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Effective Communication Requires Caring, Explaining, Listening, and Living the Role

Dr. Harry Hertz Photo and the Insights on the Road to Performance Excellence Logo

Dr. Harry Hertz, Director Emeritus
Baldrige Performance Excellence Program

October/November 2015

EC = C+E+L+L

In my 25 years with the Baldrige Program, I have never come across an organization that lacked the opportunity to improve communication, no matter how good it already was. The importance of effective communication is demonstrated by the

Effective Communication Graphic
many articles and books written on the subject. As examples, Inc., Forbes, and Entrepreneur have all dealt with the subject over the past few years. Recently (as a scientist at heart) I have been reflecting on the possibility of reducing effective communication to a simple formula or acronym to help a person remember everything that is important. The result is the title and substance of this column. With an acronym, we frequently are more able to think through important communications in advance and make sure we are addressing all the considerations for effective communication. The cell phone is probably the most common vehicle for communication today; yet the use of texts and tweets have led to many mishaps in true communication, because of the absence of real-time dialog and sometimes inappropriate brevity. So I offer the acronym CELL (Caring, Explaining, Listening, Living), not the instrument!

When I think about communication, I always remember the following story, told to me in the first management course I took. A manager has just lost his job because he could not build an effective, high-performing team. He has the opportunity to meet his successor and shares with her some of the challenges of the job. He gives her three envelopes and says he hopes she will never need any of them, but should she ever get in trouble at work, they should be used in sequence. Again, he hopes that she will never need even the first envelope.

After two months on the job, she just isn't gaining any rapport with her direct reports, so she reluctantly decides to open the first envelope. It has a simple message: "Blame your predecessor." She blames her predecessor and that helps her break down some walls. But three months later, she can't get her team to meet quality and productivity goals. She opens the second envelope. Again the communication is clear: "Offer encouragement that things are improving. Compliment the staff." That works for almost a year, and then there is a complete breakdown within her team. In desperation, she turns to the third envelope, and the message is very clear: "Prepare three envelopes."

How do we make sure that communication is as clear as those three messages, without having to resort to using the three envelopes? Let's start with the simple definition I am using for effective communication: the system by which information is exchanged so that proper actions may be taken with confidence. Effective communication is not about the person delivering a message; it is about the needs of those receiving the message. As stated in the title of this column, I believe effective communication consists of four elements: caring, explaining, listening, and living the role.

Caring

Effective communication begins with caring about the way you deliver a message and caring about the people whom you engage in dialog. Following are some key attributes associated with demonstrating caring and thus establishing a receptive audience for your message.

1. Keep the message clear and simple. If you are adding a lot of words, ask yourself if you are adding those words to clarify or to soften or blur the true message.

2. Tell stories and share personal experiences. Stories are powerful conveyors of messages and are easier to remember than blunt messages. Talk from the heart and mind, and share information about yourself as part of the message. It makes you human and adds warmth.

3. Make communication part of your regular routine. Don't communicate only when there is a big message to deliver. Familiarity breeds engagement, commitment, and appreciation.

4. Don't be a know-it-all. First of all, you don't know it all. Secondly, know-it-all attitudes do not invite questions when there is need for clarification. And know-it-all attitudes certainly don't result in contributions from your colleagues that could improve ideas and approaches.
 
5. Share credit, give praise, and reward contributions. A simple thank you goes a long way. When something has been done well, recognize the people who made the contribution.

6. Use humor and add some fun to interactions— depending on the message being delivered. When being light-hearted is appropriate, it will add to the comfort level and enhance buy-in and commitment.
 
7. Be totally present in the interaction. Use body language to show you are fully engaged. Do not look at or answer your cell phone while talking with colleagues. Doing so is a clear signal that others are more important than the people you are engaging.

Explaining

Effective communication requires explaining your message in language that is appropriate to the audience and that gives all the necessary details.

