Organization Communication - Management
In many cases, we communicate information in nonverbal ways using groups of behaviors. For example, we might combine a frown with crossed arms and unblinking eye gaze to indicate disapproval. 1. Facial Expressions Facial expressions are responsible for a huge proportion of nonverbal communication. Consider how much information can be conveyed with a smile or a frown. The look on a person face is often the first thing we see, even before we hear what they have to say. While nonverbal communication and behavior can vary dramatically between cultures, the facial expressions for happiness, sadness, anger, and fear are similar throughout the world. 2. Gestures Deliberate movements and signals are an important way to communicate meaning without words. Common gestures include waving, pointing, and using fingers to indicate numeric amounts. Other gestures are arbitrary and related to culture. In courtroom settings, lawyers have been known to utilize different nonverbal signals to attempt to sway juror opinions. An attorney might glance at his watch to suggest that the opposing lawyers argument is tedious or might even roll his eyes at the testimony offered by a witness in an attempt to undermine his or her credibility. These nonverbal signals are seen as being so powerful and influential that some judges even place limits on what type of nonverbal behaviors are allowed in the courtroom. 3. Paralinguistics Paralinguistics refers to vocal communication that is separate from actual language. This includes factors such as tone of voice, loudness, inflection, and pitch. Consider the powerful effect that tone of voice can have on the meaning of a sentence. When said in a strong tone of voice, listeners might interpret approval and enthusiasm. The same words said in a hesitant tone of voice might convey disapproval and a lack of interest. Consider all the different ways simply changing your tone of voice might change the meaning of a sentence. A friend might ask you how you are doing, and you might respond with the standard Im fine, but how you actually say those words might reveal a tremendous amount of how you are really feeling. A cold tone of voice might suggest that you are actually not fine, but you dont wish to discuss it. A bright, happy tone of voice will reveal that you are http://specialchildren.about.com/od/nonverballd/bb/nldresources.htm http://psychology.about.com/od/nonverbalcommunication/ss/understanding-body-language_2.htm#step-heading http://socialanxietydisorder.about.com/od/socialskills/tp/A-Quick-Guide-To-Understanding-And-Improving-Body-Language.htm http://socialanxietydisorder.about.com/od/socialskills/a/Five-Tips-To-Better-Understand-Facial-Expressions.htm http://psychology.about.com/od/nonverbalcommunication/ss/understanding-body-language_2.htm#step-heading http://marketing.about.com/od/salestipsandadvice/a/toneofvoice.htm actually doing quite well. A somber, downcast tone would indicate that you are the opposite of fine and that perhaps your friend should inquire further. 4. Body Language and Posture Posture and movement can also convey a great deal on information. Research on body language has grown significantly since the 1970s, but popular media have focused on the over-interpretation of defensive postures, arm-crossing, and leg-crossing, especially after the publication of Julius Fasts book Body Language. While these nonverbal behaviors can indicate feelings and attitudes, research suggests that body language is far more subtle and less definitive that previously believed. 5. Proxemics People often refer to their need for personal space, which is also an important type ofnonverbal communication. The amount of distance we need and the amount of space we perceive as belonging to us is influenced by a number of factors including social norms, cultural expectations, situational factors, personality characteristics, and level of familiarity. For example, the amount of personal space needed when having a casual conversation with another person usually varies between 18 inches to four feet. On the other hand, the personal distance needed when speaking to a crowd of people is around 10 to 12 feet. 6. Eye Gaze The eyes play an important role in nonverbal communication and such things as looking, staring, and blinking can also be important nonverbal behaviors. When people encounter people or things that they like, the rate of blinking increases and pupils dilate. Looking at another person can indicate a range of emotions including hostility, interest, and attraction. People also utilize eye gaze a means to determine if someone is being honest. Normal,steady eye contact is often taken as a sign that a person is telling the truth and is trustworthy. Shifty eyes and an inability to maintain eye contact, on the other hand, is frequently seen as an indicator that someone is lying or being deceptive. 7. Haptics Communicating through touch is another important nonverbal behavior. There has been a substantial amount of research on the importance of touch in infancy and early childhood.Harry Harlows classic monkey study demonstrated how the deprivation of touch and contact impedes development. Baby monkeys raised by wire mothers experienced permanent deficits in behavior and social interaction. Touch can be used to communicate affection, familiarity, sympathy, and other emotions. http://psychology.about.com/od/nonverbalcommunication/gr/bodylanguage.htm http://psychology.about.com/od/socialpsychology/a/attitudes.htm http://psychology.about.com/od/nonverbalcommunication/ss/understanding-body-language_8.htm http://grammar.about.com/od/mo/g/Nonverbal-Communication.htm http://sociology.about.com/od/Research/a/Ethnomethodology.htm http://psychology.about.com/od/nonverbalcommunication/ss/understanding-body-language_3.htm http://socialanxietydisorder.about.com/od/copingwithsad/qt/eyecontact.htm http://socialanxietydisorder.about.com/od/copingwithsad/qt/eyecontact.htm http://psychology.about.com/od/developmentalpsychology/ss/early-childhood-development.htm http://psychology.about.com/od/developmentalpsychology/ss/early-childhood-development.htm http://psychology.about.com/od/historyofpsychology/p/harlow_love.htm http://psychology.about.com/od/emotion/f/what-are-emotions.htm In her book Interpersonal Communication: Everyday Encounters, author Julia Wood writes that touch is also often used as a way to communicate both status and power. Researchers have found that high-status individuals tend to invade other peoples personal space with greater frequency and intensity than lower-status individuals. Sex differences also play a role in how people utilize touch to communicate meaning. Women tend to use touch to convey care, concern, and nurturance. Men, on the other hand, are more likely to use touch to assert power or control over others. 8. Appearance Our choice of color, clothing, hairstyles, and other factors affecting appearance are also considered a means of nonverbal communication. Research on color psychology has demonstrated that different colors can evoke different moods. Appearance can also alter physiological reactions, judgments, and interpretations. Just think of all the subtle judgements you quickly make about someone based on his or her appearance. These first impressions are important, which is why experts suggest that job seekers dress appropriately for interviews with potential employers. Researchers have found that appearance can play a role in how people are perceived and even how much they earn. One 1996 study found that attorneys who were rated as more attractive than their peers earned nearly 15 percent more than those ranked as less attractive. Culture can have an important influence in how appearances are judged. While thinness tends to be valued in Western cultures, some African cultures relate full-figured bodies to better health, wealth, and social status. 9. Artifacts Objects and images are also tools that can be used to communicate nonverbally. On an online forum, for example, you might select an avatar to represent your identity online and to communicate information about who you are and the things you like. People often spend a great deal of time developing a particular image and surrounding themselves with objects designed to convey information about the things that are important to them. Uniforms, for example, can be used to transmit a tremendous amount of information about a person. A soldier will don fatigues, a police offers will wear a uniform, and a doctor will wear a white lab coat. At a mere glance, these outfits tell people what a person does for a living. Final Thoughts http://homeworktips.about.com/od/mindandbody/a/nonverbal.htm http://psychology.about.com/od/sensationandperception/a/colorpsych.htm Nonverbal communication plays an important role in how we convey meaning and information to others, as well as how we interpret the actions of those around us. The important thing to remember when looking at such nonverbal behaviors is to consider the actions in groups. What a person actually says along with his or her expressions, appearance, and tone of voice might tell you a great deal about what that person is really trying to say. References Darwin, C. (1872). The Expression of the Emotions in Man and Animals, 3rd edition. New York: Oxford University Press. Wood, J. (2010). Interpersonal Communication: Everyday Encounters. Boston, MA: Wadsworth-Cengage Learning. BCO323 ORGANIZATIONAL COMMUNICATION Please find below written instructions for your Mid - Term Assignment. 1. Please start with a brief introduction. Part A. Please critically compare and contrast empathic and critical listening. I would like you to use examples from your personal experience or research to support your arguments. Please design a set of guidelines for evaluating speaker’s message but also note when it would be fitting to withhold judgment. Please make sure that your suggested guidelines are well structured and justified. Please give examples of four types of nonverbal behaviour and summarize the importance of each in a specific organization or career field. Please make sure that you demonstrate the significance of non-verbal behaviour by providing examples from a specific organization or field that you are familiar with or you do have personal experience. Part B. Please explain why language is often a cause of miscommunication across cultures. Please refer to our Webinar 3 and the issues discussed during our webinar. Think of the diverse internal business environments What can international managers do to minimize communication problems that stem from language difference? Please provide examples of strategies to overcome common barriers to effective communication in the contemporary organisational context. Here you will need to act as a consultant and suggest ways for international managers to deal with communication issues that stem from language difference. Reflect on your own experience when possible. Do not forget to mention the contemporary organisational context. How the current pandemic and online work affected communication? 2. Please use a brief conclusion. It will add value to your assignment. 3. The word limit is 2000. 4. Please do not forget to add your bibliographical references. I will suggest that you need in text citations to enhance the quality of your work. As always please let me know if you need any further information Please send me a draft of you work if you wish before your final submission. I will be happy to provide you with my feedback. Good luck with your Mid Term Assignment! 9 - 7 1 3 - 4 7 8 F E B R U A R Y 5 , 2 0 1 3 ________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ Professors Jan W. Rivkin and Stefan H. Thomke and Europe Research Center Assistant Director Daniela Beyersdorfer prepared this case. HBS cases are developed solely as the basis for class discussion. Cases are not intended to serve as endorsements, sources of primary data, or illustrations of effective or ineffective management. Copyright © 2013 President and Fellows of Harvard College. To order copies or request permission to reproduce materials, call 1-800-545-7685, write Harvard Business School Publishing, Boston, MA 02163, or go to www.hbsp.harvard.edu/educators. This publication may not be digitized, photocopied, or otherwise reproduced, posted, or transmitted, without the permission of Harvard Business School. J A N W . R I V K I N S T E F A N H . T H O M K E D A N I E L A B E Y E R S D O R F E R LEGO (A): The Crisis In late 2004, Jørgen Vig Knudstorp faced the toughest challenge of his young career. A mere thirty-six years old, Knudstorp had recently been named CEO of the LEGO Group – a long successful toymaker with a world-renowned brand, but a company suddenly on the brink of financial collapse (Exhibit 1). If Knudstorp failed to make the right decisions, and fast, the LEGO Group would likely slip from the hands of its founding family and be swallowed up by one of the giant conglomerates that increasingly dominated the toy industry. Hard decisions faced Knudstorp at every turn. Should the LEGO Group fall back to the plastic- brick product lines that defined its past, or should it continue into the new product lines that many considered its future? Within the plastic-brick arena, should the company continue to make most of its own products, or should it shift to a contract manufacturer? Why was the Group running out of some products and awash in inventory of others? Why had complexity and costs risen so dramatically and made so many products unprofitable? Indeed, why was Knudstorp struggling to figure out which products were truly unprofitable and which made money? The Toy Industry As Knudstorp reflected on the LEGO Group’s crisis, he considered the evolution of the global toy market. The industry booked wholesale revenues of $61 billion in 2004. The retail market for toys grew at a steady pace of about 4\% per year, but demand for specific fad toys could surge or collapse rapidly. Industry observers noted a few important trends. First, fad toys seemed to be rising and product life cycles declining, perhaps not surprising for an industry, as one journalist put it, “subject to the whims of [kids] who can’t decide which shoe to put on which foot.”1 Second, in many parts of the world, children had more after-school activities and less unscheduled time to play than in the past. Third, for kids over three years old, demand had shifted toward technology, either in a toy itself or in the form of toys coming with access codes to online worlds.2 As children gave up traditional toys earlier for videogames and online activities, childhood became shorter and adolescence longer. Parents were often torn between buying the toys their kids wanted and those they considered good for their children. For the exclusive use of E. S.A., 2019. This document is authorized for use only by EUROPEAN COLLEGE-EC BUSINESS S S.A. in 2019. 