Title: Communicating in the Workplace
1 14 Inter-Act, 13th Edition
Workplace
2Adults Spend 50 of Their Waking Hours at Work
All other activities
Work
3Locating Jobs
- Job openings
- Campus career center
- Online job posting sites
- Networking
- Uncover the hidden job market.
- Reach out to people you know and tell them you
are in the job market. - Network at community events.
4The Cover Letter (should be tailored to each
job posting)
- Short no longer than four paragraphs
- Express your interest in a position.
- Include how you learned of the opening.
- Tell why you are interested in the company.
- Highlight skills and experiences.
- Ask directly for an interview.
5 Professional Résumé
- Contact information
- name, address, telephone number, e-mail
- Career objective
- Education
- Employment history
- Military background
- Relevant professional affiliations
- Community service
- Personal information
- Special skills
- References
6Cover Letters and Résumés
- List information clearly.
- Use a consistent format, including margins,
indention, spacing, etc. - Proofread so that they are error-free.
- Use good-quality paper (or, if you are sending
via e-mail, use a simple, clear format).
7Applying Electronically
- Third-party résumé services are becoming
increasingly popular. - E-résumés should use plain text and limited
formatting. - E-résumés should contain a list of key words.
- Online portfolios may include
- Résumé
- Examples of your work video clips, photos
- Links to your work
8Preparing for the Interview
- 1. Do your homework.
- 2. Based on your research, prepare a list of
questions. - 3. Rehearse the interview.
- 4. Dress appropriately and conservatively.
- Plan to arrive early.
- Bring materials.
9The Interview
- Listen actively.
- Think before responding.
- Provide specific examples that highlight your
qualifications. - Be enthusiastic.
- Ask questions.
- Avoid discussing salary and benefits.
- Thank interviewer.
10After the Interview
- Send a thank-you note.
- Self-assess your performance.
- Contact the interviewer for feedback.
11Communicating with Supervisors and Subordinates
- Managers should
- Communicate expectations
- Provide useful feedback
- Employees should
- Do more than is expected of them
- Develop the relationship to the point of mutual
trust
12Communicating with a Manager
- Identify how you can help your manager.
- Volunteer for specific assignments.
- Clarify assignments.
- Ask for feedback.
- Adapt to your managers communication
preferences. - Develop a mentoring relationship.
13Work Relationships
Informational Talk about work topics Collegial Work friends Talk about families and work Do not share personal, private information Special Best friends Meet socially outside of work Share personal, private information
14Communicating in Co-worker Relationships
- Co-worker relationships
- Develop mutual trust
- Use interpersonal skills listening,
collaboration, empathizing, and supporting - Work teams
- Formal group established with a clear purpose and
appropriate structure - Members work together to achieve goals
- Can be short-lived or ongoing
15Characteristics of Effective Work Teams
- Clear group goal that all can embrace
- Clear member roles
- Feedback about performance
- Team members use their skills to help
- Commitment to the team and success
- Collaborative climate
- Standards of excellence
- Strong leadership
16Task Roles in Teams
Behaviors that help a group make a decision
- Information or opinion giver
- Information or opinion seeker
- Analyzer
17Maintenance Roles in Teams
Behaviors that improve interaction in a group
- Gatekeeper
- Encourager
- Harmonizer
18How can this groups communication become more
effective?
Microsoft Photo
19Romance at Work
- Organizational romance sexual or romantic
involvement between people who work for same
organization - Most organizations forbid romantic relationships
between supervisors and subordinates.
20Communication Technologies for Teamwork
- Electronic newsletters
- E-calendars
- Blogs
- Podcasts
- E-surveys
- Wikis
21Digital Communication Etiquette at Work
- Match your purpose with the social media device.
- Respond to ideas, not to people.
- Use social media to add value to a conversation.
- Respond appropriately and efficiently.
- Give praise where appropriate.
22Social Media at Work
- Check company guidelines prohibiting social
networking sites on company computers. - Be careful what you Tweet to your followers.
- Messages could get back to supervisors.
- Consider using a professional networking site
such as LinkedIn. - Regularly Google your own name.
- Think twice before posting questionable photos or
links.
23Boundary Spanning
- Boundary spanning communicating with people
outside your organization in a mutually
beneficial relationship - Customers and clients people, groups, or
organizations that use your organizations goods
or services - Vendors people, groups, or organizations that
supply your organization with necessary raw
materials or other goods and services
24Communicating in a Diverse Workplace
- Culture-Based Work Styles
- Results-oriented values results of work over
building relationships at work - Relationship-oriented prioritizes building
relationships at work over the results of work - Sequential task completion prefers to break
larger tasks down into separate parts and
complete one part at a time, in order - Holistic task completion prefers to work on an
entire task at once
25Gender Differences
- Feminine Linguistic Style
- Masculine Linguistic Style
- Rapport talk
- Meets face needs of others
- Uses indirect language when giving orders to
employee - Acknowledges mistakes directly
- Uses pronouns we, our, ours
- Report talk
- One-upping
- Assertive statements
- Direct language when giving orders
- Indirect language when acknowledging a mistake
- Uses pronouns I, he, she, they
26Gendered Conversation Rituals
Women Men
Apologies see apologies as comfort see apologies as one-down
Feedback praise, then constructive criticism direct criticism without praise
Compliments expect compliment in return may not recognize returning a compliment as important
Argument arguments considered breach of relationship argue vigorously as a ritual, no damage done to relationships
Relationship with manager to appear self-effacing, not likely to brag seek opportunity for networking with top managers and brag about accomplishments
27Generational Diversity
- Intergenerational differences
- Views of authority
- Approaches to rules
- Work vs. leisure
- Technological competence
28The Dark Side
- Workplace aggression any counterproductive
behavior at work intended to hurt someone else - Verbal aggression sending verbal messages
intended to hurt someone - Behavioral aggression nonverbal acts intended to
hurt someone - Physical aggression nonverbal acts of violence
against another person with the intent to do
bodily harm - Bullying habitual use of aggression and the
repeated use of aggression against one target
individual
29The Dark Side
- Sexual harassment
- Unwanted verbal or physical sexual behavior that
interferes with work - Violates the Civil Rights Act of 1964
- To cope with sexual harassment
- Tell person the conduct is unwelcome.
- Keep private, written notes.
- After informal methods fail, file formal
complaint with employer.