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Principles and Practices of Management




                    Notes          2.  Encoding: Once the source has decided what message to communicate, the content of the
                                       message must be put in a form which the receiver can understand.
                                   3.  The Message: The message is the actual physical product from the source encoding. The
                                       message contains the thoughts and feelings that the communicator intends to evoke in the
                                       receiver.

                                   4.  The Channel: The actual means by which the message is transmitted to the receiver (visual,
                                       auditory, written or some combination of these three) is called the channel. The channel is
                                       the medium through which the message travels.


                                          Example: Documenting an employee’s poor performance in writing conveys that the
                                   manager has taken the problem seriously.
                                   5.  Decoding: Decoding means interpreting what the message means.
                                   6.  The Receiver: The receiver is the object to whom the message is directed. Receiving the
                                       message means one or more of the receiver’s senses register the message.


                                          Example: Hearing the sound of a supplier’s voice over the telephone or seeing the boss
                                   give a thumbs-up signal.
                                   7.  Feedback: The final link in the communication process is a feedback loop. Feedback, in
                                       effect, is communication traveling in the opposite direction. If the sender pays attention to
                                       the feedback and interprets it accurately, the feedback can help the sender learn whether
                                       the original communication was decoded accurately.

                                   14.4 Barriers to Effective Communication

                                   Barriers to communication are factors that block or significantly distort successful communication.
                                   Effective  managerial  communication  skills  helps  overcome  some,  but not  all, barriers  to
                                   communication  in organisations. The more prominent barriers to effective  communication
                                   which every manager should be aware of is given below:
                                   1.  Filtering: Filtering refers to a situation where sender manipulating information so it will
                                       be seen more favourably by the receiver. The major determinant of filtering is the number
                                       of levels in an  organisation’s structure.  The more  vertical levels in the  organisation’s
                                       hierarchy, the more will be the opportunities for filtering.

                                   2.  Selective Perception: Selective perception means seeing what one wants to see. The receiver,
                                       in the communication process, generally resorts to selective perception, i.e., he selectively
                                       perceives  the  message  based  on  the  organisational  requirements,  the  needs  and
                                       characteristics, background of  the employees,  etc. Perceptual  distortion is one of the
                                       distressing barriers to the effective communication.


                                          Example: The employment interviewer who expects a female job applicant to put her
                                   family ahead of her career is likely to see that in female applicants, regardless of whether the
                                   applicants feel that way or not.
                                   3.  Emotions: How the receiver feels at the time of receipt of information influences effectively
                                       how he interprets the information.









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