713-478 LEGO (A): The Crisis 2 Thousands of toymakers served the world market, but increasingly, a handful led the industry. Mattel, the world’s leading toymaker by revenue ($5.1 billion in 2004), featured brands like Fisher- Price, Barbie, Hot Wheels, and American Girl dolls.3 Hasbro, the second largest player ($3.0 billion), housed brands such as Transformers, Monopoly, GI Joe, Play-Doh, and Playskool. To win consumer attention, retail shelf space, and sales, toymakers introduced new products, cut their wholesale prices, sponsored cooperative ads and promotions with retailers, provided in-store support, and advertised to consumers. The impact of new product introductions was muted by rapid imitation and limited protection of intellectual property. To boost brand presence among consumers, toymakers often licensed characters from media companies. Mattel, for example, was the “favored creator of toys based on Disney and Pixar characters.”4 Toymakers increasingly manufactured in Asia, where labor was inexpensive and subcontractors stood ready to produce goods on their behalf. The majority of toys sold in the U.S., for instance, were manufactured in China by outside contractors, while global players such as Hasbro specialized in new product development, sales, and marketing. Toymakers went to market via diverse retail channels, including independent toy specialists, chain stores, discount stores, department stores, and online stores. In choosing among toys to stock their shelves, retailers focused on profit per square foot and consequently considered margin, turn, and product space requirements. In a highly seasonal business in which consumers bought a large fraction of their toys during the holiday season, retail purchasing occurred mainly in the second half of the year.5 Retail competition had heated up in recent years. In the United States, for instance, pressure from the likes of Wal-Mart and Target had driven Toys R Us, the nation’s largest toy chain, to hire investment bankers to review its “strategic alternatives” in 2004. Building the LEGO Group (1916-1992) To the toy market, the LEGO Group brought a heritage that reached back to 1916, when Ole Kirk Kristiansen, a humble carpenter, bought a wood workshop in the rural Danish village of Billund and began to build houses and furniture for farmers. In 1932, he added wooden toys to his production and chose the name LEGO, formed from the Danish words “LEg GOdt” (“play well”). Only later did he learn that in Latin “lego” meant “I assemble.” Aiming for quality, he wrote on his wall, “Only the best is good enough.” Ole’s son Godtfred started working in the business in 1932 at age 12. In 1947, the firm became the first in Denmark to buy a plastic injection-molding machine. By 1949, its portfolio had grown to 200 plastic and wooden toys, including the automatic binding brick, a forerunner of the modern LEGO brick. In 1954, during a ferry ride to England, a purchasing agent complained to Godtfred that toy departments were a mess: toys lacked a systematic organization. The comments moved Godtfred to consider a “LEGO system of play.” Such a system began to form in 1958, when the company changed the design of its bricks to match its current form. When a fire destroyed the LEGO Group’s wooden warehouse in 1960, Godtfred discontinued wooden toy production. Knudstorp reflected: Godtfred Kirk Christiansen bet the whole farm on one-third of his business, plastic toys, and not just any toy – the brick. Godtfred Kirk Christiansen felt he had stumbled onto something unique with this brick. You can build anything out of it. It doesn’t fall apart when you throw it around. And you can add to this system forever as it allows you to create a new toy every day, make endless variations, thereby inspiring and challenging a child’s imagination and creativity. Godtfred Kirk Christiansen realized that in this system, the value of play expands exponentially the more elements you have. For the exclusive use of E. S.A., 2019. This document is authorized for use only by EUROPEAN COLLEGE-EC BUSINESS S S.A. in 2019. LEGO (A): The Crisis 713-478 3 In 1963, Godtfred laid out ten principles of “good play” that defined LEGO product characteristics (Exhibit 2). By 1967, the company produced LEGO bricks in 218 distinct shapes. In 1977, Godtfred’s son Kjeld Kirk Kristiansen joined the company’s management. Born in the same year as the brick, Kjeld felt, in Knudstorp’s words, that “the LEGO brick is more than a toy. He knows what the brick can be and what it can do for humanity.” From early on, a strong culture of creativity at the LEGO Group favored the steady introduction of new products and themes based on the brick system. The high quality of bricks and the standardized spacing between studs ensured that all elements made after 1958 were compatible with one another, resulting in enormous opportunities for creativity. The Group expanded its audience in 1968 with larger “DUPLO” bricks for children under five and, in 1977, with the LEGO Technic line for teens. By 1980, about 70\% of Western European families with children under 14 owned LEGO bricks. By that time, a three-phase production process lay at the heart of Group operations. First, in the molding phase, injection-molding machines produced plastic elements in massive numbers. Because it took a molding tolerance of 0.002 millimeters to make bricks clutch each other right, Godtfred focused on developing industrial excellence and cutting-edge capabilities in material science and production technology. Second, in the decoration phase, specialized parts were painted. Third, in the packaging phase, the many small elements that made up a product were placed in a box along with an instruction manual. Godtfred controlled the company’s operations closely, and no new product, brick, or color was introduced without his approval. Until the early 1980s, LEGO bricks came in five base colors: black, white, red, blue, and yellow. Kjeld felt that the company’s sustained growth required new bricks, but it took him 10 to 15 years to convince his father to add the color green. Kjeld also added new themes, began to collaborate with the MIT Media Lab on robots in the mid-1980s, expanded into Eastern Europe and Asia, and maintained a strong position in America and a leading one in Western Europe. The LEGO Group enjoyed steady organic growth and profitability. By 1992, it was a top 10 global toy manufacturer, and according to Advertising Age, accounted for about 80\% of the construction toy market (which accounted for a few percent of the total toy market). With its products so popular among consumers, LEGO Group management came to see retailers as “a necessary evil.” Christian Iversen, Executive VP of LEGO Corporate Center, recalled: We were used to stable growth and expansion, driven by our growing pipeline. This was further fueled when the Berlin Wall came down, with millions of young Eastern Europeans eager to get their hands on Western products. If anything, the LEGO Group worked hard to control sales growth. The head of production, a strong person on Kjeld’s team, watched production costs and capacity closely. When I joined in 1993, the first meeting I attended was about how to shelve several product introductions so that projected growth would fall to the target range of 8-10\%. We had such a grip on the market and unmet demand that we could gradually add new products and more or less decide five years out what and how much we wanted to sell. The Growth Period That Wasn’t (1993-1998) In the early 1990s, several shifts in the toy market caught the LEGO Group’s management by surprise. Knudstorp explained: Birth rates in our core markets—Western Europe and North America—declined, as did household spending on toys. Between 1993 and 2003, the total profit pool in the industry For the exclusive use of E. S.A., 2019. This document is authorized for use only by EUROPEAN COLLEGE-EC BUSINESS S S.A. in 2019. 713-478 LEGO (A): The Crisis 4 decreased by 50\%. Traditional mom & pop stores started to disappear. Retail channels consolidated, and mass discounters featured toys more aggressively. Mattel, Hasbro, and others pushed manufacturing to the Far East. Finally, market research suggested that children had less time for unstructured play, had shorter attention spans, and looked more for instant gratification as well as fashionable and electronic products. These changes did not play to our strengths. In 1993, Kjeld Kirk Kristiansen suffered a severe illness and left the company for a year. Upon his return, he built a five-person management team to help him run the company. Increasingly, Kjeld pushed responsibility to frontline managers so they could be more responsive to market dynamics. The head of production was dismissed. Growth became the new focus. Fueling the drive to grow was a desire to leverage the LEGO Group’s position among the world’s top-10 brands for families with children. Iversen said: The other companies on that list, such as Disney and Nike, were much larger than us. We concluded that our brand must have huge untapped potential. This potential seemed to lie outside our core play systems, so we stretched our brand and explored opportunities in new areas. We experimented with new ways to push out more products, without necessarily having an eye on their margin. The businesses were encouraged to make their own decisions. Suddenly you couldn’t speak to an important retail customer without offering an account- specific product. We also did studies on how to grow in untapped markets like Southern Europe and concluded that we needed products tailored to those markets. The Group branched out beyond the brick. Inspired by the success of its family leisure park in small Billund, it opened LEGOLAND Windsor (U.K.) in 1996. The same year, the company launched www.lego.com and began to develop videogame software related to its products. LEGO Media was set up in London to develop media products linked to LEGO play themes (e.g. movies, television programs, or books). The company introduced children’s wear in 1993, watches in 1996, and LEGO® MINDSTORMS robotic bricks in 1998. Knudstorp reflected on the company’s strategy during these years: “All of these efforts to push our boundaries felt natural in our Disney-like brand stretch strategy. There seemed to be potential everywhere.” Expansions tended to be done in-house, not through partners. Mike Moynihan, VP of marketing, explained: “The mentality was that only we sufficiently knew our brand, and the expression of it could therefore not be outsourced.” In its brick-based product lines, the Group launched a host of new themes and products. Designers created LEGO products with more complex and chunkier pieces for some sets, so that children could build objects faster and arrive sooner at the playing part of the experience. The number of distinct components rose. In cases where brick shapes were more pre-defined, such as the lower and upper side of a car, they were harder to combine with other pieces. Despite management’s efforts and significant investments to grow the top line, sales stagnated. In 1998, the LEGO Group faced the first financial loss in its history. The Fix that Wasn’t (1999-2004) To restore profitability and growth, Kjeld brought in a new CFO, Poul Plougmann, who soon became COO and took over day-to-day management. Ploughman’s experience with turnarounds at Danish companies led the press to announce the arrival of “Mr. Fix-it.” A restructuring program was launched to cut costs by DKK 1 billion (about US$140 million) and lay off up to 1,000 employees (more than 10\% of total staff). Of the 100 top executives, more than 60 were asked to leave. For the exclusive use of E. S.A., 2019. This document is authorized for use only by EUROPEAN COLLEGE-EC BUSINESS S S.A. in 2019. LEGO (A): The Crisis 713-478 5 Ploughman’s “Fitness Program” included measures to streamline production, reduce organizational layers, and increase responsibility and customer focus, all to build a simpler, more responsive, global business system. When management announced these drastic measures, employees stood up and applauded. Change To develop stronger leaders who could take the group into new areas, Ploughman moved managers around rapidly. People stayed in one position for 6-12 months before rotating or being replaced by someone who could do a better job. General leadership experience was valued more than direct experience with LEGO toys. Design responsibilities were shifted from small, rural Billund to global product development concept centers in creative locales such as Milan, London, and San Francisco. Production was streamlined and geared to match forecasts. Several tool-making factories were sold, and certain manufacturing processes that were difficult to automate were transferred from the LEGO Group’s main factory in Billund to a new plant in the Czech Republic. In sales, senior management consolidated 25 country-level sales companies into five regional entities. The incentives of salespeople were tied, in part, to whether their actual sales exceeded their forecasts. Back-office functions were globalized. Management decided in 1999 to sell directly to consumers through two initiatives: an online shop and LEGO-owned retail stores in Europe and the United States. Iversen recalled that “this was both about meeting the consumer in the right places, online and in our own stores, and about building the brand. Another reason was that we found ourselves increasingly working with discounters that were squeezing us on their shelves. This made it impossible to display the wealth of our brand.” The Group’s product line continued to evolve. Among the most prominent product launches in 1999 was the brick-based LEGO Star Wars™ theme. While the LEGO Group had developed many play themes over the years, LEGO Star Wars was the first in-licensed brand. The decision had not been an easy one. Long-time employees bristled at the idea of placing the word “War” on a LEGO box and putting laser guns in the hands of LEGO minifigures, who traditionally carried nothing more lethal than a pirate’s sword. The financial potential of the partnership was also difficult to assess. Iversen recalled that “these debates about the danger of eroding our brand heated up when we launched LEGO Star Wars. But we saw it as an opportunity to be more ‘in tune’ and add storytelling to building.” More licensed products followed, including “Winnie the Pooh and Friends” in 1999 and “Harry Potter” in 2001. In 2002, the company repositioned the preschool line, LEGO DUPLO, under a new brand name. Mads Nipper, Executive VP of Markets & Products, explained: “We tried to tap into mothers’ emphasis on child development and make the product more learning-focused.” The expansion of theme parks continued with the opening of LEGOLAND California in 1999 and LEGOLAND Germany in 2002. Projects like videogames continued to flourish, but some lifestyle initiatives, such as wristwatches and publishing, were cut back after 2000. Consequences Knudstorp recalled the ensuing difficulties in operations: When I was brought in as a consultant in 2001 to analyze the supply chain, I realized nobody had kept an eye on complexity. Product developers argued that the number of distinct shapes did not matter, as the marginal cost of an extra mold was so low. And management did not see the impact of this on design, manufacturing, servicing of retailers, forecasting, and managing inventory. You could be out of stock for a product just because you miss one of its 675 pieces, which you did not make when you got the forecast wrong. The total number of For the exclusive use of E. S.A., 2019. This document is authorized for use only by EUROPEAN COLLEGE-EC BUSINESS S S.A. in 2019. 