Event Communication
Event Communication
objectives. It is the tool with which the enterprise promote sales, financial
human attitudes and views, motivates them and establishes and maintains
- C. G. Brown
Features / Nature of Communication
• Exchange of facts and opinions
• A two side process (sender and receiver)
• Includes a message
• A dynamic process
• A continuous and systematic process
• Message conveyed has its reaction too
• Create understanding
• An interactive and transactive process
• A universal process
• It can be in any form (verbal and non verbal)
• It can be intentional and unintentional
Communication Process
Sender’s 7 Receiver’s
1
External Receiver External
Sender has
Environment sends Environment
an idea
and Internal feedback and Internal
Stimuli Stimuli
4 6
2
Channel Receiver
Sender
and decodes
encodes
Experience, Medium message Experience,
idea
Perception, Perception,
Attitudes, Attitudes,
3 5 Beliefs,
Beliefs,
Sender Receiver Ability,
Ability,
transmits gets Skills, etc.
Skills, etc.
message message
Situation
Models of Communication
Transmitter
Re-action Message
Receiver
• Information Source:
This is an important element in any process of communication because only
after collecting information, we are able to send the information to others.
• Transmitter:
The person sending the information to others is called the transmitter.
• Noise Source:
In the communication process, all the obstacles distorting the message are
termed here as noises.
• Message:
All the information sent by the sender to the receiver in the communication
process are known as messages.
• Receiver:
A person receiving the information is called the receiver. He usually decodes the
message to have a better understanding of the message.
• Reaction:
The sender usually gets the feedback from the receiver which signifies the
reaction on the part of receiver of the message.
• Berlo’s Dynamic Process Model:
This model was propounded by David Berlo. According to Berlo, events do
not occur in a certain determined order, but order of their occurrence
remains changing. He was of the opinion that all elements have inter
connections in the communication process.
The main factors in this model are as follows:
i. Source : ideas, thoughts, information
ii. Message: encoding, symbolic form
iii. Channel : the way, medium
iv. Communicator : Sender, communication art
v. Receiver : decoding the message received
vi. Re-action : acknowledging the message received
• Aristotle’s Model:
This model explains three elements in the communication process.
Communication process gets complicated with co-ordination of the three
elements, which are:
• Losswell Model:
This model was popularized by American Scientist Losswell. According to
him, there are many elements which are inter-connected with each other
in the process of communication.
Speaker Feedback
Message Re-action
Message
Sender Receiver
This was formulated by a scientist Dance in 1967. He was of the opinion that
communication process revolves in the form of a circle having no beginning or
end points. This can be visualized as under:
Sender Receiver
• Murphy’s model:
The writer H. A. Murphy formulated this model with the active cooperation of
his colleagues – Hiedebrand and Thomas. According to his model, the different
organs of communication process march forward of each other. Communication
process goes on from context to feedback as:
• Joseph’s model:
This model seems to be influenced by Shammon - Weaver model. Joseph chose
the under mentioned areas (sources) to explain his model:
i. Source ii. Guideline iii. Medium iv. Utility (use of message)
v. Receipt and Analysis vi. Reaction
• Mass Communication model:
This model was formulated in 1980 by different scientists which also explains
the inter connection of different components such as source, sender, message,
receiver and reaction. These components are linked with each other during the
process of communication.
Idea Receiver
Message
• Inter – personal model:
This model believes that atleast two individuals are involved in the
communication process and both have different opinions. However, they
have similarity of views on certain subjects which is visible from the
following chart:
A B
Individual Individual
• Cilber model:
According to this model, the message cannot become effective , unless
and until, the right meaning of the message is not found out. The message
is effective when sender or receiver reaches to the same conclusion about
the meaning of message.
• Vastle and Macleen model:
This model was propounded in 1957, which makes it clear that any one factor
in communication process goes on revolving continuously. When a person
wants to send his message, he present his side of the story. The receiver, after
analysing the message presents his reaction before the sender in the following
manner:
Sender
Re-action
Message
Receiver
• Leagen’s model:
The model was presented by Leagen in 1961 which includes the
following components:
Feedback
Sender Receiver
Message Channel
• Gerbner model:
• Lesiker model:
In this model also, communication process starts with sending of message,
but it goes on with a new frequency.
