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Effective Listening and Communication Strategies in Systems Analysis

This chapter explores the importance of effective listening and communication skills in systems analysis. It covers guidelines for listening, speaking styles, benefit and loss terms, body language, and proxemics. The chapter also addresses the procedures for preparing, conducting, and following up on meetings and presentations, as well as writing business and technical reports.

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Effective Listening and Communication Strategies in Systems Analysis

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  1. Introduction • The chapter will address the following questions: • How do you perform the six guidelines for doing effective listening? • What are the four speaking styles and what are the situations where you would use each? • What are examples of both benefit terms and loss terms, and what are the responses that they would elicit from the audience? • What are body language and proxemics and why does a systems analyst care about them?

  2. Introduction • The chapter will address the following questions: • What are the procedures to be able to prepare for, conduct, and follow up on meetings, formal presentations and project walkthroughs? • What are the proper methods in writing business and technical reports?

  3. Communicating With People • Introduction • The systems analyst must have good if not impeccable communications skills. • The systems analyst’s best chance for success, to rise up the corporate ladder is to possess outstanding communication skills.

  4. Communicating With People • Introduction • Don Walton, a consultant on communications, quotes the CEO and chairman of The Prudential Insurance Company of America in his book, Are You Communicating? Starting my Prudential career as an agent, I understood quickly that although people may listen, they don’t always here. I had to make sure, therefore that my presentations were clear, concise, and to the point. In addition, I taught myself to listen and understand others, another crucial point in making sales.Clear communication is an important component of any career foundation. I have seen bright, ambitious people fail simply because they were unable to understand the importance of this. The person who has the ability to make his or her point simply and effectively, while clearly understanding what is being said by others, will have the best chance of success in a society and business environment as complex and multi-dimensional as ours.

  5. Communicating With People • Introduction • One of the earliest recorded stories of communication problems - The Tower of Babel. Once upon a time all the world spoke a single language and used the same words. As men journeyed in the east, they came upon a plain in the land of Shinar and settled there. They said to one another, ``Come, let us make bricks and bake them hard''; they used bricks for stone and bitumen for mortar. ``Come,'' they said, ``let us build ourselves a city and a tower with its top in the heavens, and make a name for ourselves; or we shall ever be dispersed all over the earth.'' Then the Lord came down to see the city and tower which mortal men had built, and he said, ``Here they are, one people with a single language, and now they have started to do this; henceforward nothing they have a mind to do will be beyond their reach. Come, let us go down there and confuse their speech, so that they will not understand what they say to one another.'' So the Lord dispersed them from there all over the earth, and they left off building the city. That is why it is called Babel, because the Lord there made a babble of the language of all the world; from that place the Lord scattered men all over the face of the earth.

  6. Communicating With People • Four Audiences for Interpersonal Communication during Systems Projects • For years English and communications scholars have told us that the secret of effective oral and written communications is to know the audience. • Who is the audience during a systems development project? • There are at least four distinct groups: • System designers, other analysts and information systems specialists. • System builders, the programmers and technical specialists who will actually construct the system. • System users, the people whose day-to-day jobs will be affected, directly or indirectly, by the new system. • System owners, who in addition to possibly being system users, sponsor the project and approve systems expenditures.

  7. Communicating With People • Listening • The skill of listening may be the most important. • For a systems analyst to be successful in working with customers or users trying to solve their system problems, they must be able to listen to their problems understand what they are asking them to do. • As Thomas Gildersleeve states in his book, Successful Data Processing System Analysis, you must make a distinction between hearing and listening. • “To hear is to recognize that someone is speaking, To listen is to understand what the speaker wants to communicate.”

  8. Communicating With People • Guidelines in Effective Listening • Approach the Session with a Positive Attitude: • No matter what your feelings are for the person you are working with, or the project as whole, approaching it with a negative attitude is fighting a losing battle. • Set the Other Person at Ease: • Its no secret that one of the best ways to open a person up to talking is presenting a nice, cheerful attitude. • A good approach is to start by talking about the person’s interest or hobbies. Showing an interest in their personal life sometimes can serve as an ice breaker and put them more at an ease.

  9. Communicating With People • Guidelines in Effective Listening • Let Them Know You Are Listening: • Make it a habit to always maintain eye contact when listening and use a response such as a head nod or a “uh-huh” to indicate that you acknowledge what the other person is saying. • Always maintain good posture and even sit on the edge of your seat and lean forward. • Ask Questions: • To make sure you clearly understand what the person is saying or to clarify a point, ask a question to help you understand. • This will show that you are listening and will also give the other person the opportunity to expand on the answer.

