Communicating Effectively
Most of the verbal communicating you do
is from one individual to another. This is true whether you're in a family,
social, or a work setting.
One-on-one verbal communication affords the greatest opportunity for precision,
because immediate feedback can tell you whether you were understood accurately.
But communicating effectively involves more than just accuracy. The purpose of
most communication is to influence the attitudes and behaviors of those whom we
address. Since the human race is composed of billions of individuals, each with
a different way of responding, no one approach is universally effective. So it's
important that you learn to express yourself accurately and in a way that will
accomplish your purpose toward the individual you're addressing.
THE BASIC PROCESS OF COMMUNICATING
To achieve precision and effectiveness in communicating, you should understand
the basic process of communication. It has four requirements:
- A message must be
conveyed.
- The message must be
received.
- There must be a
response.
- Each message must be
understood.
Let's look at these requirements
one at a time.
A MESSAGE MUST BE CONVEYED
That sounds simple enough. You know what your thoughts are, and you
know how to translate them into words. But that's where we lose the
simplicity.
Each of us has our own mental dialect. It is the common language of
the culture in which we grow up, modified by our own unique life's experiences.
Our life's experiences add color and shades of meaning to different
words.
When you speak, your mental dialect must be translated into the mental
dialect of the hearer. So the words you speak acquire a different color
when they pass through the ears of the person who hears you.
IT DEPENDS UPON WHERE YOU ARE
You can probably think of numerous opportunities for misunderstandings
on your job and in your culture. If you tell your travel agent you want
a flight to Portland, be sure to specify Maine or Oregon. Otherwise,
you may end up on the wrong coast. A colleague of mine once flew to
Ohio to keep a speaking engagement in Columbus. Too late, he realized
that the group he was to address was in Columbus, Georgia. If someone
in my hometown of High Point, North Carolina asks me, "How did
Carolina do in the big game last night?" I know the reference is
to the Tar Heels of the University of North Carolina. If somebody in
Columbia puts the question in those precise words, I know that "Carolina"
means the Gamecocks of the University of South Carolina. In most cities,
if you ask a newsstand operator for the Sunday Times, you'll be handed
a New York Times. But in St. Petersburg, Florida, or Seattle, Washington,
you're likely to get the local newspaper.
A MESSAGE MUST BE RECEIVED
The second basic requirement of the one-on-one communication process
is that the message be received and understood. Effective communicators
know that they have not conveyed their meaning until they have made
sure that the other person has received it exactly as they sent it.
They test, with questions and observations, to make sure that the real
meaning they wanted to convey has passed through the filters and has
been received and understood.
THERE MUST BE A RESPONSE
The goal of all communication is to obtain the desired response. You
want to say something correctly, and have your hearer understand what
you mean by it. But you also want the hearer to do something in response.
EACH MESSAGE MUST BE UNDERSTOOD
Once a message has been delivered, received and responded to, it's time
to take stock of what each person has communicated. The cycle of communication
is complete only when you come away with a clearer understanding of
the person with whom you sought to communicate. You may not always agree
with the other person, and the other person may not always agree with
you -- but it is important that you understand each other.
ARTICLE TAGLINE FOR NIDO QUBEIN
Nido Qubein is an international speaker and consultant.
Visit his website at www.nidoqubein.com
write to Creative Services, Inc.,
P. O. Box 6008, High Point, NC 27262
or call 1-800-989-3010.
Communication Skills Articles