Thursday, April 9, 2015

Effective Communication – Getting Your Message Out


Effective communication is very important when delivering a message.  The ability to paint a picture with words requires skill.  According to Mind Tools, the training and development agency for professionals, there are seven Cs of communication.  They are clear, concise, concrete, correct, coherent, complete and courteous.  Each of these skills is important when you are trying to get a message out to your audience.  However, I believe that the two most important skills are clear and complete.

It is important to be clear about your message and what you are intending to obtain, your goal.  People need to know what is your purpose.  When you know your purpose, you will attract the appropriate audience.  Others will join your purpose when they feel they have a common goal with you.

Once you gain the confidence of the audience, it is time to move them to action.  A complete message concludes with an action plan.  People need to hear the whole plan in order for them to make an informed decision whether they want to be a part of the plan.   A message without a plan of action, particularly for policy change is no message at all.  Many people have complaints and no answers.  To move people to action they need to hear the plan. The plan consist of who, what, where, when and how.  This is part of the painting with words so that others can see the picture.

Effective communication in the form of writing can be quite different than speaking.  In preparation for speaking, it is always good to write what you want to say.  However, when speaking you have an opportunity to use your voice to stress certain points with more passion and inflection.  Although the two Cs are important in both modes of communication, it is easier for me to speak effectively than it is to write.  Speaking using clear and complete messaging is more of strength than writing.  I often struggle to find the right words written the correct way to express myself.  Using clear and complete messages in writing is something I must continue working towards.

Reference
Mind Tools. (n.d.). The 7 Cs of communication: A checklist for clear communication. Retrieved October 15, 2013, from http://www.mindtools.com/pages/article/newCS_85.htm

2 comments:

  1. Kimberly,
    I enjoyed the information on the C's, they were on point. I do have to agree that having a purpose and a passion on what you are relying is important. I think if those two P's are not developed then you have no audience. People tend to feed off of how you present a topic.

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  2. Kim,
    In your past post, you mentioned using both Facebook and blogging as ways of getting your message out. I think your thought that "This is part of the painting with words so that others can see the picture" may be one way to bridge your passion for getting the message out, and your preferred ways of doing it.
    Social media, including blogs, offer us the chance to not only paint with words, but also use graphics and video to support our ideas. These "real" images add the inflection and body language, perhaps, that can be missing from the written word.
    I look forward to reading, and seeing!, more about your issue!
    Stephanie

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