  10. Communicating With People • Guidelines in Effective Listening • Don’t Assume Anything: • One of the worst things to do is to get in a hurry and be impatient with the speaker. • For example: • You assume you know what the other person is going to say so you cut in and finish the sentence for them, possibly, missing entirely what the person was going to say, plus irritating the them in the process. • You interrupt or stop the speaker because you may have already heard that information before or you believe it is not applicable to what you are doing, thus risking missing a valuable piece of information.

  11. Communicating With People • Guidelines in Effective Listening • Don’t Assume Anything: • Art Linkletter learned this lesson on his popular television show, “Kid Say The Darndest Things” when he asked a child a philosophical question: “On my show I once had a child tell me he wanted to be an airline pilot. I asked him what he’d do if all the engines stopped out over the Pacific Ocean. He said ‘First I would tell everyone to fasten their seatbelts, and then I’d find my parachute and jump out.’ While the audience rocked with laughter, I kept my attention on the young man to see if he was being a smart alec. The tears that sprang into his eyes alerted me to his chagrin more than anything he could have said, so I asked him why he’d do such a thing. His answer revealed the sound logic of a child: ‘I’m going for gas…I’m coming back!”

  12. Communicating With People • Guidelines in Effective Listening • Take Notes: • The process of taking notes serves two purposes. • By jotting down brief notes while the other person is speaking, gives them the impression that what they have to say is important enough that you want to write it down. • It helps you remember the major points of the meeting when you reference your notes at a later time.

  13. Communicating With People • Speaking • Systems analysts need to be able to speak effectively in their work to be successful. • To be effective speaker is to deliver a clear and concise message which is received and understood for its intended purpose, minimizing the risk of creating misunderstandings with your words. • An Effective Speaking approach: • Before speaking, organize thoughts to think about what the purpose for speaking is, what is the main point, who is the intended audience and what are the desired results. • During speaking obtain feedback via oral response or body language to see if the message is being received and the desired results are being obtained. • If not, you have the opportunity to alternate your approach and try again.

  14. Communicating With People • Speaking • Keep in mind that different situations may call for different speaking styles, just as different business writings call for different writing styles. • There are four identified speaking styles: • Expressive style. Spontaneous, conversational, and uninhibited. We use this style when we are expressing our feelings, joking around, complaining, being intimate or socializing. • Directive style. Authoritative and judgmental. We use this style to give orders, give instruction, exert leadership, pass judgment, or state our opinions. • Problem-solving style. Rational, objective, unbiased, and bland. This is the style most used in business dealings. • Meta style. Used to discuss the communications process itself. Meta language enables us to talk about our interactions.

  15. Communicating With People • Use of Words: Turn-ons and Turnoffs • Choosing the right words is important, especially to the systems analyst who must effectively communicate with a diverse group of system users, owners, and builders. • There are two identified categories of terms that influence managers: benefit terms and loss terms. • Benefit terms are words or phrases that evoke positive responses from the audience. Benefit terms can be used very effectively to sell proposed changes. Managers will usually accept ideas that produce benefit terms. • Examples are: increase productivity, increase sales, and reduce cost.

  16. Communicating With People • Use of Words: Turn-ons and Turnoffs • There are two identified categories of terms that influence managers: benefit terms and loss terms. • Loss terms are words or phrases that evoke negative responses from the audience. Loss terms can also be used very effectively to sell proposed changes. Managers will usually accept ideas that eliminate loss terms. • Examples are: higher costs, excessive waste, and higher taxes. • Avoid turn-off words or phrases such as jargon. • These can kill projects by changing the attitudes and opinions of management. • Avoid red-flag terms that attack people's performance or threaten their job.

  17. Communicating With People • Electronic Mail • One of the newer forms of interpersonal communication of particular importance to the systems analyst is electronic mail (E-mail). • Electronic mail gives us the ability to create, edit, send, and receive information electronically, usually using some type of computer network. • The advantages are as follows: • A person can send messages to and receive messages from someone almost instantaneously practically anywhere in the world (provided both people are linked together by some type of computer network). These messages can be read, stored, printed, edited, or deleted. • Once the mail system software and computer network are in place, the actual cost of sending a message is very small.

