Take our Communication skills Quiz

If you ever wondered what it is that gets you less than stellar results in your life...Or maybe you just want to improve the results you're already getting ? It could just be that you are curious about what makes relationships better and what causes some to crash and burn Either way ...Take our Quiz and find out more- You get your results instantly Simply click on this link >>>>> Transforming Communication Quiz

WARNING: DO NOT Buy Any Book or Course on Public Speaking Unless it Meets the Following Criteria…

 Paul B. Evans has helped over 30,000 public speakers move from dull to dynamic!


  • How You Cast Your Place Of Work Area Reflects On How You Run Your Small Business December 13, 2011
    Do you realize that the way you cast your Office Space Orange County displays on the way you operate your business? A very good place of work house forged is essential to build a suitable performing setting in your case and for ones staffs. Naturally, not neglecting your price range, all your place of work [...]How You Cast Your Place Of Work Area Reflects O […]
    admin
  • The Benefits Of Unified Communications December 12, 2011
    Ask any amount of CIO’s what unified communications is and you'll get any number of answers. Why? Because every IP communication vendor will outline Unified Communications according to what features and consolidation they have available to do work with. True business Unified Communications (UC) means simplifying and unifying all the tactics a business c […]
    admin
  • Mobilize Your PBX With Unified Communications December 11, 2011
    As the approval for Tablets and Smart telephones keeps on rising, the clamor for a ways to unify and strip down all of the strategies a business communicates and collaborates increases with it. Now, the office and mobile environments come together more neatly than ever before. When you put your communications into the cloud you [...]Mobilize Your PBX With Un […]
    admin
  • What Are Effective Communication Skills December 11, 2011
    The facility to talk clearly, eloquently, and effectively has been recognised as the indicator of an informed person since the start of recorded history. Communication is a process of transferring info from one entity to another (Wikipedia). Everything we do has something to do with communication. Regularly we think it is something that happens when we are [ […]
    admin
  • Improve Your Corporate Communications With These Simple Steps December 11, 2011
    Get to the Point to Get Your Way: The Simple Secret to Improved Corporate Communications You’re rather more likely to get what you need in everyday business communications when you start out by giving away the ending. Consider what you usually cope with now. Rambling business memos. Excruciatingly boring reports. Another poke-a-pencil-in-your-eyeball present […]
    admin
  • Making Use Of Different Communication Systems For A Better Workplace. December 10, 2011
    Fostering a greater office communication could be very very important for every employee and employer. This won’t solely assist in advancing the career of an employee aspiring to climb up the company ladder, it should also assist employers to have a extra environment friendly workforce. As such, whether you might be an employee aspiring to [...]Making Use Of […]
    admin
  • Ten Ways Women Sabotage Communication in the Workplace….. September 5, 2009
    According to Diane DiResta there are ten ways women sabotage communication in the workplace. Here is an ezine article that she wrote… Have a read and let me know what you think by posting in the comments box on the left hand side of this page By Diane DiResta Glass ceiling or partners in sabotage? While the glass [...]Ten Ways Women Sabotage Communication in […]
    admin
  • How to Improve Communication Skills and Your Personal Style September 5, 2009
    Here are six tips for improving your communication style: 1. Knowing how to improve communication skills will come easier once you become aware of your own communication style. Each person has a unique way of communicating. Listen to your own speech. What sorts of words do you use? Which sort of body language and what tone of [...]How to Improve Communicatio […]
    admin
  • The 5 Pitfalls Of Poor Business Communication Skills For Managers September 2, 2009
    Everyone knows that effective business communication skills are a necessity for any successful manager. But what are the pitfalls of poor business communication skills by managers? 1. Lowered Efficiency Poor business communication skills can hamper the efficiency of your company or department through vague emails that need to be clarified, rewriting of vital […]
    admin
  • Business Communication Skills – Because You need to Get That all Important Message across April 12, 2009
    Communication in the workplace is essential for many reasons. All of your planning and monitoring of business processes depend on your ability to convey the facts needed to get the task done . This can take many forms and may include modern electronic methods or a simple office circular . What is crucial is that your [...]Business Communication Skills – Beca […]
    admin

Communication: Mechanical and Social Principles

Communication is one of the fundamental necessities of our relationships with other people, whether it is a stranger, work colleague, family member, child or life partner. While our interpersonal relationships can be rewarding, many of us find ourselves in situations of mis-communication and communication breakdown, often leading to interpersonal conflict.

Do you find that people often misinterpret what you are saying or your intentions? Have you ever felt that you have totally missed the meaning of what someone else was communicating to you? Do you have difficulty expressing what you would like to say? Rest assured, many of us are confronted with situations like this in our relationships with others! We are left feeling like we are not being heard and our relationships suffer. In the end, our most developed societal tool is also one of the most productive conflict factories in the history of mankind.