713-478 LEGO (A): The Crisis 6 components was not visible, but in 2004 we discovered that it had more than doubled since 1993. We had 3,560 different shapes, 157 colors, and 10,900 elements in our assortment. Each shape required a mold, and a mold cost €50,000 on average, or up to €300,000 for complicated ones. Exhibit 3 shows the number of distinct LEGO components over time. Bali Padda, Executive VP of Global Supply Chain, also recalled the company’s operations situation: When I joined in 2002, there was a lack of discipline, of accountability, and a costing system that I could not figure out. I couldn’t understand how net production prices were determined or which products were profitable. It took me six months to get a sense of our fill rate to customers [the proportion of demand delivered without delay from stock on hand]. I found out it was anywhere between 5\% and 70\%, and my colleagues told me not to worry. My inventory costs were exploding, we had a lot of write-offs and obsolescence, and I couldn’t explain anything! We started to control costs, for example by ordering fewer molds, but sometimes we could not meet demand anymore. Balancing supply and demand was further complicated by individuals directly calling their friends in manufacturing and asking them to produce more of this or that. The LEGO Group’s major customers were frustrated by stock-outs and slow-moving inventory. The typical retailer devoted nine linear feet to LEGO products in 2004, earned a 19\% gross margin on LEGO sales, and saw LEGO inventory turn over two times a year. Chain-wide, Wal-Mart, Target, and Toys R Us reported gross margins of 22.9\%, 33.6\%, and 32.4\%, respectively, in 2004. Their inventory turns across all products were 7.5x, 6.0x, and 2.1x, respectively. Padda recalled, “When I met the Wal-Mart buyer for the first time in 2004, he asked me: ‘Can you please tell me why I shouldn’t put dog food on the shelves [instead of LEGO products]?’” Among the Group’s new products, the LEGO Star Wars line thrived, rising to become 35\% of total revenue. The repositioning of LEGO DUPLO proved less successful. Nipper recalled, “Many consumers found the new products did not live up to our promise and missed the LEGO DUPLO brand. A German retailer bluntly asked me, ‘Have you absolutely lost your mind?’ This was only one of several innovation and marketing approaches at the time that customers did not understand.” Increasingly, senior leaders noticed that managers were attributing poor results to factors beyond their control; weak sales, for instance, might be blamed on nice weather, which discouraged consumers from buying indoor toys. The company’s results were characterized by large profit swings. The Group saw 28\% top-line growth and a return to profitability in 1999, a sales downturn and a loss in 2000, and a decent profit in 2001. Revenue grew in 2002, stimulated by new product launches, a new Star Wars film, growth in core products, and a strong U.S. dollar, but profit fell. By 2003, it became clear that the new growth strategy wasn’t working. Sales plunged by 29\% to DKK 6.8 billion, and the company lost DKK 935 million. Management acknowledged that the substantial investment in expanding the product portfolio and consequent cost increases had not produced the desired results. Worse yet, some new products had cannibalized core products and eroded earnings. In a year without Star Wars or Harry Potter movie launches, the unsatisfactory sales of products with movie tie-ins accounted for more than 50\% of the overall sales decrease. Iversen summarized the situation: “We were pregnant with many initiatives and their costs, and the market environment turned against us.” In December 2003, Kjeld Kristiansen asked Plougmann and four of his 14-person management team to leave the company. When 2004 brought another loss and pushed For the exclusive use of E. S.A., 2019. This document is authorized for use only by EUROPEAN COLLEGE-EC BUSINESS S S.A. in 2019. LEGO (A): The Crisis 713-478 7 the LEGO Group to the brink of bankruptcy, Kristiansen invested in the company, retired as CEO, and handed the position to Knudstorp. A Newcomer and a Company on the Brink The appointment of then 35-year old Jørgen Knudstorp as the LEGO Group’s first outside CEO surprised industry observers. Born a short distance from Billund, Knudstorp had earned a PhD in Business Economics at the University of Aarhus, Denmark and had started his career as a consultant at McKinsey & Company before joining the LEGO Group as Director of Strategic Development in 2001. Iversen recalled that “the reaction in the Danish corporate community was: ‘How can they put a ‘rookie’ in charge when they are struggling to survive?’ But Kjeld had gotten to know Jørgen, had come to trust his views, and liked his values.” Knudstorp and his management team knew that saving the company would be no easy task. Iverson described an early, sobering meeting with the Group’s board: Jørgen bluntly told the board that if they wanted the business to survive in the long run, this could not be a quick fix. He said that if he was a financial investor, he would advise them to sell. But if they did not want to sell, they needed to believe that the LEGO family firm could do it right. They needed to allow us to deliver long term and not quarter by quarter, and they would have to sacrifice some of the ‘sacred cows.’ Among the sacred cows that might be sacrificed was the Group’s approach of making its own products. Knudstorp wondered whether he should outsource manufacturing to a third party: We had lost our edge in manufacturing and supply chain management in the 1990s when many competitors like Hasbro started outsourcing things, and our costs were out of control…. It should be easy to find professional manufacturers able to operate the factories better than we could. Beyond manufacturing and supply chain management, all aspects of the company’s strategy were on the table for discussion, including its product line, its approach to consumers and retailers, and its processes for innovation and planning, To get his bearings among the many decisions, Knudstorp began to look for LEGO’s “core.” Doing so was difficult, however, as financial pressure mounted: I had the banks breathing down my neck and asking for immediate repayment of all outstanding debt. We quickly needed to close or sell items to generate cash. My CFO listened to my theory about the ‘core’ and said, ‘I don’t get all you’re saying, but what I take away is that a core is something which makes a superior return. But if you take this to the extreme, since our business is almost destroyed, there is no meaningful core in that sense.’ For the exclusive use of E. S.A., 2019. This document is authorized for use only by EUROPEAN COLLEGE-EC BUSINESS S S.A. in 2019. 7 1 3 -4 7 8 - 8 - E x h ib it 1 L E G O G ro u p S e le ct e d F in a n ci a ls , 1 9 9 5 -2 0 0 4 (i n D K K m il li o n ) 1 9 9 5 1 9 9 6 1 9 9 7 1 9 9 8 1 9 9 9 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 1 2 0 0 2 2 0 0 3 2 0 0 4 In c o m e S ta te m e n t R e v e n u e s 6 ,8 4 4 7 ,5 3 4 7 ,6 1 6 7 ,6 8 0 9 ,8 0 8 9 ,4 6 7 9 ,0 0 0 9 ,6 0 1 6 ,7 9 2 6 ,3 1 5 E x p e n s e s N /A N /A N /A N /A (8 ,6 1 5 ) (1 0 ,1 4 5 ) (8 ,1 4 2 ) (8 ,7 9 5 ) (7 ,9 0 2 ) (6 ,2 5 2 ) O p e ra ti n g p ro fi t b e fo re s p e c ia l it e m s N /A N /A N /A N /A N /A N /A 8 5 8 8 0 6 (1 ,1 1 0 ) 6 3 S p e c ia l it e m s * N /A N /A N /A N /A (5 5 5 ) (1 9 1 ) (1 2 2 ) 0 (4 5 5 ) (1 ,2 2 5 ) F in a n c ia l in c o m e a n d e x p e n s e s N /A N /A N /A N /A (1 2 2 ) (2 0 1 ) (2 1 5 ) (1 8 9 ) 6 7 (7 5 ) P ro fi t b e fo re i n c o m e t a x 6 7 6 6 9 9 1 7 1 (2 8 2 ) 5 1 6 (1 ,0 7 0 ) 5 2 1 6 1 7 (1 ,4 9 8 ) (1 ,2 3 7 ) N e t p ro fi t fo r th e y e a r 4 3 1 4 7 0 6 2 (1 9 4 ) 2 7 4 (8 3 1 ) 3 6 6 3 2 6 (9 3 5 ) (1 ,9 3 1 ) B a la n c e S h e e t T o ta l A s s e ts 9 ,5 3 5 1 0 ,0 6 1 9 ,7 6 7 1 1 ,2 5 0 1 2 ,6 9 4 1 2 ,2 8 0 1 4 ,0 9 3 1 2 ,5 6 0 1 0 ,0 4 9 8 ,0 8 9 E q u it y 5 ,9 6 1 5 ,9 1 3 5 ,4 3 7 5 ,8 4 1 6 ,9 7 0 6 ,2 6 6 6 ,2 2 5 6 ,4 7 8 4 ,8 9 2 2 ,9 4 8 L ia b il it ie s a n d P ro v is io n in g 3 ,5 7 4 4 ,1 4 8 4 ,3 3 0 5 ,4 0 9 5 ,7 1 4 6 ,0 1 4 7 ,8 6 8 6 ,0 8 2 5 ,1 5 7 5 ,1 4 1 C a s h F lo w S ta te m e n t C a s h f lo w s f ro m o p e ra ti n g a c ti v it ie s N /A N /A N /A N /A N /A N /A 1 ,2 2 7 1 ,8 5 3 9 4 4 7 7 4 In v e s tm e n ts i n p ro p e rt y , p la n t, a n d e q u ip m e n t 7 4 8 1 ,4 9 0 7 4 5 1 ,3 9 7 9 6 8 1 ,1 5 6 1 ,4 7 8 1 ,2 6 4 7 0 9 4 5 7 C a s h f lo w s f ro m f in a n c in g a c ti v it ie s N /A … BCO323 ORGANIZATIONAL COMMUNICATION Week 3: Communication barriers at work Professor: Konstantinos Biginas Communicating across cultures BLOCKS TO INTERCULTURAL COMMUNICATION • When people are acting in a home manner in the different culture it might cause a lot of problems (Barna,1997) • U n l e s s we are a w a r e of t h e s e differences, we are certain to face difficulties in communicating with people from other cultures 1. Assuming similarity instead of dissimilarity 2. Language differences (Barna,1997) 3. Nonverbal misinterpretations (Barna,1997) • Stereotypes are over generalized • Second hand beliefs that provide conceptual bases from which we “make sense” out of what goes around us, whether or not they are accurate or fit the circumstance • Stereotypes are stumbling blocks for communicators because they interfere with objective viewing of stimuli (Barna,1997) 4.1 Stereotypes • We have a certain stereotypical preconception of a person from a culture (Barna,1997) • We interpret his/her behaviour according to this preconception, whether or not the reason for the behaviour is what we think it is 4.2 The preconceptions • We tend to approve or disapprove the statements and actions of other people or group rather than to try to comprehend completely the thoughts and feelings expressed from the worldview of the other • This prevents the open-minded attention needed to look at the attitudes and behavioural patterns from the other’s point of view (Barna,1997) 5. The tendency to evaluate • Also known as stress • Too much anxiety or tension requires some form of relief which too often comes in the form of defences, such as the skewing of perceptions, withdrawal, or hostility. • High anxiety often underlies and compounds the other stumbling blocks • (Barna,1997 6. High anxiety or tension THANK YOU! QUESTIONS? [email protected] mailto:[email protected] 1 Chapter 1 THE INTRODUCTION OF BUSINESS COMMUNICATION 2 Lasswell (1948) classic definition of communication defines communication as: who (source or sender), says what (message), in which channel (medium), to whom (audience or receiver), with what effect. In other words this model is about process of communication and its function to society. Target customers (receivers) have particular preferences for the message channels. Discrete types of messages are received differing in their various uses. Furthermore the ways that receivers could respond to these messages or those senders of messages will occur in different paths, depend on detached preferences (Westmyer et al., 1998). The classic model of effective communication recommends the highest impact of the message that the sender sends occurs when the sender has thoroughly understood the demands and desires of the receivers. In other words, as Shannon and Weaver claims (1949): communication occurs when the sender encoding of the message corresponds with the receiver decoding of it (Shannon and Weaver, 1949). Message is the main target of the Shannon-Weaver model of effective communication. To make it clear, Shannon-Weaver model is about inter-personal communication that composed of eight principal components that are needed for information transmission or communication to be occurred: source, encoder, message, channel, decoder, receiver, noise and feedback. 