  18. Communicating With People • Electronic Mail • The disadvantages are as follows: • The sheer volume of electronic mail an individual receives may be overwhelming. • Because it is so quick and easy to create a response to an electronic mail message and because mail users sometimes forget that they are communicating with another person via a machine, not with the machine directly, electronic mail messages are sometimes blunt, tactless, or inflammatory. • Personal privacy is another concern. • Electronic mail deprives its users of some of the richness of other forms of communication, such as tone of voice, facial expression, body language, etc.

  19. Communicating With People • Body Language and Proxemics • Body language is all of the information being communicated by an individual other than their spoken words. Body language is a form of nonverbal communications that we all use and are usually unaware of. • Why should the analyst be concerned with body language? • Research studies have determined a startling fact — of a person's total feelings, only 7 percent are communicated verbally (in words), 38 percent are communicated by the tone of voice used, and 55 percent of those feelings are communicated by facial and body expressions. • If you only listen to someone's words, you are missing most of what they have to say!

  20. Communicating With People • Body Language and Proxemics • We will focus on just three aspects of body language: facial disclosure, eye contact, and posture. • Facial disclosure means you can sometimes understand how a person feels by watching the expressions on their faces. • Many common emotions have easily recognizable facial expressions associated with them. • However, you need to be aware that the face is one of the most controlled parts of the body. • Some people who are aware that their expressions often reveal what they are thinking are very good at disguising their faces.

  21. Communicating With People • Body Language and Proxemics • Eye contact is the least controlled part of the face. • A continual lack of eye contact may indicate uncertainty. • A normal glance is usually from three to five seconds in length; however, direct eye contact time should increase with distance. • As an analyst, you need to be careful not to use excessive eye contact with a threatened user so that you won't further intimidate them. • Direct eye contact can cause strong feelings, either positive or negative, in other people. • If eyes are ``the window to the soul,'' be sure to search for any information they may provide.

  22. Communicating With People • Body Language and Proxemics • Posture is the least controlled aspect of the body, even less than the face or voice. • Body posture holds a wealth of information for the astute analyst. • Members of a group who are in agreement tend to display the same posture. • A good analyst will watch the audience for changes in posture that could indicate anxiety, disagreement, or boredom. • An analyst should normally maintain an “open” body position signaling approachability, acceptance, and receptiveness. • In special circumstances, the analyst may choose to use a confrontation angle of head on or at a 90 angle to another person in order to establish control and dominance.

  23. Communicating With People • Body Language and Proxemics • Individuals also communicate via proxemics. • Proxemics is the relationship between people and the space around them. Proxemics is a factor in communications that can be controlled by the knowledgeable analyst. • People still tend to be very territorial about their space. • A good analyst is aware of four spatial zones: • Intimate zone -- closer than 1.5 feet. • Personal zone -- from 1.5 feet to 4 feet. • Social zone -- from 4 feet to 12 feet. • Public zone -- beyond 12 feet.

  24. Communicating With People • Body Language and Proxemics • Certain types of communications take place only in some of these spatial zones. • For example, an analyst conducts most interviews with system users in the personal zone. • But the analyst may need to move back to the social zone if the user displays any signs (body language) of being uncomfortable. • Sometimes increasing eye contact can make up for a long distance that can't be changed. • Many people use the fringes of the social zone as a ``respect'' distance.

  25. Meetings • Introduction • During the course of a systems development project, many meetings are usually held. • A meeting is an attempt to accomplish an objective as a result of discussion under leadership. Some possible meeting objectives are listed in the margin. • The ability to coordinate or participate in a meeting is critical to the success of any project.

  26. Meetings • Preparing for a Meeting • Meetings are also very expensive because they require several people to dedicate time that could be better spent on other productive work. • The more individuals involved in a meeting, the more the meeting costs. • But because meetings are an essential form of communication, we must strive to offset the meeting costs by maximizing benefits (in terms of project progress) realized during the meeting.

  27. Meetings • Preparing for a Meeting • Step 1: Determine the Need for and Purpose of the Meeting: • Every meeting should have a well-defined purpose that can be communicated to its participants. • Meetings without a well-defined purpose are rarely productive. • The purpose of every meeting should be attainable within 60 to 90 minutes, because longer meetings tend to become unproductive. • When necessary, longer meetings are possible if they are divided into well-defined submeetings that are separated by breaks that allow people to catch up on their normal responsibilities.

  28. Meetings • Preparing for a Meeting • Step 2: Schedule the Meeting and Arrange for Facilities: • After deciding the purpose of the meeting, determine who should attend. • The proper participants should be chosen to ensure that the purpose of the meeting can be attained. • Some research indicates that the most creative problem solving and decision making is done in small, odd-numbered groups.

