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.
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.
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/
![]() Google News Updated : Fri, 10 Oct 2008 23:49:19 GMT Emptying the Pac-10 notebook - ESPN
ESPN - USC is a perfect 8-0 vs ASU this decade, last losing to the Sun Devils in 1999. Over the 8 wins, USC has averaged 39.8 PPG. The Trojans are going for their 400th victory at the Coliseum. Trojans sense an opportunity with Arizona State USC, ASU to avoid second Pac-10 loss Publ.Date : Fri, 10 Oct 2008 22:31:02 GMT Conflict Resolution Marked Career of Nobel Laureate Martti Ahtisaari - Voice of America
Voice of America - By Andre de Nesnera Conflict resolution marked the career of former Finnish president Martti Ahtisaari who has received this year's Nobel Peace Prize for his efforts to secure peace in various regions of the world. Video: Ex-Finland President Wins Nobel Peace Prize Martti Ahtisaari gets a deserved Nobel Peace Prize for a (failed) plan Publ.Date : Fri, 10 Oct 2008 21:23:27 GMT GOP Alleges Nonprofit Voter Fraud - CBS News
CBS News - (CBS) This week Sen. John McCain and his running mate, Gov. Sarah Palin, went after one of the nation's leading voter registration groups which focuses its efforts minorities and low-income families and now being investigated for voter fraud. McCain Campaign Calls for Investigation of ACORN-Obama Ties Voter fraud accusations mar presidential campaign Publ.Date : Fri, 10 Oct 2008 23:21:41 GMT Notes on a Milk Scandal - Wall Street Journal
Wall Street Journal - By JOSEPH STERNBERG | FROM THE WALL STREET JOURNAL ASIA It's a question I'd never expected to spend much time thinking about. France pulls tainted Chinese food Tainted milk prompts new Chinese standards Publ.Date : Fri, 10 Oct 2008 18:28:15 GMT Wall Street, markets continue roller coaster - Bizjournals.com
Bizjournals.com - A roller coaster week on Wall Street ended with the Dow Jones Industrial Average down 128 points Friday after bouncing back from almost 700 points down in the day. Video: Wild Swings Drive Morning Trading Worst Week on Wall Street Ends Down Publ.Date : Fri, 10 Oct 2008 21:29:25 GMT Two Banks in Midwest Fail - Wall Street Journal
Wall Street Journal - By JEFF BATER WASHINGTON -- The Federal Deposit Insurance Corp. on Friday announced the closings of two banks, bringing to 15 the number of federally insured banks that have failed this year. Two banks fold, bringing total to 15 failures this year Regulators shut small banks in Mich., Ill. Publ.Date : Fri, 10 Oct 2008 23:14:00 GMT John McCain, Barack Obama on healthcare - Los Angeles Times
Los Angeles Times - How workable are the presidential candidates' health reform plans? Here's a summary of their proposals and a list of online resources for more information. In this economy, don't count on comprehensive health reform Fact Check: Would Obama fine businesses that don't offer health care? Publ.Date : Fri, 10 Oct 2008 23:27:40 GMT Amazon Associate Software |
PARLOT::Ebooks, Scripts,
Websites, and more... In my work with business executives, I have come to... Read More Researchers have undertaken numerous studies to look at the connection... Read More A recent article in the Wall Street Journal raised the... Read More We all are on a quest for knowledge. Whether its... Read More There is no sure fire route to commercial success, but... Read More The pure and simple truth is rarely pure and never... Read More Usually, we're most interested in communicating outwardly; getting our messages... Read More Companies are welcoming a diverse range of employees (The Sunday... Read More What has been your store's shrinkage experience for the last... Read More Managing, supervising, being a team leader is the hardest job... Read More As a small business owner, entrepreneur or independent professional, it's... Read More Are you the position or the person?Bosses can lose their... Read More There is a pervasive assumption that small firms are more... Read More Modern business faces complex problems; management often calls upon highly-specialized... Read More Increasing shareholder value is the most important driver for organisations... Read More Successful enterprise building requires seven elements. These are:1. People, who... Read More Charles Petrie, from Stanford, released a short article entitled "The... Read More Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation... Read More This article relates to the Ethics in the Workplace competency,... Read More In today's chaotic world and uncertain economic times too many... Read More If you are an executive, you may sometimes feel like... Read More This article relates to the Job Security competency, commonly evaluated... Read More You've seen it happen many times. An organization that provides... Read More Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation... Read More Bar Charts and the Information ChallengeWhether one is an unknown... Read More
Adsense
websites
3 Keys to Being a Fearless Executive
Examining the Relationship Between Employee Satisfaction and Customer Satisfaction
Executive Performance -- Whos to Blame for Incompetent Managers?
Profound Knowledge
Innovation, Idea Selection, Valuation
The Truth?
Listening Strategically
Innovation Management ? Diversity Can Make All The Difference
Shrinkage Control
Managing People - Why Is It So Difficult?
How To Get What You Really Want
Give Yourself a Boss Day Gift, Part 2: Are You the Position or the Person?
Creativity and Innovation - Large Firms Versus Small Firms
The Red Phone - Management Consulting in 30 Seconds or Less
Building Shareholder Value Through Your People
Miracle Max On Market Breakthroughs
Contract Management Software: the Solution to the Problem of Coordination
Creativity and Innovation Management ? Motivation and Management Layers
Tales from the Corporate Frontlines: Workplace Ethics: Reaching the Highest Standard
Take The Guesswork Out Of Problem Solving
How to Deal With Salespeople
Tales from the Corporate Frontlines: The Responsibility for Job Security
Increasing Employee Retention Through Employee Engagement
Creativity and Innovation Management ? Psychological Reward
Bar Charts Brought to Life: Index of Interactive Information for HTML and PDF
One of the most difficult tasks you will face as... Read More
Creativity can be defined as problem identification and idea generation... Read More
Most people treat meetings as a free resource that can... Read More
The meeting started like a hundred others before. There were... Read More
Tis' the season for business and corporate gift-giving! If you... Read More
Re-organizing, re-engineering, re-training, down-sizing, outsourcing, changing-changing-changing. Organizations today think they... Read More
"Nothing inspires confidence in a business man sooner than punctuality,... Read More
We all know people who are like human dynamos. They... Read More
The title implies that some people are and others not.This... Read More
Putting a piece of paper in a file folder is... Read More
The retention of highly skilled knowledge workers is one of... Read More
Remember Papa John's commercial on TV with the slogan "Better... Read More
Assignment of Claims Act of 1986"....What does this mean for... Read More
At one time or another, all of us have experienced... Read More
This technological revolution has organization, efficiency and productivity requirements well... Read More
All small to mid-sized company owners want to know where... Read More
Last month, my featured article was about creating a "Stop... Read More
Is your online business disaster-proof? Online businesses face a unique... Read More
Many business owners are sabotaging their business without even realizing... Read More
Cold Water Comments - What They Are and How to... Read More
In 1987 I sold my business, South Mountain Company, to... Read More
FEAR! To what extent does fear rule your life? How... Read More
Most of us would like to be better communicators. As... Read More
Definition From http://www.merriamwebster.com -- "Virtual: - being such in essence... Read More
Building rapport is all about creating a relationship, in the... Read More
Business Management |