Business Communication Notes
Business Communication Notes
Chapter 1:
Communication is the process of transferring information and meaning between senders and receivers,
using one or more media and communication channels.
Ambition and great ideas aren’t enough; you need to be able to communicate with people to succeed in
business.
These three exchanges between a software project manager (left) and his boss (right) illustrate the
variety of ways in which information is shared between senders and receivers. In the top exchange, the
sender’s meaning is transmitted intact to the receiver, who accepts what the sender says at face value.
In the middle exchange, the sender and receiver negotiate the meaning by discussing the situation. The
negotiated meaning is that everything is fine so far, but the risk of a schedule slip is now higher than it
was before. In the bottom exchange, the receiver has a negative emotional reaction to the word think
and as a result creates her own meaning—that everything probably is not fine, despite what the sender
says.
Professional Communication
Professionalism is the quality of performing at a high level and conducting oneself with purpose and
pride. Professionalism can be broken down into six distinct traits:
striving to excel
being dependable and accountable
being a team player
demonstrating a sense of etiquette
making ethical decisions
maintaining a positive outlook
What employers expect?
Recognizing information needs, using efficient search techniques to locate reliable sources of
information (particularly from online sources), and using gathered information ethically; this
collection of skills is often referred to as digital information fluency9
Organizing ideas and information logically and completely
Expressing ideas and information coherently, persuasively, and concisely
Actively listening to others
Communicating effectively with people from diverse backgrounds and experiences
Using communication technologies effectively and efficiently
Following accepted standards of grammar, spelling, and other aspects of high-quality writing
and speaking
Communicating in a civilized manner that reflects contemporary expectations of business
etiquette, even when dealing with indifferent or hostile audiences
Communicating ethically, even when choices aren’t crystal clear or you have to share news that
people don’t want to hear
Managing your time wisely and using resources efficiently
Using critical thinking, which is the ability to evaluate evidence completely and objectively in
order to form logical conclusions and make sound recommendations.
Every organization has a formal communication network, in which ideas and information flow along
the lines of command (the hierarchical levels) in the company’s organization structure.
Downward communication flows from executives to employees, conveying executive
decisions and providing information that helps employees do their jobs
Upward communication flows from employees to executives, providing insight into
problems, trends, opportunities, grievances, and performance, thus allowing executives to
solve problems and make intelligent decisions
Horizontal communication flows between departments to help employees share
information, coordinate tasks, and solve complex problems
Informal communication network, often referred to as the grapevine or the rumor mill,
which encompasses all communication that occurs outside the formal network.
Viewing communication as a process helps you identify steps you can take to improve your success as a
communicator.
To improve the odds that your messages will be successfully perceived by your audience, pay close
attention to expectations, ease of use, familiarity, empathy, and technical compatibility.
Decoding is a complex process; receivers often extract different meanings from messages than senders
attempt to encode in them.
Selective perception occurs when people ignore or distort incoming information to fit their preconceived
notions of reality. Resolve potential ambiguities.
Shared Experiences:
Audiences will likely respond to a message if they remember it, if they’re able to respond, and if they’re
properly motivated to do so.
The social communication model can increase the speed of communication, reduce costs, improve
access to expertise, and boost employee satisfaction.
Info overload
Lower level of engagement with tasks and other people
fragmented attention
information security risks
reduced productivity
the difficulty of maintaining a healthy boundary between personal and professional lives
Mobile Revolution
Mobile apps and communication systems can boost employee productivity, help companies form closer
relationships with customers and business partners, and spur innovation in products and services
Mobile devices are rapidly taking over as the primary communication platform for many business
professionals.
Another successful approach is creating mobile apps that offer a more interactive and mobile-friendly
experience than a conventional website can provide.
People who grew up with mobile phones often expect to have the same level of connectivity in their
roles as both customers and as employees.
Here are the most significant ways mobile technology is changing the practice of business
communication:
Constant connectivity is a mixed blessing: In this regard, mobile plays an important role in
efforts to reduce operating costs through telecommuting and other nontraditional work models
Small mobile displays and sometimes-awkward input technologies present challenges for
creating and consuming content, whether it’s typing an email message or watching a video.
Mobile users are often multitasking
Mobile communication, particularly text messaging, has put pressure on traditional standards of
grammar, punctuation, and writing in general.