  29. Meetings • Preparing for a Meeting • Step 2: Schedule the Meeting and Arrange for Facilities: • The date and time for the meeting will be subject to the availability of the meeting room and the prior commitments of the various participants. • Morning meetings are generally better than afternoon meetings because the participants are fresh and not yet caught up in the workday's problems. • It is best to avoid scheduling meetings in the late afternoon (when people are anxious to go home), before lunch, before holidays, or on the same day as other meetings involving the same participants.

  30. Meetings • Preparing for a Meeting • Step 2: Schedule the Meeting and Arrange for Facilities: • The meeting location is very important. • Seating arrangement is particularly important. • If leader-to-group interaction is required, the group should face the leader but not necessarily other members of the group. • If group-to-group interaction is needed, the team members, including the leader, should all face one another. • Make sure that any necessary visual aids (flip charts, overhead projectors, chalk, and so forth) are also available in the room.

  31. Meetings • Preparing for a Meeting • Step 3: Prepare an Agenda: • A written agenda for the meeting should be distributed well in advance of the meeting. • The agenda confirms the date, time, location, and duration of the meeting. • It states the meeting's purpose and offers a tentative timetable for discussion and questions. • If participants should bring specific materials with them or review specific documents prior to the meeting, specify this in the agenda. • The agenda may include any supplements — for example, reports, documentation, or memoranda — that the participants will need to refer to or study before or during the meeting.

  32. Meetings • Conducting a Meeting • Try to start on time, but do not start the meeting until everyone is present. • If an important participant is more than 15 minutes late, then consider canceling the meeting. • Discourage interruptions and delays, such as phone calls. • Have enough copies of handouts for all participants. • Review the agenda so that the discussion items become group property. • Cover each item on the agenda according to the timetable developed when the meeting was scheduled. • The group leader should ensure that no one person or subgroup dominates or is left out of the discussion.

  33. Meetings • Conducting a Meeting • Decisions should be made by consensus opinion or majority vote. One rule is always in order: • Stay on the agenda and end on time! • If you do not finish discussing all items on the agenda, schedule another meeting. • Sometimes, the purpose of a meeting is to generate possible ideas to solve a problem. One approach is called brainstorming. • Brainstorming is a technique for generating ideas during group meetings. Participants are encouraged to generate as many ideas as possible in a short period of time without any analysis until all the ideas have been exhausted.

  34. Meetings • Conducting a Meeting • Brainstorming is a formal technique that requires discipline. • These guidelines should be followed to ensure effective brainstorming: • Isolate the appropriate people in a place that will be free from distractions and interruptions. • Make sure that everyone understands the purpose of the meeting (to generate ideas to solve the problem) and focus on the problem(s). • Appoint one person to record ideas. This person should use a flip chart, chalkboard, or overhead projector that can be viewed by the entire group.

  35. Meetings • Conducting a Meeting • These guidelines should be followed to ensure effective brainstorming: • Remind everyone of the brainstorming rules: • Be spontaneous. Call out ideas as fast as they occur. • Absolutely no criticism, analysis, or evaluation of any kind is permitted while the ideas are being generated. Any idea may be useful, if only to spark another idea. • Emphasize quantity of ideas, not necessarily quality.

  36. Meetings • Conducting a Meeting • These guidelines should be followed to ensure effective brainstorming: • Within a specified time period, team members call out their ideas as quickly as they can think of them. • After the group has run out of ideas and all ideas have been recorded, then and only then should the ideas be analyzed and evaluated. • Refine, combine, and improve the ideas that were generated earlier.

  37. Meetings • Following Up on a a Meeting • As soon as possible after the meeting is over, the minutes of the meeting should be published. • The minutes are a brief, written summary of what happened during the meeting -- items discussed, decisions made, and items for future consideration. • The minutes are usually prepared by the recording secretary, a team member designated by the group leader.

  38. Formal Presentations • Introduction • In order to communicate information to the many different people involved in a systems development project, a systems analyst is frequently required to make a formal presentation. • Formal presentations are special meetings used to sell new ideas and gain approval for new systems. They may also be used for any of the purposes in the margin. In many cases, a formal presentation may set up or supplement a more detailed written report. • Effective and successful presentations require three critical ingredients: preparation, preparation, and preparation.

  39. Formal Presentations • Introduction • Formal Presentation Advantages: • Immediate feedback and spontaneous responses. • The audience can respond to the presenter, who can use emphasis, timed pauses, and body language to convey messages not possible with the written word. • Formal Presentation Disadvantages: • The material presented is easily forgotten because the words are spoken and the visual aids are transient. • That's why presentations are often followed by a written report, either summarized or detailed.

  40. Formal Presentations • Preparing for the Formal Presentation • As mentioned earlier, it is particularly important to know your audience. • The systems analyst is frequently thought of as the dreaded agent of change in an organization. • As Machiavelli wrote in his classic book The Prince, There is nothing more difficult to carry out, nor more dangerous to handle, than to initiate a new order of things. For the reformer has enemies in all who profit by the old order, and only lukewarm defenders in all those who would profit from the new order, this lukewarmness arising partly from fear of their adversaries — and partly from the incredulity of mankind, who do not believe in anything new until they have had actual experience of it. • People tend to be opposed to change.

  41. Formal Presentations • Preparing for the Formal Presentation • A successful analyst must be an effective salesman. • To effectively present and sell change, you must be confident in your ideas and have the facts to back them up. • Step 1: Define your expectations of the presentation — for instance, that you are seeking approval to continue the project, that you are trying to confirm facts, and so forth. • A presentation is a summary of your ideas and proposals that is directed toward your expectations. • Step 2: Organize your presentation around the allotted time (usually 30 to 60 minutes).

  42. Formal Presentations • Preparing for the Formal Presentation • Step 3: Prepare visual aids such as predrawn flip charts, overhead slides, Microsoft Powerpoint slides and the like — to support your position. • Just like a written paragraph, each visual aid should convey a single idea. • To hold your audience's attention, consider distributing photocopies of the visual aids at the start of the presentation. • This way, the audience doesn't have to take as many notes • Step 4: Practice the presentation in front of the most critical audience you can assemble. • Have somebody raise criticisms and objections. • Practice your responses to these issues.

  43. Formal Presentations • Conducting the Formal Presentation • The following are guidelines that may improve the actual presentation: • Dress professionally. The way you dress influences people. • Avoid using the word “I” when making the presentation. Use “you”' and “we” to assign ownership of the proposed system to management. • Maintain eye contact with the group and keep an air of confidence. If you don't show management that you believe in your proposal, why should they believe in it? • Be aware of your own mannerisms. Some of the most common mannerisms include using too many hand gestures, pacing, and repeatedly saying ``you know'' or ``okay.''

  44. Formal Presentations • Conducting the Formal Presentation • Ways to Keep the Audience Listening: • Stop talking. The silence can be deafening. • Ask a question, and let someone in the audience answer it. • Try a little humor. Everybody likes to laugh. Tell a joke on yourself. • Use some props. Use some type of visual aid to make your point clearer. • Change your voice level. By making your voice louder or softer, you force the audience to listen more closely or make it easier for them to hear. • Do something totally unexpected. Drop a book, toss your notes, jingle your keys.

  45. Formal Presentations • Conducting the Formal Presentation • Answering Questions: • Sometimes answering questions after a presentation may be difficult and frustrating. • We suggest the following guidelines when answering questions: • Always answer questions seriously, even if you feel that it is a silly question. • Answer both the individual who asked the question and the entire audience. • Summarize your answers. • Limit the amount of time you spend answering any one question. • Be honest.

  46. Formal Presentations • Following Up the Formal Presentation • It is extremely important to follow up a formal presentation because the spoken work and impressive visual aids used in a presentation do not usually leave a lasting impression. • For this reason, most presentations are followed by written reports of some kind that provide the audience with a more permanent copy of the information that was communicated.

  47. Project Walkthroughs • Introduction • A special type of meeting conducted by the analyst is called a project walkthrough. • The project walkthrough is a peer group review of systems development documentation. Walkthroughs may be used to verify almost any type of detailed documentation such as ERDs, DFDs and program listings. • Peer group review tend to identify errors that go unnoticed by the analyst who prepared the documentation.

  48. Project Walkthroughs • Who Should Participate in the Walkthrough? • A walkthrough group should consist of seven or fewer participants. • All members of the walkthrough must be treated as equals. • The analyst who prepared the documentation to be reviewed should present that documentation to the group during the walkthrough. • Another analyst or key system user should be appointed as walkthrough coordinator. • The coordinator schedules the walkthrough and ensures that each participant gets the documentation well before the meeting date. • The coordinator also makes sure that the walkthrough is properly conducted and mediates disputes and problems that may arise during the walkthrough.

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