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Interpersonal Communication

Social and Professional Interpersonal Situations Making introductions Making apologies Giving directions Making requests Asking and answering questions Speaking on the phone Offering and receiving criticism Dealing with differences

Making introductions Things to Include:


Names (Say loudly and clearly) Titles (Professor of) Relevance (Why the person is present)

Example:
Kelly, Id like to introduce Danita Powell. Danita is the assistant director of human resources. Weve invited her to help us make some personnel planning decisions. Danita, this is Kelly Francis. Kelly is our service director. She will come into our meeting later this morning with a list of her needs for new employees.

If you are being introduced Follow these suggestions:


Listen carefully (for persons name, title and reason for being there) Make a name note (tie the persons name with something familiar) Make eye contact (its courteous and begins a good relationship) Shake hands (Make sure it is firm, but friendly) Smile (it is evidence that you are sincere) Speak (Hello, Im pleased to meet you.)

Making apologies Some suggestions to remember


Name it and claim it (be specific and say what you did that was wrong) Offer an explanation (state why the mistake was made) Offer to make it right (if it is correctable, correct the mistake) Keep it brief (respect the other persons time and get to the point) Be sincere! (mean it!)

Example:
Bob Maya, Id like to talk about what happened last week before our breakfast. Im very sorry that I referred to you and Diane as the office chicks. It was a thoughtless comment. Please accept my apology. I promise to be more sensitive in the future. Maya I appreciate that you took the time to talk to me about that, and I appreciate your apology.

Giving directions
Tips to Remember:
Begin by communicating the goal (To get to Randall Consulting) Know where you are starting (Start at Main Street and) Break the directions down into steps (First, second, third) Check for understanding (be aware of nonverbal signs of confusion) Dont talk down (dont treat anyone as inferior) Be patient ()

Making requests
Understand Your Purpose & Analyze the Situation and Audience: Determine who to ask (who has the power, time, info, etc.) Determine an appropriate level of assertiveness (as a question? or a command!) Be TACTFUL! Determine an appropriate level of specificity (Should you be very general or specific in your request?) Determine the best situation (when is the best time, place, etc. to ask?) Determine a deadline (create a fair timeline to have the request met.)

Asking questions
This too, requires skill. Remember these:
Assertiveness (dont be afraid to ask questions, be confident) Tact (think carefully about who you are asking and where dont embarrass the person) Courtesy (wait for appropriate timing dont butt into a conversation) Specificity (your question should contain enough info that the person understands what you are asking.) Relevance (make sure the question is relevant to the person and situation) Sincerity (the person you are asking should feel their answer is important to you)

Example:
Donna, Im working on the schedule for next weeks meeting. Would you please tell me how long Mr. Talcott takes to make his section of the new employee presentation? courtesy please specificity Donna knows precisely WHAT the questioner needs to know. relevance Donna know precisely WHY the questioner needs to know.

Answering questions
Knowing how to ask a good question will provide you with a good answer:
Tact (show respect for the person asking the question) Courtesy (you may want to thank the person for asking the question) Specificity (be specific, give a useful answer) Relevance (be sure your answer relates to the question asked)

Telephone Etiquette
Answering: answer promptly; before picking up the receiver, stop other conversation or activity that can be heard by the other party; speak clearly and distinctly in a pleasant tone; if taking a message- get name & number, write down day & time, give to person promptly Calling: Think about time of day; give your name; enunciate words; use pleasant voice

Offering & Receiving Criticism


Criticism vs. constructive criticism Giving criticism: attack issue, not person; be tactful Receiving criticism: watch defensiveness; consider it; be tactful in response; take it in stride!

Dealing with Differences -Gender -Ethnicity -Age


Dont avoid communication simply because of differences Treat people as PEOPLE first!

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