Mobile devices can serve as sensory and cognitive extensions
Mobile devices create a host of security and privacy concerns for end users and corporate
technology managers alike
Mobile tools can enhance productivity and collaboration by making it easier for employees to
stay connected.
Mobile apps can assist in a wide variety of business tasks
More engaging experiences for customers and their users
Don’t rely too much on technology or let it overwhelm the communication process. Technology is an aid
to interpersonal communication, not a replacement for it.
Information overload results when people receive more information than they can effectively process.
An important step in reducing information overload is to avoid sending unnecessary messages.
The information technology paradox: information tools can waste as much time as they save.
Communicating in today’s business environment requires at least a basic level of technical competence.
In addition to using your tools appropriately, knowing how to use them efficiently can make a big
difference in your productivity.
No matter how much technology is involved, communication is still about people connecting with
people.
Web-Based Meetings
Videoconferencing and Telepresence
Shared Online Workspaces
Voice Technologies
Mobile Business Apps
Mobile Business Apps
Wikis
Data Visualization
Crowdsourcing and Collaboration Platforms
Internet of Things
Content Curation
Blogging
Applicant Tracking Systems
Podcasting
Online Video
User-Generated Content Sites
Gaming Technologies
Community Q&A Sites
Microblogging
Social Networking
Plagiarizing
Omitting essential information
Selective misquoting.
Misrepresenting numbers
Distorting visuals
Failing to respect privacy or information security needs
Transparency gives audience members access to all the information they need in order to process
messages accurately
An ethical dilemma is a choice between alternatives that may not be clearly right or clearly wrong.
Ethical individuals
Ethical company leadership
Appropriate policies and structures to support employees’ efforts to make ethical choices
To ensure ongoing compliance with their codes of ethics, many companies also conduct ethics audits to
monitor ethical progress and to point out any weaknesses that need to be addressed.
Ensuring Legal Communication:
Promotional communication: Marketing specialists need to be aware of the many laws that
govern truth and accuracy in advertising.
Contracts: A contract is a legally binding promise between two parties in which one party makes
a specified offer and the other party accepts.
Employment communication
Intellectual property: includes patents, copyrighted materials, trade secrets, and even Internet
domain names.
Financial reporting
Defamation
Transparency requirements: Governments around the world are taking steps to help ensure that
consumers and other parties know who is behind the information they receive, particularly
when it appears online.
Chapter 2: Collaboration, Interpersonal Communication, and Business Ettiquette
Collaboration—working together to solve complex problems—is an essential skill for workers in nearly
every profession. Problem-solving teams and task forces assemble to resolve specific issues and then
disband when their goals have been accomplished.(transitional)
Such teams are often cross-functional, pulling together people from a variety of departments who have
different areas of expertise and responsibility.
Team members have a shared mission and are collectively responsible for their work.
Committees are formal teams that usually have a long life span and can become a permanent part of
the organizational structure.
Advantages of Teams:
Disadvantages of Teams:
Groupthink: occurs when peer pressure causes individual team members to withhold
contrary or unpopular opinions.
Hidden agendas
Cost
Overload
Effective teams have a clear sense of purpose, open and honest communication, consensus-based
decision making, creativity, and effective conflict resolution. In contrast, teams lacking one or more of
these attributes can get bogged down in conflict or waste time and resources pursuing unclear goals.
Group Dynamics:
Group dynamics are the interactions and processes that take place within a team
Assuming Team roles: Each member of a group plays a role that affects the outcome of the
group’s activities.
Allowing for Team Evolution: Teams typically evolve through a variety of phases, such as
orientation, conflict, brainstorming, emergence, and reinforcement.
1. Orientation: Team members socialize, establish their roles, and begin to define their
task or purpose
2. Conflict
3. Brainstorming
4. Emergence
5. Reinforcement
You may also hear the process defined as forming, storming, norming, performing, and
adjourning, the phases identified by researcher Bruce Tuckman when he proposed one of the
earliest models of group development
Resolving Conflict: Conflict in teams can be either constructive or destructive. Destructive
conflict can lead to win-lose or lose-lose outcomes.
