peoples conflict management styles reflect
    different combinations of cooperative and
    assertive behavior
  • Cooperativeness is the desire to satisfy the
    other partys needs and concerns
  • Assertiveness is the desire to satisfy ones own
    needs and concerns
  • Conflict management styles
  • Avoidance (withdrawal) Uncooperative and
    unassertive
  • Accommodation (smoothing) Cooperative and
    assertive
  • Competition (authoritative command)
    Uncooperative and assertive
  • Compromise Moderately cooperative and assertive
  • Collaboration (problem solving) Cooperative and
    assertive

24
Figure 17.5 Alternative conflict management
styles
25
Study Question 3 How can we deal positively with
conflict?
  • Conflict management styles

26
Study Question 3 How can we deal positively with
conflict?
  • Structural approaches for resolving conflicts
  • Appealing to higher level goals
  • Making more resources available
  • Changing the people
  • Altering the physical environment
  • Integrative devices for resolving conflicts
  • Using liaison personnel, special task forces,
    cross-functional teams, or a matrix organization
  • Changing reward systems
  • Changing policies and procedures
  • Training in interpersonal skills

27
Study Question 4 How can we negotiate successful
agreements?
  • Negotiation
  • The process of making joint decisions when the
    parties involved have different preferences
  • All negotiation situations are susceptible to
    conflict and require exceptional communication
    and interpersonal skills
  • Negotiation goals and approaches
  • Substance goals Concerned with outcomes , Tied
    to the content issues of negotiation
  • Relationship goals Concerned with processes ,
    Tied to the way people work together
  • Effective negotiations occur when
  • Issues of substance are resolved
  • Working relationships are maintained or improved

28
Study Question 4 How can we negotiate successful
agreements?
  • Criteria for effective negotiation
  • Quality Negotiating a wise agreement that is
    truly satisfactory to all sides
  • Cost Negotiating efficiently, using minimum
    resources and time
  • Harmony Negotiating in a way that fosters
    interpersonal relationships
  • Types of negotiation
  • Distributive negotiation Focuses on claims made
    by each party
  • Leads to win-lose outcomes
  • Principled (or integrative) negotiation Goal is
    to base the outcome on the merits of individual
    claims, Leads to win-win outcomes
  • Gaining integrative agreements Separate the
    people from the problem
  • Focus on interests, not on positions, Generate
    many alternatives before deciding what to do,
    Insist that results are based on some objective
    standard

29
Figure 17.6 The bargaining zone in classic
two-party negotiation
30
Study Question 4 How can we negotiate successful
agreements?
  • Common negotiation pitfalls
  • Falling prey to the myth of the fixed pie
  • Nonrational escalation of conflict
  • Overconfidence and ignoring others needs
  • Too much telling and too little hearing
  • Trap of ethical misconduct

31
Study Question 4 How can we negotiate successful
agreements?
  • Ethical issues in negotiation
  • High ethical standards should be maintained
  • Profit motive and the competitive desire to win
    sometimes lead to unethical behavior
  • Unethical negotiating behavior can lead to
    short-term gains but long-term losses
  • Third-party dispute resolution
  • Mediation
  • Involves a neutral third party who tries to
    improve communication between negotiating parties
    and keep them focused on relevant issues
  • Arbitration
  • Involves a neutral third party who acts as a
    judge and issues a binding decision

32
Chapter 17 Case
  • Twitter An enterprising opportunity
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com