1. Use multiple modes of communication for important messages and repeat the message. Some people receive information best when they hear it; others, when they read it. Some people want both or benefit from repeating the message with different words. Regular repetition of a message and dialog about implementation can emphasize key principles of behavior or operational importance.
Two examples of regular repetition come from Robert Galvin and Paul O'Neill. Robert Galvin introduced the world to Six Sigma quality as CEO of Motorola. I have been told that every senior management meeting he led started with a discussion of quality that frequently was the only focus of the meeting for him. He knew that all important business metrics would follow from that focus. Paul O'Neill, as CEO of Alcoa, had a relentless focus on worker safety. At his first meeting with investors, despite flagging financials, he spoke about safety on the job. His focus on safety in interactions with the workforce transformed the culture at Alcoa and resulted in a quintupling of Alcoa's income during his tenure.
2. Share vision and goals. No one had doubts about what was important to Galvin and O'Neill (especially when goals are quantitative as in Six Sigma). Their unwavering focus was a powerful communication mechanism for setting context and gaining big-picture buy-in.

3. Know communication styles. In the Baldrige Program, we have used the DiSC assessment tool to help us understand how each person prefers to communicate and prefers to receive messages. Accommodating to individual styles builds rapport, improves teamwork, and facilitates interpersonal understanding.

4. Make sure everyone receives key messages. At two-time Baldrige Award recipient Ritz-Carlton, every shift at every location around the globe starts with a daily line-up. This line-up happens at each hotel and at the corporate offices. It is a brief get-together with a scripted message from corporate communications that emphasizes an aspect of the company's Gold Standard, followed by sharing of "wow" stories and important location-specific news. It takes less than 15 minutes and results in everyone being informed and feeling important ("in the know"). At Baldrige Award recipient Advocate Good Samaritan Hospital in Downers Grove, Illinois, each day (seven days a week) starts with a patient safety huddle led by the health care organization's president. The safety huddle builds awareness about what is happening at the frontline and initiates a daily cascaded message through all departments about safety considerations of current importance. Again, it takes less than twenty minutes and sends a powerful message.

5. Explain why. This is probably the most important component of explaining. If I understand why something is being done, changing, or needs my involvement, I am much better able and willing to assimilate the information and act accordingly to be a positive contributor.

Listening

Effective communication requires good listening skills. I believe that listening well is as important as explaining well. Since no one person has a monopoly on good ideas, we all can learn as we listen to questions and complementary ideas. I was once told that knowledge is not gained by flapping your lips but, rather, by removing your ear wax.

1. Manage by walking around is a great process for active listening. Engaging in conversation at a person's work area makes interaction less formal and more comfortable. It also allows observation of possible workplace challenges and the description of those in a visual context.

2. Give and get feedback in an informal setting. Feedback is a gift, but only if it is delivered and received in the spirit of collaboration and continuous improvement. Receiving feedback in a comfortable "place" (your personal work environment) facilitates that spirit.

3. Listen for what is not being said. This is an often overlooked aspect of listening. Paying attention to gaps in content may well be a clue to what is actually on someone's mind but hard or uncomfortable to say. Inviting feedback on the unspoken can be as insightful as listening to volunteered information.

Living the Role

Effective communication requires living the values and messages you espouse.

1. Walk the talk. Once caught in a misstep, regaining confidence in you and your communications is a long uphill climb.

2. Share good news and bad. People want to hear good news. Trust is built when you also share bad news and don't withhold information that colleagues need or should have. Loyalty is built through shared adversity, not just celebrating good times.

3. Don't lose your temper in public. While it is fine to display your emotions, taking them out on others hurts relationships. It is said that Abraham Lincoln had an interesting habit. When someone made him angry, rather than lashing out, he sat down and wrote them a letter. Next, he tore up the letter and developed a more logical and less emotional or visceral response. Today we talk about "counting to ten"; that is a rephrasing of this principle of effective communication.

4. Admit to your mistakes. As the great philosopher Big Bird said, "Everyone makes mistakes, so why can't you?" Admitting to your mistakes makes you more human and therefore increases the effectiveness of other communications.

A Parting Thought

It is tempting to think of effective communication as the job of leaders, managers, and supervisors. While it is their job, it is not theirs alone. Effective communication is everyone's job. It builds trust, teamwork, and high-performing organizations. If culture drives an organization, effective communication is the fuel.

Resources

Baldrige Excellence Framework
Baldrige Excellence Builder
Blogrige
News
If You Want to Build Trust, Collect Trash (February/March 2015)
People, Process, and Plentiful Passion (April/May 2015)
It Is 2015. Is Your CEO Thinking about Current Issues? (June/July 2015)
Leadership Behaviors That Count (and Can Benefit All Organizations) (August/September)
Archived Columns


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Created February 16, 2016, Updated June 2, 2021