How to resolve:
1. Proactive behavior
2. Communication: Non-verbal gestures are important.
3. Openness
4. Research
5. Flexibility
6. Fair play
7. Alliance
Overcoming Resistance: When you encounter resistance or hostility, try to maintain your
composure and address the other person’s emotional needs.
Rather than pushing harder, stop talking and start listening. Apply the active listening skills
With a line of communication open, recognize that your primary goal is not to win the argument
but rather to build a relationship that can lead to solving the dilemma at hand.
As you establish a comfortable working relationship, continue to be aware of elements of
resistance that remain unspoken.
With a better understanding of the resistance, the next step is to move toward a resolution
through collaborative effort.
When you receive constructive feedback on your writing, keep your emotions in check and view it as an
opportunity to improve.
Constructive feedback, sometimes called constructive criticism, focuses on the process and outcomes of
communication, not on the people involved. In contrast, destructive feedback delivers criticism with no
guidance to stimulate improvement.
Content listening is to understand and retain the information in the speaker’s message.
The goal of critical listening is to understand and evaluate the meaning of the speaker’s message on
several levels: the logic of the argument, the strength of the evidence, the validity of the conclusions,
the implications of the message, the speaker’s intentions and motives, and the omission of any
important or relevant points.
The goal of empathic listening is to understand the speaker’s feelings, needs, and wants so that you can
appreciate his or her point of view
Active listening, making a conscious effort to turn off their own filters and biases to truly hear and
understand what the other party is saying.
Receiving
Decoding
Remembering
Evaluating
Responding
Effective Listening:
Selective listening is one of the most common barriers to effective listening. If your mind wanders, you
may stay tuned out until you hear a word or phrase that gets your attention again. But by that time,
you’re unable to recall what the speaker actually said; instead, you remember what you think the
speaker probably said.
Listeners sometimes make up their minds before fully hearing the speaker’s message, or they engage in
defensive listening—protecting their egos by tuning out anything that doesn’t confirm their beliefs or
their view of themselves.
Chapter 3: Communication Challenges in a Diverse, Global
Marketplace
You will communicate with people from many other cultures throughout your career. Not surprisingly,
effective communication is important to cross-cultural and global business. The good news here is that
improving your cultural communication skills could make you a more valuable job candidate at every
stage of your career.
A company’s cultural diversity affects how its business messages are conceived, composed, delivered,
received, and interpreted. Culture influences everything about communication, including
Language
Nonverbal signals
Word meaning
Time and space issues
Rules of human relationships
Culture is a shared system of symbols, beliefs, attitudes, values, expectations, and behavioral norms. You
belong to several cultures, each of which affects the way you communicate. You learn culture both
directly (by being instructed) and indirectly (by observing others). Cultures tend to offer views of life that
are both coherent (internally logical) and complete (able to answer all of life’s big questions).
Avoiding assumptions
Withholding judgment
Accepting differences
Cultural context is the pattern of physical cues, environmental stimuli, and implicit understanding that
conveys meaning between members of the same culture.
Contextual Difference:
Cultural context is the pattern of physical cues, environmental stimuli, and implicit understanding that
conveys meaning between members of the same culture.
High-context cultures rely heavily on nonverbal actions and environmental setting to convey meaning;
low-context cultures rely more on explicit verbal communication.
As you conduct business around the world, you’ll find that both legal systems and ethical standards
differ from culture to culture. Making ethical choices across cultures can seem complicated, but you can
keep your messages ethical by applying four basic principles:
Social Differences:
Formal rules of etiquette are explicit and well defined, but informal rules are learned through
observation and imitation.
Respect and rank are reflected differently from culture to culture in the way people are addressed and
in their working environment.
Cultures around the world exhibit varying degrees of openness toward both outsiders and people whose
personal identities don’t align with prevailing social norms.
Non-Verbal Differences:
The meaning of nonverbal signals can vary widely from culture to culture, so you can’t rely on
assumptions.
Greetings
Personal space
Touching
Facial expressions
Eye contact
Posture
Formality
Age Differences:
A culture’s views on youth and aging affect how people communicate with one another.
Gender Differences:
Broadly speaking, men tend to emphasize content in their messages, whereas women tend to
emphasize relationship maintenance.
Religious Differences
Ability Differences:
Assistive technologies help employers create more inclusive workplaces and benefit from the
contributions of people with physical or cognitive impairments.