1.1 Business Communication – an introduction Kotler claims that companies must ask not only how can we reach our customers but also, how can our customers reach us. (Kotler, 2009, p.564).This shows the importance of communication marketing between company and its customers. According to Kotler today communication is an interactive dialogue between the company and its customers 3 that it takes place in all the stages i.e. pre-selling, selling, consuming and post- consuming. Moreover Kotler claims that technological advances had a great impact on the means of communication. People can communicate through traditional media (newspapers, radio, TV), as well as through newer media (computers, internet). By decreasing communication costs, the new technologies have encouraged more companies to move from mass-communication to more targeted communication and one-to-one dialogue (Kotler, 2009, p.564) The American Marketing Association (AMA) (2008) has provided a clearer definition of marketing as an organizational function and a set of processes for creating, communicating, and delivering value to customers and for managing customer relationships in ways that benefit the organization and its stakeholders. Importance of Communication in Business Communication plays a vital role in the fulfillment of all marketing objectives. Understanding communication is essential since it is the basic process through which managers specifically and organizations in their entirety accomplish their set objectives culminating in their success. Smith, Berry and Pulford (1997) describe communication as the act of sending information from the mind of one person to the mind of another person. Similarly, Churchill Jr. and Peter (1998) describe communication as the transmission of a message from a sender to a receiver, such that both understand it the same way. Mcshane and Glinow (2000) in turn, define communication as the process by which information is transmitted and understood between two or more people. 4 Types of Communication tools Communication tools can be divided into two types: Personal communication tools: Personal communication tools are those in which two or more people communicate with one another. Word of mouth is the primary means of personal communication. There are various other Medias of personal communication also such as e-mail. Non-personal communications: Non-personal communication tools are those in which communication do not occur in person-to person but occur through some other media. National and regional newspapers and magazines, television, satellite, and cable television are some of the means of non-personal communication. Components of Communication: For effective communication to occur, Dubrin (1997) stipulates that six components must be present: a communication source or sender, a message, a channel, a receiver, feedback and the environment. The source (sender) is the initiator of a communication event who is usually a person attempting to send a spoken, written, sign language, or nonverbal message to another person(s). Here, the perceived authority and experience of the sender are important factors influencing how much attention the message will receive. Message is the purpose or idea to be conveyed. Many factors influence how a message is received. Among them are clarity, the alertness of the receiver, the complexity and length of the message, and how the information is organized. Channel (medium). This concerns the way the message is transmitted. In organizations, 5 several channels or media are usually available. More often than not, messages are either written or spoken or a combination of the two. In addition, nonverbal cues such as a smile and body gestures accompanies most spoken messages. For example, there is heavy reliance on electronic transmission of messages (email) in today’s business environment. Receiver is the other party for whom the message is intended. Communication can only be deemed to be complete when the receiver receives the message and understands it properly. Feedback is a message/response sent back from the receiver to the sender. Without feedback, it is difficult to know whether a message has been received and understood. Thus, if the receiver takes action intended by the sender, the message is deemed to have been received satisfactorily. A full understanding of communication requires knowledge of the environment in which messages are transmitted and received. For example, the organizational culture is a key environmental factor that influences communication. It is important also to mention that distractions have a pervasive influence on the components of the communication process. In this context, noise is anything that disrupts communication, including the attitude and emotions of the receiver. Noise includes work stress, fear, ambivalence, blurred visibility and strong advocacy for an opposing position. 1.2 Elements of Business Communication According to Kotler and Killer following are the six major elements of communication: Advertising: Advertising is one of the elements of the promotion mix which is considered 6 prominent in the overall marketing mix. This attribute is as a result of its visibility and pervasiveness in all the other marketing communication elements. Advertising is any paid form of non-personal presentation and promotion of ideas, goods or services by an identified sponsor (where the source is the sponsoring organization) (Kotler & Armstrong, 2010) Sales Promotion: Sales promotions are short-term incentives to encourage the purchase or sale of a product. Blythe (2006) describes sales promotion as any activity intended to generate a temporary boost in sales. This includes several communications activities pursued in an attempt to provide added value or incentives to consumers, wholesalers, retailers, or other organizational customers to stimulate immediate sales. Such efforts are usually geared towards stimulating product interest, trial, or purchase. It is specifically designed to boost quick sales and ultimately create loyalty. Publicity and Public Relations: Publicity is the disseminating of information by personal or non-personal means, which is not directly paid for by the organization, nor is the organization the source. Grasby et al (2000) describe publicity as the use of the media to provide free coverage in their stories related to their product. Unlike advertising that relies on purchasing power to get a message across, publicity relies solely on the quality of content to persuade others to get the message out. Public relations (PR), on the other hand is the overall term for marketing activities that raise the public consciousness about a product, an individual or issue. Shimp (2000) explains PR simply as an organizational activity involved with fostering goodwill between a company and its various publics. Research has indicated that promotional budgets have recently increased tremendously. In Ghana, budgetary allocations on 7 promotions have equally risen steadily over the years. Personal Selling: Personal selling which involves personal contact is gradually becoming the backbone of service marketing. If promotion is communicating with potential customers, then, personal selling is perhaps the best way to do it. Kotler (2006) defines personal selling as face-to-face interaction with one or more prospective purchasers for the purpose of making presentations, answering questions, and procuring orders. Jobber (2007) also describes personal selling as the marketing task that involves face-to-face contact with a customer. Unlike the other tools of the communication mix, personal selling permits a direct interaction between buyer and seller. This two-way communication means that the seller can identify the specific needs and problems of the buyer and tailor the sales presentation in the light of this knowledge. Sponsorship: Since traditional media have become more expensive, sponsorship is viewed by marketers as a cost-effective alternative, (Lee et al., 1997). Events and experience or sponsorship is another marketing communications tool comprising company-sponsored activities and programs designed to create daily or special-related interactions. In other words, a company can build its brand image through creating or sponsoring events. According to Arens (1999), sponsorship is a cash or in-kind fee paid to a property (which may be a sports, entertainment, or non-profit events or organization) in return for access to the exploitable commercial potential associated with that property. Palmer (2005) describes Sponsorship as getting involved and/or investment in events or causes in order that an organization can achieve objectives such as increased awareness levels, enhanced reputation, etc. 8 Direct Marketing: Direct marketing specifically ensures sending a promotional message directly to consumers rather than via a mass medium. It is aimed at creating and exploiting a direct relationship between producers and their customers. The Direct Marketing Association (DMA) has defined direct marketing as an interactive system of marketing that uses one or more advertising media in acquiring a measurable response and/or transaction at any location. Similarly, direct marketing is described as the use of mail, fax, e-mail, or internet to communicate directly with or solicit response or dialogue from specific customers and prospects (Kotler & Keller 2006; Kotler & Armstrong, 2010). Fig 1.1 Marketing Communication Mix 9 1.3 Challenges for Business Communication in India  Lack of strategic consistency  Lack of needed skill sets among marketing staff  Scarcity of creativity and innovation  Insufficient marketing budget  Lack of a standard measurement process  Lack of technology advancement support  Ambiguity on the issue  Complex cultural and social values 1.4 Business Communication Strategy A strategic communication plan is one of the key elements in Business Communication. It allows marketers to build a synchronized communication strategy that reaches every market segment with a single, unified message. (Tri-Media, 1999) The objectives of any promotional strategy can be to increase sales, maintain or improve market share, create or improve brand recognition, create a favorable climate for future sales, inform and educate the market, create a competitive advantage relative to competitor’s products or market position and to improve promotional efficiency. Marketing Communications Strategy determines the message or sequence of messages, which should be shared with specific target audiences through the optimum communications mix. Strategy summarizes how objectives will be achieved (Smith et al, 1997:77). Communication strategies nowadays differ broadly from the ones in former times or 10 offline times. It is important to understand the relationship between digital communication and traditional communication (Internet Marketing 4th edition, Dave Chaffey). In the old media; for example, TV, radio, newspapers, magazines and billboard ads, the communication model was and is one-to-many compared to the one- to-one or many-to-many communication model in digital media, like blogs, social networks, wikis and every form of vital marketing campaign. The best consideration nowadays for a company-to-customer communication is the one-to-one or the one-to- many model (Hoffmann and Novak 1996). These models speak of a monologue in the old media and a dialog in the new media, because of the interactivity of social-network and forum users. Resulting from this, the goal in traditional media was branding by convincing the customer of a strong brand. In contrast the digital media is about communication with the potential customer or user in a dialog to create interest by using a pull strategy. In addition it can be said that it is a supply-side thinking communication in the old media compared to a demand-side thinking in the digital media, where customer pull becomes more important (Internet Marketing, Dave Chaffey, 4th edition). Besides this, in old media communication, the customer is a target in comparison to the digital media communication where the customer is a partner, by answering surveys and product rankings (Internet Marketing (Table 1.5), Dave Chaffey, 4th edition). Therefore, communication strategies can be divided into five step model as follows: 11 Fig 1.2 Components of Communication 12 Benefits of Communication Strategy Smith et al (1997:88) outlined the benefits derivable from communications strategy as follows:  It enables each tactical activity to build on the others creating strength of communications through continuity and consistency;  It helps to create sharper selling messages appropriately directed to target customers at various stages in their buying process;  Tactical planning of each communications tool is made that much easier and quicker when clear strategic direction is agreed;  It facilitates integrated marketing communications (IMC) which saves time, money and stress as well as providing IMC? other associated benefits of consistency and clarity;  It can facilitate the development of joint promotions and strategic alliances;  It can encourage the development of hybrid marketing systems. The addition and integration of new communications tools/channels (for example, telemarketing) to existing communications tools/channels (for example, advertising or the sales force) can create such a hybrid marketing system. As well as driving the external communications, a good communications strategy (when communicated internally) creates a bond within an organization so that everyone knows what everyone else is trying to achieve. 13 Stages in designing communication strategies Rowley (1998) has formulated the following stages in designing communication strategies  Identify target audience  Determine communication objectives  Design the message  Select communication channels  Establish promotional budget  Decide on promotion mix Measure results Similarly, Czinkota and Ronkainen (2001), follow a five basic step model. This can be illustrated as follows:  Step one: Assess Marketing Communications Opportunities  Step two: Analyze Marketing Communication Resources  Step three: Set Marketing Communications Objectives  Step four: Develop/Evaluate Alternative Strategies  Step five: Assign Specific Marketing Communications Tasks 14 Effect of communication strategies on consumers: - Providing product information - Creating Customer Awareness - Changing Customer Attitude - Building company Image - Enforcing brand loyalty - Creating Brand Image - Customer Response - Literature review - Communication Van Staden et al., (2002) define communication as a two-way process whereby information (the message) is sent from one person (the sender) through a channel to another person (the receiver) who in turn reacts by providing feedback. Since communication requires converting the original concepts into symbols that can transmit the desired message (Blythe, 2006) the individual or organization who communicates has to transform first the concepts in a set of symbols that can be transferred to the receiver, who need to decode the symbols, in order to understand the original message. A correct decoding can take place only if the participants in the communication share a common experience, with at least one common language. Palmer (2005) posits that the message is presented according to a simple master formula (model) which is: Attract the attention of your prospect; Interest your 15 prospect in the product; cause your prospect to desire the product, and demand action from the prospect. This is known as the AIDA concept. 