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Communication Tips for Managers

Effective Communication Tips For Managers

Follow this guide to effective communication and achieve good communication with your employees.

Here we’re going to look at a number of Communication Tips for Managers

Managers are responsible for creating any work environment. So how do your employees figure in the communication process?

Follow this guide to effective communication and achieve good communication with your employees.

Communication Tips for Managers

Communicate with Clarity

To be an effective interpersonal communicator you need to be able to organise your thoughts.

Think it Through

Think through what you want to say before you say it

Choose the words that will best suit the ears of the people you are speaking to. Speak to them in language they will understand.

Express Your Feelings

Be willing to express your feelings

People who are able to express their feelings are more likely to be effective communicators than those who are not.

This does not mean an irresponsible venting of emotions; rather, it means an expression of feelings tempered with responsibility.

If you are unable or unwilling to express your feelings, others may view you as bland.

Express Clear Intent

Your people want to know where you are coming from

Tell them! Move beyond merely exchanging data and information. Enrich your communication with a clear expression of your feelings about the issues at hand.

Being Empathic

Put yourself in the place of the other person:

The effective communicator has empathy. The capacity to participate in another’s thoughts or feelings. Empathy is the ability to see the world through the other person’s eyes. It is an attitude, a frame of mind, which has a profound effect on the quality of communication.

Empathy is what helps set up the exchange as a living mutual relationship.

Be Present

Try to be truly present when engaging in interpersonal communication. Many managers appear to be preoccupied with other thoughts. Their body language conveys the impression that their thoughts are paying attention to something other than the matter at hand.

Don’t be guilty of this type of behaviour. Whenever talking with another person, give that person your undivided attention. Even if you have only 10 minutes to give, give the person 10 minutes of your undivided attention.

Address the Barriers

Understanding the seven barriers to communication will help you identify when they start to impact a team’s ability to interact and collaborate effectively. Spotting the signs is the first step to analysing the cause of issues so you can take proactive steps to address them.

Good Listening

Be a good listener. It has been estimated that no more than about 10 per cent of the general population might be considered really good listeners.

That means that about 90 per cent of us have room for improvement. It will be to your credit if you develop a reputation for being a good listener. Be an active listener and listen with understanding. Ask good questions. Paraphrase the key points that the other person has made.

Avoid gossip and rumour.

Check your perception of the person’s feelings. Link the elements. Achieve unity. These are things that you can learn to do. Great effort is required, but making the effort will surely enhance your effectiveness in interpersonal communication.

Evaluate Slowly

Teach yourself to postpone evaluation for a little longer. Whenever a new idea is being presented for consideration, many managers are too quick on the draw in evaluating the idea.

Before they have really understood the idea, they judge it to be either good or bad. Such behaviour tends to inhibit communication and may cause the manager to miss out on some promising ideas. Whenever a new idea is being presented to you, discipline yourself to postpone evaluation until after you have demonstrated that you fully understand the idea.

Communication Tips for Managers

Show Understanding of Different Points of View

Avoid becoming hostile when another person’s views differ from your own:

Employees learn a great deal about their manager on the basis of how the manager responds to opposing views. (And body language speaks louder than words.) If the manager appears threatened or distressed whenever an employee offers an opposing view, the employees in all likelihood will be reluctant to challenge the manager in the future.

As a consequence, the manager’s ideas may go untested, and some potentially good ideas may never be considered. Avoid becoming hostile to opposing views. Try to understand the other person’s views: what they mean, how they came about, and why the person supports these particular views. Then, when appropriate, try to incorporate these views into your own thinking, while at the same time giving due credit to the person who generated the ideas.

Demonstrate Willingness to Change

Be willing to change your convictions as new truths are uncovered.

Too many people believe that they have a “lock” on truth. There is only one way to the top of the mountain, and that is their way.

Their own views are obviously correct, which means that any opposing views are obviously incorrect. One of the greatest challenges for you as a manager is to keep an open mind. This does not mean a wishy-washy approach in which you agree with every opposing view, but it does mean that you will hear others out and try to understand their views, even when the views are contrary to your own.

Perhaps it will turn out to be a significant learning experience; you may glean some insights that will help you strengthen your own views.

Confrontation and Conflict

Conflict is an integral part of life. If we are encouraging people to be authentic in expressing their thoughts and feelings, conflict is inevitable; if we are calling for people to be creative in expressing their own views, conflict is inevitable; and if we are requiring people to work in complex and ever-changing organisations that have competing demands, conflict is inevitable.

Conflict is not something to be avoided; rather, it is something to be guided and channelled for productive ends. Whenever your views differ from those of others, be willing to confront. This is essential for authentic dialogue.

Think Win-Win

When confronting others, there are those who think only in terms of win-lose. There obviously will be a winner and a loser. This is a basic attitude that has been ingrained over the years. Don’t get trapped in the win-lose mentality. Transcend it! Focus on ends rather than means.

Ask yourself: In this particular confrontation, what might be done to assure that both my adversary and I achieve our objectives? How can we both emerge as winners?

This article was contributed by Nishanth Reddy

Communication Tips for Managers

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