Methods of Communication
Importance of communication
- Communication is the transferring of a message from the sender to the receiver, who understands the message.
- A message is the information or instructions being passed by the sender to the receiver.
- Effective communication is important because it:
- reduces errors
- speeds up decision making
- improves motivation
- strengthens customer relations
Internal and external communication
- Internal communication is between members of the same organization.
- Examples include:
- notices on a table/board
- someone asking a question
- phone call
- Examples include:
- External commmunication is between the organization and other organizations or individuals.
- Examples include:
- orders for goods from suppliers
- sending info to customers about prices and delivery times
- advertising goods or services
- asking customers to pay bills on time
- Examples include:
Methods of communication
| Method | Type | Advantages | Disadvantages |
|---|---|---|---|
| Meetings | Verbal | Allows immediate feedback, body language and tone can be read, good for brainstorming | Can take up too much working time, no permanent written record of what was said, hard to coordinate across time zones |
| Writtten | Fast, low cost and leaves a permanent record, can send large documents to multiple people instantly | Risk of information overload, vulnerable to security hacks/viruses, lack of personal connection | |
| Text messages | Written | Instant, direct, and high open rates, great for quick, urgent updates | Limited space for detailed info, can look unprofessional for external clients |
| Social media | Visual/written | Massive external reach to potential customers, dyanmic, interactive and relatively cheap | Public mistakes can ruin a brand’s reputation instantly, requires constant monitoring for negative comments |
| Phone calls | Verbal | Quick, personal, allows instant feedback, good for resolving tense issues | No written proof of conversation, can be distruptive if the receiver is busy |
| Posters & noticeboards | Visual | Cheap, eye-catching, stays up long-term, reaches a large internal audience passively | Easily ignored after a few days, one-way only (no mechanism for feedback) |
Communication barriers
- Communication barriers are factors that stop effective communication of messages.
| Barrier | Example | Problem | Solution |
|---|---|---|---|
| Problems with sender | Manager uses technical jargon | Receiver misinterprets instructions and makes errors | Use clear, everyday language. Train managers to adapt to their audience |
| Problems with medium | A printed poster is placed on a crowded, messy noticeboard | Message is unseen | Use direct, high-impact channels like text alerts or direct emails |
| Problems with receiver | Employee does not trust manager or is distracted | Worker ignores the directive, leading to poor morale or missed targets | Hold interactive, face-to-face meetings where two-way communication is required |
| Problems with feedback | No channel is provided for the receiver to ask questions | Sender assumes the message was understood when it actually fails | Mandate confirmation replies or include clear Q&A sessions at the end of briefings |