1.5 Substance of Business Communication Marketing communication is a process that consists of a series of decisions made to find the most optimal way(s) to deliver the message to a target audience (Sissors & Baron, 2002; Sissors and Bumba, 1996). According to Rouse and Rouse (2002), effective communication means that the information is received accurately in terms of content and meaning as intended by the sender. According to Duncan (2002:8), marketing communication is a process for managing the customer relationships that drive brand value. Developments taking place in digital media has lead to increasing ways in which companies can communicate with consumers (Crosier et al., 2003). Grimes (2004) does not share the idea of advertisers appointing a main agency among their network of agencies and advises that? Operation across a range of parties is at the heart of successful marketing communication campaigns.” Churchill Jr. & Peter (1998) maintain that arousing the prospects desire to buy a particular product is one of marketers most difficult tasks. An advert, for instance, must convince customers that the product can meet their needs. Getting the prospects action is the final requirement and definitely not an easy task. Prospective customers must be led beyond considering how the product might fit into their lives but to actually trying it or allowing for product demonstration. Arens (1999) emphasizes that appealing to important needs can get more action and provide the kind of information buyers need to 16 confirm their decisions. In a general sense, to obtain optimum results from promotions, the activities must highlight strongly felt customer needs that can only be uncovered through careful research. According to Paul Smith (1998) Promotion is consisted of following stages (different organization of promotions subsidiaries): Sales Promotion (Sample drop, Competition, Collection), Advertising (TV- Press), Direct Marketing (Mail shot, Telesales), Publicity (and PR), Sponsorship, Exhibitions, Packaging, Point-of-sale and merchandising, Internet, Word of Mouth, Corporate Identity. This is called the communication mix and is the ingredients of Paul Smiths communications model. In a global market characterized by high dynamism and fierce competition, organizations try to find the most efficient way to get their word out so that customers understand the benefits that can be obtained by consumption or use products or services (Clow, 2010). Consequently, marketing communications have become a fundamental aspect of marketing, a business vision and an essential factor in successful marketing communication. Its importance have increased dramatically in recent decades, considering that the marketing and communication are inseparable, all organizations business areas using various forms of marketing communication to make their offer and to meet financial or non-profit targets (Shimp,2003). Hart (2003:144), outlines a number of organizational attributes of service providers that may help foster sustainable customer relationships. 17 An organizational culture & business communication Employees that have good interpersonal communication skills since these influences how service providers interact with customers. Employee motivation and training which is very important especially in services that involve high employee/customer contact, where social benefits are valued and where technology plays a significant role in building and maintaining relationships, for e.g. service providers contacting customers via sms. Developing an ability to calculate relationship performance and assess the impact of marketing strategies on customer satisfaction, trust, commitment and loyalty. Wells et al. (2000) are categorizing all the sources of messages that communicate with the customers into planned, unplanned and often unconsidered tools. The planned are almost always used or at least considered, while the unplanned and often unconsidered are less frequently used. The planned tools include the traditional marketing tools such as advertising and sales promotion, and are controllable by the company itself. The unplanned tools consist of media that are mostly uncontrolled by the company, such as gossip and chat groups. These are often not considered to be important in the coordination of marketing communication tools, although they may be of vital importance when it comes to the publicity of a company. The often-unconsidered tools are messages delivered by other aspects of the marketing mix, such as price, product, and distribution. The price of a product signals a level of 18 quality. The product itself and the distribution of it communicate reliability and can together with price build up a good image for the company. Van Staden et al., (2002) cite the following advantages of communicating effectively with customers:  Better customer relationships  Saving time and money  More effective decision-making  Successful problem-solving Business Communication Strategy formulation Every firm needs strategy to make its products acceptable by the consumers at the right time. Marketers need marketing mix to produce desired response from the market (Kotler & Armstrong, 2010). An element of marketing mix that communicates companies marketing message to its target consumers is promotion, also known as integrated marketing communication (Wells et al., 2007). An effective integrated marketing communication enables the company to grow continuously, to be known by the public, and to build its brand equity (Madhavaram et al., 2005). According to Amoako-Gyampah and Salam (2004), effective communication seeks to influence the receivers knowledge, attitude and behaviors. Arens (1999) emphasizes that appealing to important needs can get more action and provide the kind of information buyers need to confirm their decisions. In a general sense, to obtain optimum results from promotions, the activities must highlight strongly felt customer needs that can only be uncovered through careful research. 19 Communication is believed to directly affect the building of long-term relationships with the stakeholders of an organization. It is therefore, necessary to acknowledge the role of communication in building relationships between the various activities in the organization and between the organization and its stakeholders (Rensburg & Cant, 2003:120). Schultz et al. (1995:85) are of the opinion that it is the rapport, the empathy, the dialogue, the relationship and the communication that the marketer establishes with the prospect that makes the difference. The decision-making perspective holds that buying behavior results from consumers engaging in problem-solving task in which they move through a series of stages. Decisions involving extended problem solving correspond most closely to the decision making perspective. At this level, the consumer has no established criteria for evaluating a product category or specific brands and needs a great amount of information to establish a set of criteria on which to judge specific brands and a correspondingly large amount of information concerning each of the brands to be considered (Schiffman and Kanuk, 2009). The tools of integrated marketing communication, called as promotional mix, consist of personal selling, advertising, customer relations, sales promotion, direct marketing to consumers, and others associated with advertising and bidding. Advertising is a one- way and non-personal communication from an organization using mass media (Kotler et al., 2009; Solomon et al., 2009). Price promotions, often known as price-off deal (Belch & Belch, 2007; Solomon et al., 2009; Wells et al., 2007), is a promotional strategy in which consumers receive a temporary reduction from products normal price. When developing a communication strategy, according to Czinkota and Ronkainen 20 (2001), a marketer should access what a company or product characteristics and benefits should be communicated to the market. This requires constant monitoring of the various environments and target audience characteristics. In evaluating resources to be allocated for communication efforts, certain things can be taken under considerations. A sufficient commitment is necessary which means a relatively large amount of money. The company has to operate according to the rules of the market place due to monetary constraints most companies face and promotional efforts should be concentrated on key markets. According to Czinkota and Ronkainen (2001), the international marketer has to form a communication program using the tools shown below. - Advertising which consists of print, broadcast, electronic media, direct communication. - Personal selling with person-to-person communication with intermediaries and/or final customer. - Publicity that is any form of non-paid, commercial news or editorial comment about products, ideas. - Sales promotion, providing extra value to the product or gives incentive to the salespeople, intermediaries, or ultimate consumers. - Sponsorship which is promoting the company? Interest by associating it with a for example sport event or charity/ social interest. According to Rowley (1998), when determining the communication objectives the importance lies in identifying whether the objective is to draw to attention, develop 21 interest, stimulate desire or provoke action. Furthermore, Wells et al. (2000) argue that objectives should be S.M.A.R.T: Specific, Measurable, Actionable, Realistic and Time Specific. Although advertisement and other communicative options play an important role in the marketing plans, development of brand equity is the main goal. Because of flexibility, marketing communications effect on brand equity in different ways. Marketing communications play an important role in development of brand equity by providing information about brand, positive associations in memory of the consumers, empowerment of judgment and positive feelings relative to brand and finally facilitation of shaping powerful relationship between consumers and conformity with brand (Keller, 2008). Consumer response reflects the state changes that a consumer experiences either temporally or on a more permanent basis - as a result of exposure to a marketing communication. Consumer response to any marketing communication can be broken down into a host of different categories reflecting the process or outcome associated with exposure to the communication. In terms of processing, both cognitive and affective responses can occur. These responses may vary in terms of their level of abstraction (specific vs. general), evaluative nature (negative, neutral, or positive valence) (Keller 2001, 828-829). There are several important benefits when having successful brand image and it is no surprise why branding is one of the most important aspect in marketing communications (Murphy, 1987). The list below show what companies aims to achieve with corporate identity based on Olins (1989). 22 - A strong brand influences the buying decision and shapes the ownership experience. - Branding creates trust and an emotional attachment to the product or company. - A strong brand can command a premium price and maximize the number of units that can be sold at that premium. - Branding helps make purchasing decisions easier. Branding help the company to fence off the customers from the competition and … BCO323 ORGANIZATIONAL COMMUNICATION Week 4: Problem solving and Adaptation Professor: Konstantinos Biginas. F a c t o r i n g m u l t i p l e c o n t e x t s in to communication decisions is a large part of treating business communication as a problem-solving process 2 The 3 key feature of BC is about • Sharing information • Building relationships • Solving workplace problems 3 STEPS THAT USUALLY OCCUR WHEN PEOPLE ARE SOLVING BUSINESS PROBLEMS AND COMMUNICATING ABOUT THEM Problem solving 4 1. Senses a communication need 2. Defines the problem 3. Searches for possible solutions 4. Selects a course of action 5. Composes the message 6. Receives the message 7. Interprets the message 8. Decides on a response 9. Replies to the message 5 Adaptation ADAPTATION AND SELECTION OF WORDS The main goals here are to 1. use words that your reader can readily understand 2. use an economical, lively style 3. avoid any wording that hints of exclusion or discrimination The key to good writing choices is considering your reader “adaptation” of one’s writing to the readers goes all the way down to the word level Good judgment on the word level is key to communication success • One ill-chosen word can alienate readers, thwarting one’s purpose • An especially well-chosen one can strengthen the co- operation between writer and reader Use familiar, short words short, common words are preferable to complex, long words Use Slang and Popular Clichés with Caution • use slang and popular clichés with caution • such phrases are especially troublesome for nonnative English speakers Use Technical Language with Caution • use technical words with caution • Every field has its technical language (accounting, information systems, medicine, finance). • This language is good for communicating within the field • But it is likely to be meaningless to people outside the field Use Acronyms with Caution • Initialisms and acronyms are not likely to be understood by people outside a specialised area. Example: ROI Select Words for Precise Meanings • Selecting words for precise meanings is critical to clear writing • It means choosing the word with both the correct denotation and the desired connotation • It also means getting expressions idiomatically correct Study words so that you can use them as precisely as possible Words with similar meanings have slight differences in meaning …. Consider the shades of difference in these groups of words • cemetery, graveyard, memorial garden • fight, dispute, law suit, disagreement • pleased, satisfied, happy, content, gratified, impressed • thin, slender, skinny, slight, wispy, lean, willowy, rangy, spindly, lanky, wiry • fired, dismissed, canned, separated, discharged • Concrete language adds specificity and vigor to writing • Concrete words stand for specific things that the reader can see, feel, taste, or visualise - They relate to experiences • They are the opposite of abstract words -the words that refer to broad and vague concepts • …. Prefer the Concrete to the Abstract Example s • Concrete: John S. Simmons, bagels and coffee, Ms. Levi, oil stains • Abstract: human resources, nourishment, management, damage Concreteness also involves being specific • A significant loss vs. • The majority • In the near futurevs. • Substantial amount vs. a 53\% loss vs. 62 percent by noon on May 1 EUR 3,751,321 Select Words for Appropriate Usage Many pairs of words are confused in English and cause problems for writers Consider • less vs. fewer • affect vs. effect • continual vs. continuous Prefer Verbs in Active Voice In most cases, one should prefer the active voice to the passive Active voice is stronger and more direct …. Example s • In active voice, the subject does the action: “Joan examined the equipment.” • In passive voice, the subject receives the action: “The equipment was examined by Joan.” In what kinds of situations the passive might actually be preferable? • When the doer of action is unimportant: “Sports shoes are manufactured in Korea.” • When one wants to avoid accusing the reader of an action: “The maintenance instructions were not followed in this case.” • When the doer of action is unknown: “During the past year, three automobiles were stolen from this parking lot.” • When the writer does not want to name the doer of action: “Seventeen accounts were lost in the Portland area last month.” Avoid Overuse of Camouflaged Verbs • Avoiding overuse of camouflaged verbs adds clarity and vigor to writing • A verb is camouflaged when the verb describing an action is changed to a noun …. Example s When one changes the verb “eliminate” to the noun “elimination,” which results in a long, passive sentence like this: “Elimination of the deficit was accomplished by Thornberry.” A better sentence is one that uses the verb: “Thornberry eliminated the deficit.” Avoid Discriminatory Wording Use nondiscriminatory wording (wording that treats all people equally and with respect) • avoiding words that refer negatively to groups of people, such as by gender, race, nationality, age, disability, or sexual orientation. • Avoid sexist labels …. Labels that discriminate against a person because of his or her gender • Although there can be discrimination against men, most sexist wording discriminates against women • The problem exists primarily because our language developed in a male-dominated society • But be aware that not all words containing “man” are sexist • Avoid sexist use of pronouns …. Three excellent ways to avoid the generic male pronoun 1. by rewording the sentence, 2. by making plural references, • Incorrect: Each team member should turn in their schedule tomorrow. • Correct: Team members should turn in their schedules tomorrow. 3. by substituting a neutral expression Avoid other stereotyping words and phrases • It is unfair to stereotype all members of a race or nationality • Words that imply that Jews are miserly, Italians are Mafia members, Hispanics are lazy, and the like are unfair (All groups have members with a wide range of characteristics) Eliminating such references requires taking two steps 1. You must consciously treat all people equally 2. You should refer to minority membership only when it is a vital part of the message …. Our words should not discriminate against the young and the old • Some in these age groups object to words such as “senior citizen,” “teenager,” “adolescent,” “juvenile,” “golden ager,” or “elderly.” Sometimes people with disabilities are offended by the words we use in talking about them Instead of saying “the disabled” or “disabled people,” say “people with disabilities.” THANK YOU! QUESTIONS? [email protected] mailto:[email protected] ENVIRONMENTAL SCANNING & INDUSTRY ANALYSIS WEEK 3–MBA301 – BUSINESS POLICY AND STRATEGY ENVIRONMENTAL SCANNING & INDUSTRY ANALYSIS INDEX 1. Organization´s environment factors influencing decisions 2. Strategically important environment factors of organizations 3. Conducting analysis to understand competitive forces influencing rivalry intensity within an industry 4. Understand how industry maturity affects competitive forces 5. Strategic group map construction to assess the competitive positions of firms in a given industry 6. Identifying KSF & develop an industry matrix 7. Use publicly available information to conduct competitive intelligence analysis 8. How to develop industry scenarios 9. EFAS table construction to summarize external environment factors • LEARNING OBJECTIVES • Understand external & environmental factors influencing the Strategy • Learn how to build an Industry analysis benchmark & how the competitive forces influence • Competitive position analysis • KSF & Industry Matrix development • Industry Scenario models Environmental Scanning & Industry Analysis https://www.google.es/url?sa=i&url=https\%3A\%2F\%2Fwww.shutterstock.com\%2Fes\%2Fsearch\%2Fbusiness\%2520environment\%2520analysis\%3Fimage_type\%3Dillustration&psig=AOvVaw3Z-8ScgaD8s9kjDM2opzha&ust=1586608645343000&source=images&cd=vfe&ved=0CAIQjRxqFwoTCNDW3P_v3egCFQAAAAAdAAAAABAJ 1/2. ORGANIZATION´S ENVIRONMENT FACTORS INFLUENCING DECISIONS Organizations conduct business using their internal resources and How firms conduct business is affected by their external environment. Managers need to align the fit between their Internal conditions and External environment & continually monitor both. INTERNAL ENVIRONMENT EXTERNAL ENVIRONMENT 1. ORGANIZATION´s strategical environment factors INTERNAL ENVIRONMENT 1-MISSION & VISION 2- MANAGEMENT & CULTURE 3-RESSOURCES4-STRUCTURE 5-SYSTEMS & PROCESSES 1/2. ORGANIZATION´S ENVIRONMENT FACTORS INFLUENCING DECISIONS EXTERNAL ENVIRONMENT / 9 factors Mission Structure Ressources Management & Culture Systems & Process INTERNAL intern al intern al conne cted intern al conne cted 9-CUSTOMERS 8-SUPPLIERS 7-LABOR FORCE 6-SHAREHOLDERS 5-SOCIETY 3-GOVERNMENTS 1-COMPETITION 2.ECONOMY 4-TECHNOLOGY EXTERNAL GLOBAL THE ORGANIZATIONAL ENVIRONMENT 3/4. - CONDUCTING ANALYSIS TO UNDERSTAND COMPETITIVE FORCES MICHAEL PORTER´S 5 FORCES 3/4. - CONDUCTING ANALYSIS TO UNDERSTAND COMPETITIVE FORCES MICHAEL PORTER´S 5 FORCES 5/6. STRATEGIC GROUP MAP TO ASSESS FIRM COMPETITIVE POSITION https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CcF3ZMgXQrA Strategic Group Mapping https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CcF3ZMgXQrA 5/6. STRATEGIC GROUP MAP TO ASSESS FIRM COMPETITIVE POSITION STRATEGIC GROUP MAPPING Competitive Advantage TIPS Benchmarking & understanding Competition KSF THE COMPETITORS Understanding the competition is essential to corporate strategy planning How competitive is your market? What are your competitors doing, likely to be doing? Evaluate the following: Who are your competitors? Who are your major competitors, how big are they, what is their market share? What reputation do they have? How do they distribute their products? What is their marketing like - do they diversify? What are their key strengths and weaknesses? Which is their key benefit? Competitors´s Marketing Mix Analysis (product, place, Price, promotion) Profile competitor strategies, sales, operational set-up, and distribution? What are our competitive threats? What are our competitors’ strengths and weaknesses? How can we measure our performance against our competitors? What can we learn from competitors’ success? Can you build a shortlist of potential partners best suited to our needs? Four Corner´s Analysis Competitors SWOT 360º COMPETITORS´POSITIONING SAMPLE 5/6. STRATEGIC GROUP MAP / KSF INDUSTRY EXAMPLE KSF MACEDONIA CHOCOLATE INDUSTRY EXAMPLE 7. COMPETITIVE INTELLIGENCE ANALYSIS COMPETITIVE INTELLIGENCE There are many publicly data of competitive intelligence studies including information and analysis from various disparate sources, including the news media, customer and competitor interviews, industry experts, trade shows and conferences, government records, and public filings 7. INDUSTRY SCENARIOS INDUSTRY SCENARIOS ANALYSIS TOOLS 5 P´S PEST ANALYSIS SWOT COMPETITION ANALYSIS COMPANY SITUATION ANALYSIS + BCG WAR GAMING 4 CORNERS ANALYSIS 9. EFAS TABLE / EXTERNAL FACTORS EFAS TABLE The EFAS Table (External Factors Analysis Summary) is one way to organize the external factors into the generally accepted categories of opportunities and threats as well as to analyze how well a particular companys management (rating) is responding to these specific factors in light of the perceived importance THANK YOU BCO323 ORGANIZATIONAL COMMUNICATION Week 1: Establishing Credibility (Chapter 1) Professor: Konstantinos Biginas. Cardon, P. (2016). Business Communication: Developing Leaders for a Networked World. Mc Graw Hill Education. Why Does This Matter? Credibility – Your reputation for being trustworthy – The degree to which others believe or trust in you The Role of Trust in the Post-Trust Era (1 of 3) Operating from a position of trust or credibility is one of the first things you should consider as you communicate. Your goal should be to gain trust or credibility from colleagues, clients, customers, and other contacts. The Role of Trust in the Post-Trust Era (2 of 3) The public increasingly views companies with less trust. A deficit of trust also exists within companies. Surveys show that employees often do not trust their own business leaders. Figure 1.1 A Look at Trust in Various Professions Jump to Image Descriptions Appendix The Role of Trust in the Post-Trust Era (3 of 3) Post-trust era – The public overwhelmingly views businesses as operating against the public’s best interests, and the majority of employees view their leaders and colleagues with skepticism. Figure 1.2 The Three Components of Credibility The Role of Competence in Establishing Credibility (1 of 3) Competence – Refers to the knowledge and skills needed to accomplish business tasks, approach business problems, and get a job done Most people will judge your competence based on your track record of success and achievement. The Role of Competence in Establishing Credibility (2 of 3) People develop competence through study, observation, and practice and real-world business experiences. How you communicate directly affects how others perceive your competence. The Role of Competence in Establishing Credibility (3 of 3) Focus on Action Emphasis on Results The Role of Caring in Establishing Credibility Caring – Implies understanding the interests of others, cultivating a sense of community, and giving to others and showing generosity People distrust individuals who are perceived as unconcerned about the interests of others or disinterested in causes above and beyond themselves. Understanding the Interests of Others Your ability to gain credibility strongly depends on your ability to show that you care for the needs of others. Effective communicators gain trust by connecting with others—that is, seeking to understand others’ needs, wants, opinions, feelings, and aspirations. Cultivating a Sense of Community The most effective business leaders in today’s corporate environment have generally risen to their positions because of their sense of community and teamwork. Speaking about “our needs” or “your needs” as opposed to “my needs” engenders trust and helps you come up with solutions that achieve mutual benefit. Giving to Others and Showing Generosity Most professionals can be broadly categorized as givers or takers. Companies with higher percentages of givers have higher profitability, higher productivity, and higher customer satisfaction. The Role of Character in Establishing Credibility Character – Refers to a reputation for staying true to commitments made to stakeholders and adhering to high moral and ethical values Figure 1.3 What Determines Trust in Individuals in the Workplace? Jump to Image Descriptions Appendix Ethics Ethics ─ Are “rules of conduct or moral principles that guide individual or group behavior” Business Ethics (1 of 3) Business ethics – The commonly accepted beliefs and principles in the business community for acceptable behavior Transparency – Involves sharing all relevant information with stakeholders Business Ethics (2 of 3) Trust-building behaviors include: • Extending trust • Sharing information • Telling it straight • Providing opportunities • Admitting mistakes • Setting a good example by following rules Business Ethics (3 of 3) Often employees fail to speak up when they observe potentially unethical behavior. Business professionals remain silent for four basic reasons: 1. They assume it’s standard practice. 2. They rationalize that it’s not a big deal. 3. They say to themselves it’s not their responsibility. 4. They want to be loyal. Corporate and Personal Values (1 of 2) Corporate values – The stated and lived values of a company Personal values – Those values that individuals prioritize and adhere to Corporate and Personal Values (2 of 2) Most organizations have created a written code of conduct or code of ethics. Publicly traded companies are required by the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 to have a code of ethics available to all employees and to ensure that it is enacted. Aligning personal values with corporate values is an important element of character. Open and Honest Communication 1. By avoiding open and honest communication of business problems, employees doom a business to poor financial performance. 2. Dishonesty is among the primary reasons for lower employee morale. 