Summary: Communication is the lifeblood
of successful organizations, whether it's with customers,
employees, from manager to manager, or up and down
the organization hierarchy. Poor communication effects
the bottom line AND employee satisfaction, and poor
communication creates additional unnecessary conflict.
Learn how to look at your organizational conflict
using a communications audit.
Organizations communicate in two directions: internally
to staff and externally to clients, customers, shareholders,
stakeholders, the media. Faulty internal communications
can lead to mistakes, discouraged and unhappy staff,
employees leaving the company. Poor external communications
can jeopardize image and sales. It really is that
simple. Any overall management strategy needs a communications
plan or the whole operation might fail.
A communications audit analyzes an organization’s
practices to reveal how effective they are—throughout
a whole company or in specified parts of the organization.
It can pinpoint problem areas such as frequent misunderstandings,
information blocks, information lacks, information
duplication, misrepresentation. An audit could be
part of a periodic health check but it is especially
helpful at a time of change: a merger or acquisition,
launch of a new product or service, entry into new
markets, for example.
The exact nature of the audit will depend on the
type of organization and its particular needs and
problems. But it will certainly aim to identify target
audiences: the external audience will have different
needs from an internal one. It will need to identify
the key messages that need to be communicated and
the channels that exist for conveying them. It will
look not only at the communications that the organization
makes but also how it receives them.
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Communication
But what might be going wrong, with external communications,
say? Let me give an example here. My husband is a
shareholder in a building company. Every year it produces
a glossy Annual Report that it sends to shareholders.
The report is extremely detailed and full of lavish
photographs. It clearly costs a lot to produce and
distribute. This makes my husband very angry. He doesn’t
want to read the full report and resents the money
that is wasted on producing and sending a document
that goes straight in the bin. What he would like
is a leaflet summarizing the salient points about
the company’s performance and changes. Does the company
realize that some shareholders feel this way? It is
important to bear in mind that most shareholders are
not able to attend shareholder meetings and may not
know how to make their views known. This company has
a two-way problem. The communications it sends out
are wrong for some shareholders but it has not thought
about a way of creating a channel for the shareholders
to give their feedback. It is thus breaking a fundamental
rule of effective communications: you must have feedback.
Or take an internal issue. The HR department of a
company gives out a detailed instruction manual to
new employees. Yet many of the newly hired people
seem completely lost during their first weeks. Why
might this be? Well, in the first place, the employees
are mostly involved in manual work. They are not used
to reading chunks of written material. Most of the
manuals lie unopened in their lockers. A buddy scheme
of some kind would probably be a much better way of
easing the new people through the first weeks.
Another example comes from a small company in which
everybody was under pressure to meet deadlines. The
director of the company made a habit of telephoning
staff for briefings at lunchtime because he knew they
‘weren’t busy’ then. But that was the point. They
were having lunch. The amount of resentment he caused
by this policy of disturbing people during the precious
few minutes they had to relax was enormous.
Communicating is a complex process with potential
pitfalls at each stage. Is the message clear? Is the
medium for transmitting it appropriate? Has the recipient
actually received it? If so, has it been understood?
Has it had the desired effect? Does the recipient
have a channel for feedback? Can the recipient understand
how to provide the feedback? The old metaphor of the
Chinese whisper holds true. You thought you said one
thing but when you check you find that a totally different
message was actually received.
The audit is a systematic approach that forces an
organization to look at what it is really doing as
opposed to what it believes it is doing. The audit
will look at the people who send and receive messages;
the means of communicating—which extend beyond the
obvious use of the telephone, meetings, conferences,
e-mail etc. to encompass dress code, office layouts,
desk-tidy policies—in order to build up a comprehensive
picture of what is happening. Every aspect of communication
provides another piece of the jigsaw and, once this
is complete, you have the basis for an evaluation.
The evaluation report will consider attitudes towards
the communications (do people look forward to meetings
or consider them a waste of time?); it will look at
the needs of different groups (the most appropriate
way to deliver training, for example) and it will
provide evidence of any problems that need to be addressed.
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However, it is important to evaluate the audit within
a relevant framework. For this reason, key people
will have to clarify the purpose for the organization’s
existence, its cultural values and its identity. For
example, the communications strategy for a budget
airline will be very different from one which targets
business executives. The two companies will have different
purposes, values and identities. They will know exactly
who uses their service and why. They will also understand
the key frustrations of their customers and must ensure
they can use communications to deal with those frustrations
effectively.
The audit is thus a valuable tool for enhancing internal
motivation, loyalty and efficiency and for beefing
up market position. It can be handled internally but
there are also benefits from using an external consultant.
Employees might feel inhibited about expressing their
real view to another company member, whereas an outsider,
who guarantees their anonymity, will be less of a
threat.
Brenda Townsend Hall is a writer and trainer in the
fields of communications and cross-cultural awareness.
She is an associate member of the ITAP International
Alliance: http://www.itapintl.com/
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