Organizational Behavior by Mcshane, S. (8th edition) a summary
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Organizational Behavior
Chapter 9
Communicating in teams and organizations
Communication: the process by which information is transmitted and understood between two or more people.
Communication flows through one or more channels (also called media) between the sender and receiver.
The sender forms a message and encodes it.
The encoded message is transmitted to the intended receiver.
The receiver senses and decodes the incoming message into something meaningful.
In most situations, the sender looks for evidence that the other person received and understood the transmitted message.
Communication is not a free-flowing conduit, the transmission of meaning from one person to another is hampered by noise.
Influences on effective encoding and decoding
Effective communication depends on the sender’s and receiver’s ability, motivation, role clarity, and situational support to efficiently and accurately encode and decode information.
Four main factors influence the effectiveness of the encoding-decoding process
Two main types of channels
Problems with email and other digital message channels
Four top complaints:
Workplace communication through social media
Social media are more conversational and reciprocally interactive between sender and receiver, resulting in a sense of community.
Each type of social media serves a unique combination of functions.
Enterprise social media can improve knowledge sharing and socializing among employees under some conditions.
Many social media platforms enable feedback, which potentially gives employee more voice.
Nonverbal communication
Nonverbal communication is necessary when noise or physical distance prevents effective verbal exchanges and the need for immediate feedback precludes written communication.
Nonverbal cues signal subtle information to both parties.
Nonverbal communication differs from verbal communication in a couple of ways
Emotional contagion
Emotional contagion: the nonconscious process of ‘catching’ or sharing another person’s emotions by mimicking that person’s facial expressions and other nonverbal emotions.
Emotional contagion influences communication and social relationships in three ways
Synchronicity
Synchronicity: the extent to which the channel requires or allows both sender and receiver to be actively involved in the conversation at the same time (synchronous) or at different times (asynchronous)
Synchronous communication is better when:
Asynchronous communication is better when:
Social presence
Social presence: the extent to which a communication channel creates psychological closeness to others, awareness of their humanness, and appreciation of the interpersonal relationship
A communication channel is valued for its social presence effect when the purpose of the dialogue is to understand and empathize with the other person or group.
Social acceptance
How well the communication medium is approved and supported by the organization, teams, and individuals involved in the exchange.
Factors:
Media richness
Media richness: a medium’s data-carrying capacity, the volume and variety of information that can be transmitted during a specific time.
Rich media are better than lean media when the communication situation is nonroutine and ambiguous.
Lean media work well in routine situations.
Exceptions to the media richness theory
Three factors explain why digital channels may have more media richness than media richness theory predicts
Communication channels and persuasion
Spoken communication is more persuasive than written communication. Three main reasons
Written messages have the advantage of presenting more technical detail.
Language issues can be huge sources of communication noise because sender and receiver might not have the same codebook.
The ambiguity of language isn’t always dysfunctional noise.
Jargon, specialized words and phrases for specific occupations or groups, is usually designed to improve communication efficiency.
It is a source of communication noise when transmitted to people who do not possess the jargon codebook.
Another noise in the communication process is the tendency to filter messages.
Information overload
Information overload: a condition in which the volume of information received exceeds the person’s capacity to process it.
Employees have a certain information-processing capacity. At the same time, jobs have a variating information load.
Information overload problems can be minimized by:
Increasing globalization and cultural diversity have created more cross-cultural communication issues.
Nonverbal differences across cultures
Nonverbal communication represents another potential area for misunderstanding across cultures.
Many nonconscious or involuntary nonverbal cues have the same meaning around the world, but deliberate gestures often have different interpretations.
Gender differences in communication
Men and women have similar communication practices, but there are subtle distinctions that can occasionally lead to misunderstanding and conflict.
Gender differences are modest.
Effective interpersonal communication depends on the sender’s ability to get the message across the receiver’s performance as an active listener.
Getting your message across
If you are communicating bad news or criticism, focus on the problem, not the person.
Active listening
Effective leadership includes active listening.
Three components
Workspace design
Redesigning the workspace and employee territorial practices in that space.
The location of design of areas all shape to whom we speak as well as the frequency of that communication.
Another strategy is to cloister employees into team spaces, but also encourage sufficient interaction with people from other teams.
Internet-based organizational communication
Employees are increasingly skeptical of information that has been screened and packaged by management.
Direct communication with top management
Effective organizational communication includes regular interaction directly between senior executives and employees further down the hierarchy.
Grapevine: an unstructured and informal communication network founded on social relationships rather than organizational charts or job descriptions.
Grapevine characteristics
Grapevine transmits information very rapidly in all directions throughout the organization.
The typical pattern is a cluster chain, whereby a few people actively transmit information to many others.
Grapevine distorts information by deleting fine details and exaggerating key points of the story.
Grapevine benefits and limitations
Benefits:
Limitations
This is a summary of the book Organizational Behavior by Mcshane, S (8th edition). This book is about psychology at the workplace. It contains for instance ways to increase employee satisfaction and workplace dynamics. The book is used in the course 'Labor and and
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communicating sandikames contributed on 20-05-2020 15:42
great articles...
very smart
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