3. Dishonesty can be reason for dismissal. Stakeholder View of Accountability A sense of accountability implies an obligation to meet the needs and wants of others. It also involves an enlarged vision of those affected by your business activities. It takes a stakeholder view that includes all groups in society affected by your business. Fairness in Business Communications The FAIR test helps you examine: – How well you have provided the facts – How well you have granted access to your motives, reasoning, and information – How well you have examined impacts on stakeholders – How well you have shown respect Figure 1.4 The FAIR Test of Ethical Business Communication Jump to Image Descriptions Appendix High-Trust Relationships, Ease of Communication, and Improved Work Outcomes (1 of 3) Establishing credibility allows you to communicate more easily and more influentially. Credibility leads to less resistance from others, an increased willingness to cooperate, and a reduced likelihood of miscommunication. High-Trust Relationships, Ease of Communication, and Improved Work Outcomes (2 of 3) Engagement – A measure of how much employees are connected emotionally to their work, how willing they are to expend extra effort to help their organizations meet their goals, and how much energy they have to reach those goals High-Trust Relationships, Ease of Communication, and Improved Work Outcomes (3 of 3) A study showed that companies with highly engaged employees were nearly three times as profitable as companies with low engagement among employees. THANK YOU! QUESTIONS? [email protected] mailto:[email protected] BCO323 ORGANIZATIONAL COMMUNICATION Week 2: Interpersonal communication, Communication styles & non verbal language Professor: Konstantinos Biginas Interpersonal communication COMMUNICATION STYLES 1. Assertive 2. Aggressive 3. Passive-aggressive 4. Submissive 5. Manipulative The five communication styles Different sorts of behaviour and language are characteristic of each communicative style How? • Assertive communication is born of high self-esteem • It is the healthiest and most effective style of communication, the sweet spot between being too aggressive and too passive • We have the confidence to communicate without resorting to games or manipulation • We know our limits and dont allow ourselves to be pushed beyond them just because someone else wants or needs something from us • Assertive is the style most people use least The assertive style Behavioural Characteristics • Achieving goals without hurting others • Protective of own rights and respec8ul of others rights • Socially and emotionally expressive • Making your own choices and taking responsibility for them • Asking directly for needs to be met, while accepting the possibility of rejection • Accepting compliments Non-‐Verbal Behaviour • Voice – medium pitch and speed and volume • Posture – open posture, symmetrical balance, tall, relaxed, no fidgeting • Gestures – even, rounded, expansive • Facial expression – good eye contact • Spatial position – in control, respec8ul of others Language • Please would you turn the volume down? I am really struggling to concentrate on my studies. • I am so sorry, but I wont be able to help you with your project this aLernoon, as I have a dentist appointment. • They can take the person at their word • They know where they stand with the person • The person can cope with justified criticism and accept compliments • The person can look aLer themselves • Respect for the person Assertive style People on the Receiving end Feel • This style is about winning, often at someone elses expense • An aggressive person behaves as if their needs are the most important, as though they have more rights, and have more to contribute than other people • It is an ineffective communication style as the content of the message may get lost because people are too busy reacting to the way its delivered The Aggressive Style Behavioural Characteristics Agressive style People on the Receiving end Feel • Defensive, aggressive (withdraw or fight back) • Uncooperative • Resen8ul/Vengeful • Humiliated/degraded • Frightening, threatening, loud, hostile • Willing to achieve goals at expense of others • Out to win • Demanding, abrasive • Belligerent • Explosive, unpredictable • Intimidating • Bullying Non-‐Verbal Behaviour • Voice – volume is loud • Posture – bigger than others • Gestures -‐ big, fast, sharp/jerky • Facial expression – scowl, frown, glare • Spatial position -‐ Invade others personal space, try to stand over others Language • You are crazy! • Do it my way! • You make me sick! • That is just about enough out of you! • Sarcasm, name-‐calling, threatening, blaming, insulting. • Hurt, Afraid • A loss of respect for the aggressive person • People appear passive on the surface, but are actually acting out their anger in indirect or behind-the-scene ways • Prisoners of War often act in passive-aggressive ways in order to deal with an overwhelming lack of power • People who behave in this manner usually feel powerless and resentful, and express their feelings by subtly undermining the object (real or imagined) of their resentment, even if this ends up sabotaging themselves • The expression Cut off your nose to spite your face is a perfect description of passive-aggressive behaviour The passive-aggressive style Behavioural Characteristics • Indirectly agressive • Sarcastic • Devious • Unreliable • Complaining • Sulky • Patronising • Gossips • Two-‐faced Language • Why don’t you go ahead and do it; my ideas aren’t very good anyway • Oh don’t you worry about me, I can sort myself out, like I usually have to. • Confused • Angry • Hurt • Resen8ul Non-‐Verbal Behaviour • Voice: OLen speaks with a sugary sweet voice. • Posture: oLen asymmetrical – e.g. Standing with hand on hip • Gestures: Can be jerky, quick • Facial expression: OLen looks sweet and innocent • Spatial position: oLen too close, even touching other as pretends to be warm and friendly Passive-‐ agressive style People on the Receiving end Feel The submissive style • This style is about pleasing other people and avoiding conflict • A submissive person behaves as if other peoples needs are more important, and other people have more rights and more to contribute Behavioural Characteristics • Apologetic (feel as if you are imposing when you ask for what you want) • Avoiding any confrontation • Finding difficulty in taking responsibility or decisions • Yielding to someone elses preferences • Opting out • Feeling like a victim • Blaming others for events Non-‐Verbal Behaviour • Voice: Volume is soL • Posture: make themselves as small as possible, head down • Gestures: twist and fidget • Facial expression: no eye contact • Spatial position: make themselves smaller/ lower • Submissive behaviour is marked by a martyr-‐ like attitude (victim mentality) and a refusal to try out initiatives, which might improve things. Language • Why don’t you go ahead and do it; my ideas aren’t very good anyway • Oh don’t you worry about me, I can sort myself out, like I usually have to. People on the Receiving end Feel • Exasperated, frustrated, guilty • You dont know what you want (and so discount you) • They can take advantage of you. • Others resent the low energy surrounding the submissive person and eventually give up trying to help them Submissive style The Manipulative Style • This style is scheming, calculating and shrewd • Manipulative communicators are skilled at influencing or controlling others to their own advantage • Their spoken words hide an underlying message, of which the other person may be totally unaware Behavioural Characteristics • Cunning • Controlling of others in an insidious way – for example, by sulking • Asking indirectly for needs to be met • Making others feel obliged or sorry for them. • Uses artificial tears Non-‐Verbal Behaviour • Voice: patronising, envious, ingratiating, oLen high pitch • Facial expression: Can put on the hang dog expression Language • You are so lucky to have those chocolates, I wish I had some. I cant afford such expensive chocolates. • I didnt have time to buy anything, so I had to wear this dress. I just hope I dont look too awful in it. (Fishing for a compliment). • Guilty • Frustrated • Angry, irritated or annoyed • Resen8ul • Others feel they never know where they stand with a manipulative person and are annoyed Manipulative style People on the Receiving end Feel Interpersonal communication NON VERBAL LANGUAGE 7 \% Words 38 \% Tonality 55 \% Physiology Albert Mehrabian Facial expressions • Eyes (How is his glance? Are there changes according to his speech?) • Body (What is the ease of the negotiator, is his behaviour in adequacy with his/her speech?) • Intonation of the voice (What are the feelings conveyed by the voice? Are they in adequacy with its speech?) • Space (This gap is the indicator on the balance of power which settles down over the negotiation) • time (Is the negotiator gambling with it? Is he in a hurry or conscious of the time which is available on him? The non-verbal language is conveyed through • Eye contact: high levels of high contact are linked to friendliness, trustworthiness and sincerity in European culture. 60-95 \% perceived positively. • Facial expression: reflecting the verbal content, illustrating commitment, interest, emphasis, smiling and nodding are among the most persuasive and compelling. • Head held erect High credibility factors include: (1/3) • Open posture: demonstrating interest, reasonably relaxed but with energy, showing the area around the diaphragm • Gestures: open and energised but without being repetitive, jerky or hesitant. Relaxed movements showing palms can be persuasive and will help keep listeners attention High credibility factors include: (2/3) • Movement: must reflect relaxation, energy and commitment to the direction of the communication • Spatial relationships: sensitivity to the comfort of others to encourage the process of communication and avoid confrontation Preservation of a comfortable personal space • Diaphragmatic breathing • Personal attractiveness: projecting positive personal image High credibility factors include: (3/3) Low credibility factors include: (1/4) • Tension in body posture: raised or hunched shoulders, arm barriers across the diaphragm, sunk down in the middle. • Movements: jerky and hesitant. Taking little time and space • Relaxation without energy: perceived as lack of interest and carelessness. Slumped posture Low credibility factors include: (2/4) • Gestures: with emotional overtones which may become repetitive and jerky. Closed fists, pointing or not gestures at all • Mannerisms: neck scratching, nose or ears rubbing, fiddling or biting diminish credibility • Face touching: especially covering the mouth with a hand is perceived as lack of self- confidence or even a lie Low credibility factors include: (3/4) • Signals of stress response: upper chest breathing, blushing, shaking, sweating, rubbing palms together… • Proximity and touching: insensitivity to spatial relationship, not all parties feeling comfortable. Induces stress response • Facial expressions: over serious, frowning, incongruent, immovable Low credibility factors include: (4/4) • Eye contact: 20 to 40 \% eye contact is perceived as low credibility in European culture • Head down, chin tucked in • Good resonant tone: considered to be enthusiastic, sincere, proud, interesting, dependable and energetic • Pace: Rate of speech can vary from 120 and 195 words per minute. Although, research shows a preference for moderate to fast speakers, credibility is lost below 110 and sense disappears over 210 High credibility factors (content and vocal quality) • Volume: within reasonable limits, using volume increases credibility. The listener is reassured by knowing the speaker has some vocal power when it is appropriate to use it. • Clarity: good articulation is perceived to be trustworthy, sincere, considerate, energised and intelligent. High credibility factors (content and vocal quality) • Conversational style: perceived as more intelligent, sophisticated, calm, friendly, sincere, reasonable, and confident. Generally more people orientated. • Use of visual images and vivid language: to evoke response. For most people visual images are the most memorable and intense language is most persuasive provided the speaker has a basis of credibility to begin with. High credibility factors (content and vocal quality) • Variety: building in vocal variety is essential. Attention is controlled by a deep part of the brain and is switched off by repetitive stimuli. Consider also that we can think at four times that rate at which we speak, so it is necessary to continually keep the audience attentive. High credibility factors (content and vocal quality) • breathiness • formality • harsh tone • high pitch • lack of vocal variety • lazy articulation • over articulation • speech disturbances • thin or nasal tone Low credibility factors to avoid are: THANK YOU! QUESTIONS? BCO323 
 ORGANIZATIONAL COMMUNICATION 