In order to tackle two problems with a single solution, we’ve devised a comprehensive article on communication – and how improving it can not only improve your personal relationships, but also ensure that your professional life is on the right lane.

What is communication?

Body language, sign language, verbal language, writing, gestures, broadcasting – you name it, it is part of the process of communication. Communication is a broad concept and its history can be traced from a wide variety of pathways. Gesture and body language are the most primitive forms of communication, being practiced even before humans were able to produce ‘sound’ verbal language. Verbal language is possibly the most prominent human form of communication (albeit not the most used – it is perceived to be only 7% to 11% of communication). Some philosophers affirm that our capacity to verbally communicate with each other is the link which separates humans from other animals in the evolutionary scale.

Written language, another particularly prominent and advanced form of human communication, was initiated not so long ago – around 3,000 B.C. when the Egyptian civilisation created their first set of hieroglyphics. The complexity of human communication evolved analogously with the human capacity of learning, invoking major evolutionary changes in the brain structure and resulting in our capacity to improve (or arguably complicate) the way in which we communicate to each other. For the purpose of this article, we’ll focus on verbal communication and body language.

Interpersonal Communication

Interpersonal communication can be defined as the transactional process of creating meaning through mutually responsive entities – or less formally, transmitting and receiving messages to and from other individuals. When people are communicating, they’re being bombarded with information which, in most cases, they vastly fail to perceive. Why? Because people are not aware of the manner in which others perceive the world and themselves. They may have a rough idea, and even share some commonalities, but being able to predict interpretation of meaning to its full extent is impossible. However, it is possible to recognise some general trends.

Interpersonal communication has a core structure: sender, receiver, message and context. When the first ‘message’ is produced, a receiver will interpret that message according to his personal background (values, culture, experiences, knowledge and more) and according to the context in which the message was produced (situation, relevance, sender characteristics and more). To effectively communicate, people need to be able to align each individual’s background information to the verbal or cultural significance of the message being transmitted. Relationships are based on that common level of understanding, and the more people fail to communicate to each other, the more they develop personal assumptions that could lead to conflict.

Barriers to communication

Considering its complexity, understanding the core challenges to interpersonal communication can vastly improve the process of interpreting people’s messages, and helping them understand how to interpret yours. According to Bolton (1993) there are twelve major communication spoilers, listed in three different categories:

Judging

1. Criticising – making a negative evaluation of the other person.

2. Name-calling – stereotyping the other person.

3. Diagnosing – analysing the other person’s behaviour.

4. Praising evaluatively – making excessive positive judgments to the other person.

Sending Solutions

5. Ordering – commanding the other person to do something you would like.

6. Threatening – controlling the other person’s actions by warning about consequences.

7. Moralising – telling what the other person should do in a given situation.

8. Inappropriate or excessive questioning – using close-ended questions in excess.

9. Advising – giving the other person a solution to a problem.

Avoiding the Other’s Concerns

10. Diverting – “pushing” a solution to the other person’s problems.

11. Logical argument – attempting to convince the other with an appeal to logic and facts.

12. Reassuring – trying to stop the other person from feeling negative emotions.

Improving Communication

There are many effective strategies to help improve interpersonal communication. Effective communication does not only involve the transmission of a message, but also ensuring that the other person is devoting enough attention and that the environment is appropriate to transmit the message (controlling the ‘noise’ and ‘interruption’ levels).

Attention is the major skill that needs to be ‘practised’ during the communication process. The more attention devoted to a dialogue, for example, the better a communicator can recognise body language and voice trends. Furthermore, understanding the context of each message and aligning that to the other person’s cultural and emotional background plays a key role in creating reliability in the interpretation.

Basic Communication Skills

Such rules are beneficial for any communication process, but particularly important during a formal relationship.

1. Listening well – valuing the client and demonstrating interest for the conversation.

2. Observing – observing body language, voice tone and emotive expressions.

3. Acknowledgement – the recognition for the client’s initiative to state his/her issues.

4. Awareness – ensuring that the counsellor’s body language is appropriate for the context.

5. Thinking – reasoning about what is and what is not appropriate input to the process.

6. Verbal expression – ensuring the use of the appropriate tone, rhythm and volume of voice.

7. Reflecting – clarifying and verifying what the client has expressed to the counsellor.

Subscribe to our FREE eZine.

Pedro Gondim
http://www.articlesbase.com/communication-articles/communication-mechanical-and-social-principles-139761.html

Uncategorized

Leave a Reply

 

 

 

You can use these HTML tags

<a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>

Security Code: