Top Banner
Talking Business A guide for communicating at work
17

Talking business manual

May 25, 2015

Download

Economy & Finance

Anna Trester

A guide to communicating at work
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Talking business manual

Talking BusinessA guide for communicating at work

Page 2: Talking business manual

First and foremost: Expect misunderstanding Miscommunications can be very frustrating, but they are to

be expected. Language is necessarily inherently ambiguous You cannot possibly spell everything out every single time that you try to express anything to someone else. There simply isn’t time. So we make shortcuts and in those shortcuts, meaning gets lost.

Expect misundertstandings to occur.

Page 3: Talking business manual

Equally important: Assume good intentions Everyone assumes that their own way of communicating is

the most natural and therefore the best, so when we recognize that someone is communicating differently, the first instinct can often be that of frustration, to assume that when miscommunication occurs that it is the other person’s fault, and even worse, that it was done willfully or with intention to hurt.

In adapting an analytical stance to language, allow for the possibility of “what if?” “what if this person is trying just as hard to be helpful and informative as I am?”

Page 4: Talking business manual

Be an ethnographer This guide is designed to help you be an active investigator of

your own use of language and communication – to teach you to be an ethnographer of your own ways of communicating!

Ethnography is a research method based on observing people in their natural environment with an aim to understanding how they make sense of their world.

As linguists, our focus is language. By studying how people talk, and recognizing patterns where others might see chaos, we hope to gain access to things like motivations, beliefs, values, and identities.

Page 5: Talking business manual

Your toolkit:

Listen Mirror Ask Questions Know how to Repair / Recover Get at underlying assumptions D.I.E.

Page 6: Talking business manual

D.I.E. Practice of Observation

DescribeInterpret Evaluate

Page 7: Talking business manual

Conversational styleUnconscious way of speaking.

But also how we listen and evaluate. How we gather information about people: Is this person nice, smart, trustworthy, polite,

aggressive, threatening, confident, competent etc etc etc?

Do we like each other?

Page 8: Talking business manual

To what extent can style be changed? To the extent that you can become more aware of your own style

and your expectations about style

Page 9: Talking business manual

Some things to pay attention to

Page 10: Talking business manual

Discourse slot How you structure your contributions to an interaction.

For example, when structuring an open discussion, if you are team leader, wait to give your contribution LAST. Allow the space for others to give their ideas BEFORE you give your decision.

Page 11: Talking business manual

Silence Silence is as rich, and has situated meaning as any other

form of social interaction.

Be aware of the meanings that you attach to silence, and how you interpret it. Be aware that these meanings may not be shared.

Page 12: Talking business manual

Face Threatening Acts

Page 13: Talking business manual

The Meaning of Questions

Page 14: Talking business manual

“Noisy nots” things that are not talked about, but which you might expect

would be

Negeation. Often people tell you who they are by telling you what they are NOT. Pay attention to who/what they “other.”

Page 15: Talking business manual
Page 16: Talking business manual

What to call this skill? Critical Thinking: Awareness of underlying assumptions Cross - Cultural Communication Awareness of Conversational Style Recognition of Meaning-Making – Processes Ability at perspective-taking

Page 17: Talking business manual

An inherently transferrable skill By increasing your awareness and understanding of how you

use language, you will become more aware of ways that others use language and be better able to recognize and recover from misunderstandings.

In-depth knowledge of how languge works in one context can be brought to your own organizations and communities (families, friends, etc.)