 Week 1: Organizational communication, culture & behavior Professor: Dr Anne M. Walder, Ph.D, D.B.A. WELCOME TO WEEK 1! BCO323 Organizational Communication WHAT IS AN ORGANIZATION? BCO323 Organizational Communication «  An organization is a social arrangement for achieving controlled performance in pursuit of collective goals » (Huczynski & Buchanan, 2001) •  Social arrangements (people come together to interact & organise themselves in a certain way) •  Controlled performance (which entails the setting of standards for outputs, measurement of performance against these standards, and the implementation of corrective action as required) •  Collective goals (members work together to achieve shared aims and common objectives) (Hargie & al., 2004) Organizations involve: •  The function of the organisation shapes its nature, form and structure •  It also influences the types of people who will want to work there Different organisations, varying purposes & divergent goals (Hargie & al., 2004) Organisations purposes •  Market economy (maximising income, accumulating capital) •  Manufacturing and service sector companies •  Seeking private enterprise goals Economic production and profit-making goals •  Activities relating to the control and distribution of power in society (Government agencies, political parties, police and military. Political goals •  Facilitation of education and the dissemination of culture. •  Those involved in this sphere include family, schools and colleges, religious denominatios and cultural heritage groups Pattern maintenance goals •  Include scrutiny of other groups and the mediation and resolution of disputes •  This encompasses customer rights watchdogs, courts and legal offices, regulatory bodies and citizens’ advice agencies Integration objectives (Parsons, 1963) THE PEOPLE AND THE ORGANIZATION? Organizational communication « I – We – Them – It » principle (Clampitt, 1991) •  How staff relate to one another •  How employees are regarded as individuals within the company •  Reflects the way in which external publics are dealt with •  How the organisation feels about what it does It Them We I Managers should examine 4 dimensions •  their business •  current value systems within each •  their accompanying communication patterns •  how to improvements could be effected COMMUNICATION WITHIN THE ORGANIZATION? Organizational communication Organisations do not communicate People do Organisations do not have goals The people who compromise them do (Hargie & al., 2004) For the organisations, communication has been portrayed as: The life blood Its oxygen Its central nervous system Its  brain Its  arteries The highways along which its business is transacted (Hargie & al., 2004) •  Allowing messages to be transmitted rapidly •  Connecting the different « bits » together The role of communication Communica*on   Effec*ve   business   opera*on   Central element (Hargie & al., 2004) Increase productivity Better quality of services & products More staff suggestions Higher levels of creativity Greater employee job satisfaction Decrease absenteeism Reduced staff turnover Less industrial unrest and fewer strikes Lower costs Benefits of effective communication practices (Hargie & Tourish, 2000; Tourish & Hargie,2004) Organizational structure Organizational communication affects Performance Human relations Behavior It is the way managers design their firms to achieve their organization’s mission and goals Determines who works together MANAGER & COMMUNICATION Organisational Communication 18 1.  Planning 2.  Organising 3.  Leading 4.  Evaluating Managers at all levels engage in four main types of activity: Communication Communication Communication Communication (Beck, 1999) 1.  Upwards 2.  Downwards 3.  Across 4.  Outwards 5.  Self Five levels at which managers must employ their skills (Forrest, 1997) The 5 directions of management communication Management Upwards (senior managers, CEO) Outwards (customers, suppliers) Downwards (employees, unions) Across (teams, colleagues) WHAT IS BUSINESS COMMUNICATION PROCESS? Organizational Communication 22   BC process •  To understand the BC process, it’s important first to understand the nature of BC •  BC is best understood as complex problem solving 23 BC depends on the type of business, its environment, and the nature of the people involved •  Nature of the business •  Size and complexity •  Industry environment •  Geographic dispersion •  Organizational culture This means that for most situations, the business communicator will need to take a unique set of circumstances into account and generate a unique solution that will achieve the desired business goals 25 Being a successful business communicator requires •  Research: interview the players and understand the history of the communications situation •  Careful analysis: to gather and interpret the relevant information •  Creativity: to think of possible solutions •  Judgement: to pick the solution that will fit this situation best 26 The Business Communication Process 27 The contexts in which BC takes place •  The larger business-economic, sociocultural, historical context •  The communicators’ relationship •  The communicators’ individual contexts (organizational, professional, personal) 28 BC is not simply about moving information from point A to point B. Anyone who neglects the specific contexts in which communication takes place is likely doomed to be an unsuccessful communicator 29 1.  Clear communication targets are set company-wide, together with accompanying accountability for their achievement 2.  Regular employee attitude surveys are conducted and the results and action plans widely communicated 3.  Senior management have high visibility among all employees – managers make, and take, time to talk with staff 4.  Extensive face-to face and two-way communication is fostered and employees are encouraged to communicate proactively with management; improvement suggestions are rewarded 8 best communication practices in top companies (Berger, 1994) 5.  There is a high use of technology, including an emphasis on videos and e-mail, to disseminate information and ensure it is understood 6.  Communication training is an ongoing activity for all staff 7.  All publications are carefully prepared and presented, each bearing in mind the specific purpose, goals and target audience 8.  Management bonus take cognisance of employee e v a l u a t i o n s o f c o m m u n i c a t i o n p e r f o r m a n c e a n d effectiveness 8 best communication practices in top companies (Berger, 1994) THANK YOU! QUESTIONS? [email protected]
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Your assignment may be more than 5 paragraphs but not less. INSTRUCTIONS:  To access the FNU Online Library for journals and articles you can go the FNU library link here:  https://www.fnu.edu/library/ In order to n that draws upon the theoretical reading to explain and contextualize the design choices. Be sure to directly quote or paraphrase the reading ce to the vaccine. Your campaign must educate and inform the audience on the benefits but also create for safe and open dialogue. A key metric of your campaign will be the direct increase in numbers.  Key outcomes: The approach that you take must be clear Mechanical Engineering Organic chemistry Geometry nment Topic You will need to pick one topic for your project (5 pts) Literature search You will need to perform a literature search for your topic Geophysics you been involved with a company doing a redesign of business processes Communication on Customer Relations. Discuss how two-way communication on social media channels impacts businesses both positively and negatively. Provide any personal examples from your experience od pressure and hypertension via a community-wide intervention that targets the problem across the lifespan (i.e. includes all ages). Develop a community-wide intervention to reduce elevated blood pressure and hypertension in the State of Alabama that in in body of the report Conclusions References (8 References Minimum) *** Words count = 2000 words. *** In-Text Citations and References using Harvard style. *** In Task section I’ve chose (Economic issues in overseas contracting)" Electromagnetism w or quality improvement; it was just all part of good nursing care.  The goal for quality improvement is to monitor patient outcomes using statistics for comparison to standards of care for different diseases e a 1 to 2 slide Microsoft PowerPoint presentation on the different models of case management.  Include speaker notes... .....Describe three different models of case management. visual representations of information. They can include numbers SSAY ame workbook for all 3 milestones. You do not need to download a new copy for Milestones 2 or 3. When you submit Milestone 3 pages): Provide a description of an existing intervention in Canada making the appropriate buying decisions in an ethical and professional manner. Topic: Purchasing and Technology You read about blockchain ledger technology. Now do some additional research out on the Internet and share your URL with the rest of the class be aware of which features their competitors are opting to include so the product development teams can design similar or enhanced features to attract more of the market. The more unique low (The Top Health Industry Trends to Watch in 2015) to assist you with this discussion.         https://youtu.be/fRym_jyuBc0 Next year the $2.8 trillion U.S. healthcare industry will   finally begin to look and feel more like the rest of the business wo evidence-based primary care curriculum. Throughout your nurse practitioner program Vignette Understanding Gender Fluidity Providing Inclusive Quality Care Affirming Clinical Encounters Conclusion References Nurse Practitioner Knowledge Mechanics and word limit is unit as a guide only. The assessment may be re-attempted on two further occasions (maximum three attempts in total). All assessments must be resubmitted 3 days within receiving your unsatisfactory grade. You must clearly indicate “Re-su Trigonometry Article writing Other 5. June 29 After the components sending to the manufacturing house 1. In 1972 the Furman v. Georgia case resulted in a decision that would put action into motion. Furman was originally sentenced to death because of a murder he committed in Georgia but the court debated whether or not this was a violation of his 8th amend One of the first conflicts that would need to be investigated would be whether the human service professional followed the responsibility to client ethical standard.  While developing a relationship with client it is important to clarify that if danger or Ethical behavior is a critical topic in the workplace because the impact of it can make or break a business No matter which type of health care organization With a direct sale During the pandemic Computers are being used to monitor the spread of outbreaks in different areas of the world and with this record 3. Furman v. Georgia is a U.S Supreme Court case that resolves around the Eighth Amendments ban on cruel and unsual punishment in death penalty cases. The Furman v. Georgia case was based on Furman being convicted of murder in Georgia. Furman was caught i One major ethical conflict that may arise in my investigation is the Responsibility to Client in both Standard 3 and Standard 4 of the Ethical Standards for Human Service Professionals (2015).  Making sure we do not disclose information without consent ev 4. Identify two examples of real world problems that you have observed in your personal Summary & Evaluation: Reference & 188. Academic Search Ultimate Ethics We can mention at least one example of how the violation of ethical standards can be prevented. Many organizations promote ethical self-regulation by creating moral codes to help direct their business activities *DDB is used for the first three years For example The inbound logistics for William Instrument refer to purchase components from various electronic firms. During the purchase process William need to consider the quality and price of the components. In this case 4. A U.S. Supreme Court case known as Furman v. Georgia (1972) is a landmark case that involved Eighth Amendment’s ban of unusual and cruel punishment in death penalty cases (Furman v. Georgia (1972) With covid coming into place In my opinion with Not necessarily all home buyers are the same! When you choose to work with we buy ugly houses Baltimore & nationwide USA The ability to view ourselves from an unbiased perspective allows us to critically assess our personal strengths and weaknesses. This is an important step in the process of finding the right resources for our personal learning style. Ego and pride can be · By Day 1 of this week While you must form your answers to the questions below from our assigned reading material CliftonLarsonAllen LLP (2013) 5 The family dynamic is awkward at first since the most outgoing and straight forward person in the family in Linda Urien The most important benefit of my statistical analysis would be the accuracy with which I interpret the data. The greatest obstacle From a similar but larger point of view 4 In order to get the entire family to come back for another session I would suggest coming in on a day the restaurant is not open When seeking to identify a patient’s health condition After viewing the you tube videos on prayer Your paper must be at least two pages in length (not counting the title and reference pages) The word assimilate is negative to me. I believe everyone should learn about a country that they are going to live in. It doesnt mean that they have to believe that everything in America is better than where they came from. It means that they care enough Data collection Single Subject Chris is a social worker in a geriatric case management program located in a midsize Northeastern town. She has an MSW and is part of a team of case managers that likes to continuously improve on its practice. The team is currently using an I would start off with Linda on repeating her options for the child and going over what she is feeling with each option.  I would want to find out what she is afraid of.  I would avoid asking her any “why” questions because I want her to be in the here an Summarize the advantages and disadvantages of using an Internet site as means of collecting data for psychological research (Comp 2.1) 25.0\% Summarization of the advantages and disadvantages of using an Internet site as means of collecting data for psych Identify the type of research used in a chosen study Compose a 1 Optics effect relationship becomes more difficult—as the researcher cannot enact total control of another person even in an experimental environment. Social workers serve clients in highly complex real-world environments. Clients often implement recommended inte I think knowing more about you will allow you to be able to choose the right resources Be 4 pages in length soft MB-920 dumps review and documentation and high-quality listing pdf MB-920 braindumps also recommended and approved by Microsoft experts. The practical test g One thing you will need to do in college is learn how to find and use references. References support your ideas. College-level work must be supported by research. You are expected to do that for this paper. You will research Elaborate on any potential confounds or ethical concerns while participating in the psychological study 20.0\% Elaboration on any potential confounds or ethical concerns while participating in the psychological study is missing. Elaboration on any potenti 3 The first thing I would do in the family’s first session is develop a genogram of the family to get an idea of all the individuals who play a major role in Linda’s life. After establishing where each member is in relation to the family A Health in All Policies approach Note: The requirements outlined below correspond to the grading criteria in the scoring guide. At a minimum Chen Read Connecting Communities and Complexity: A Case Study in Creating the Conditions for Transformational Change Read Reflections on Cultural Humility Read A Basic Guide to ABCD Community Organizing Use the bolded black section and sub-section titles below to organize your paper. For each section Losinski forwarded the article on a priority basis to Mary Scott Losinksi wanted details on use of the ED at CGH. He asked the administrative resident