1 / 30

Chapter 1 Communication

Chapter 1 Communication. It’s Importance and Roles in Your Life. Case Study 1. Three months ago, Anna Washington graduated from Winston Business College. Upon graduation, she obtained her first full-time job with IBM. Needless to say, she was very excited about the opportunity.

fawn
Download Presentation

Chapter 1 Communication

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Chapter 1 Communication It’s Importance and Roles in Your Life

  2. Case Study 1 Three months ago, Anna Washington graduated from Winston Business College. Upon graduation, she obtained her first full-time job with IBM. Needless to say, she was very excited about the opportunity. As the receptionist in the foyer of a new building, Anna works in an attractive setting. She has the opportunity to greet most employees, including upper management, and customers as they enter the building. She answers incoming calls and forwards them to appropriate individuals. Anna’s computer is equipped with usual software-words processing, spreadsheets, databases, presentations graphics, and games such as Solitaire, Hearts, FreeCell, and Minesweeper. She has email and Internet access as well. Anna sometimes uses her word processing software when the secretarial staff has too much work. While this opportunity doesn’t happen too often, she enjoys it when it does come. After three months, Anna’s job has lost some its appeal. She does not greet employees with the same enthusiasm as she did at first. Neither do her fellow employees respond as enthusiastically to her greetings. Her supervisor becomes irritated when she finds errors in the documents Anna has keyed. Answering incoming calls has become routine, almost boring. Recently, Anna sent an email to a friend about personal business and her supervisor caught her. She did not say anything at the time, but Anna could tell she was upset. Today, Anna was bored and decided to play Solitaire. She was in the middle of her first game when her supervisor brought a document to key. Her supervisor became upset and lectured Anna as several people, including a member of upper management, walked by. Obviously, Anna was very embarrassed.

  3. Case Study Questions • How important is communication at Anna’s job? • How did Anna use communication to reflect her attitude toward her job? • Did Anna use audience analysis? If so, did she use it effectively? • Does Anna’s recent job performance reflect an I or a you attitude? • What opportunities did electronic communication offer Anna? • What messages did Anna’s use of electronic communication send to her supervisor?

  4. The Importance of Communication

  5. Did you know? • Face book clip

  6. The Purposes of Communication

  7. To establish and build goodwill

  8. To persuade • Convince people video

  9. To Obtain or Share Information

  10. To Establish Personal Effectiveness

  11. To Build Self Esteem

  12. The Communication Process Has five components Message sent through channel R e c e i v e r S e n d e r Feedback

  13. The Sender

  14. The Message • ellen

  15. The Receiver • Chris Brown

  16. The Feedback • UH Football

  17. The Channel

  18. Checkpoint 1 • When communicating, what are the types of symbols that make up a message/ • When communicating, how important is the channel? Why?

  19. Communication Media

  20. Checkpoint 2 Indicate the media you would use for the following messages and explain your selection. • You want to ask your supervisor for a day off? • You need to give the head of the Sales Department your sales figures for last month. • You want to tell a subordinate, Les, that he can have a day off as he requested. • You must tell Anna that she cannot play computer games while on the job. (case study 1)

  21. Lets go back to questions 1 and 2 of the case study. • How important is communication at Anna’s job? • How did Anna use communication to reflect her attitude toward her job?

  22. Responsibilities of Participants

  23. Audience Analysis • Miss teen USA

  24. Audience Analysis • Billy Madison

  25. The Receiver's Responsibilities

  26. Forms of Communication

  27. Barriers to Communication

  28. Lets go back to questions 3, 4, 5 and 6 of the case study. • Did Anna use audience analysis? If so, did she use it effectively? • Does Anna’s recent job performance reflect an I or a you attitude? • What opportunities did electronic communication offer Anna? • What messages did Anna’s use of electronic communication send to her supervisor?

  29. Case 1 Summary Anna does not understand how nonverbal communication is used to evaluate her job performance. Her excitement for the first few weeks on the job is expected. Anna’s real challenge came after the initial excitement had worn off- a challenge she has failed to meet successfully. Instead of showing boredom with her she needs to find things to do that will enhance her job performance. But, what could Anna do to make her supervisors view her as a valued employee? What would you do? Instead of playing games, Anna cold use her computer and surf the Internet for information on being a receptionist and ways to improve her job performance. She could also find good books to read -books that would help her learn about the business world and specifically her employer. If her supervisor had seen Anna reading a book to further her future in the company, her opinion of Anna might have been different. There are many things Anna could do to use her time more effectively.

  30. Setting Up Shop: Case Study • Page 35 of Textbook • Must be typed in Times Roman Numeral Font. • Complete Sentences! • Don’t start a sentence with yes, no or maybe.

More Related