A
Message Medium Receiver Feedback
Feedback
Noise
Importance of Business Communication
• Clear pronunciation
• Precision (Accurate, Concise, Exact, Correct)
• Conviction (Convincing)
• Logical sequence
• Appropriate word choice
• Avoiding hackneyed (or repetitive) phrases
• Natural voice
• Adjusting the speech according to the needs of listeners
Merits of Oral communication:
• Direct, simple, flexible and time saving form of communication
• Least expensive form of communication
• Conveys personal relationship, friendliness and develops a
feeling of belongingness
• Removes the misunderstanding, if any
• Lays mutual understanding and confidence
• Allows both parties to participate in the communication
• Facial expressions, gestures, voice tone communicates the
message better
• Makes discussion more easier
Demerits of Oral communication:
• No formal record of communication held
• Possibility of distortion of message
• Lengthy and distant communication cannot be transmitted
effectively
• Cannot be used for reference in future
• Formal authority cannot be transmitted effectively
• Create misunderstanding, and more or less different
meanings might be conveyed by manner of speaking
• Create legal difficulties
Requisites for Effective Speaking
• Think clearly what to communicate
• Make clear about the objective
• Know well the audience
• Command over language
• Clear pronunciation
• Precise form of message
• Appropriate word choice
• Logical sequence
• Avoid hackneyed phrases (like, generally, etc.)
• Natural voice
• Adjusting the speech according to the needs of listeners
• Adequate knowledge of human psychology
• Cheerfulness
• Sincerity and accuracy of facts
• Timing of communication
• Ensure whether properly received at the other end
• Proper facial expressions and gestures
• Using visual aids
• Comfortable posture
• Eye contact
• Natural Movements
• Voice Modulation
• Pauses
• Feedback or follow-up
Types of Speaking
• Informative: Informative speaking generally centers on talking about
people, events, processes, places or things. This speech imparts information
on a particular topic or issue. Business presentations, seminars, class
presentations are some examples of informative speeches. A person
preparing for an informative speaking has to research the subject or topic
very well.
• Persuasive: Persuasive speaking is the type of speaking in which the speaker
is trying to persuade or convince the audience about an idea or product.
These speeches aim to influence and change the opinions of the audience.
• Special Occasion: Speaking on Special Occasion aims to pay tribute or praise
a person, an institution, an event, idea or place.
• Entertainment: This form of speaking is usually given at weddings, parties
etc. The entertainment speaking can be humorous, touching or emotional,
as per the occasion and the mood. However, one should take utmost care of
not to hurt feelings by making snide (i.e. false or sarcastic) remarks about
people.
Techniques for Effective Speaking
• Breathing: Everyone breathes. It’s one of the most natural things
we do. There are some special ways to breathe that makes our
voice better. Some of the instructions are given below:
1. Sit forward in a chair and let your stomach muscles relax.
2. Breathe in through your nose and imagine that you are a vessel filling up
with air as you would pour water into a vase. Fill up your abdomen first,
then your lower ribs (you should feel them expand) and then all the way
up to your chin.
3. Hold this breath for a count of ten.
4. Now exhale slowly. As you exhale, keep your ribs expanded and tighten
your abdomen as you would if you were doing a ‘crunch’.
5. Repeat. Once you have mastered the exercise sitting down, practice
incorporating it into your speaking and singing. You may need to do it
slowly at first until you can coordinate all the actions smoothly.
The key thing to remember is that breathing should be low and
expansive. If you do the exercise correctly, your stomach will go in
while your chest stays out and expands. Practicing this technique
will provide many benefits, including:
• Awareness of your breathing will enable you to breathe more
effectively.
• Proper posture for breathing creates a confident, strong
appearance.
• Deeper breathing makes you feel more confident and strong as
well. Andrew Weil writes, “You cannot always center yourself
emotionally by an act of will, but you can use your voluntary
nerves to make your breathing slow, deep, quit, and regular, and
the rest will follow.”
• Deep breathing decreases tension and helps to focus intellectual
activity. Proper breathing technique helps an speaker to remain
calm on the floor.
Breathing and Vocal Variety
• It is advised to an speaker to ‘use your voice to complement your
message’.
• Ideally, you want your content to align with your delivery method
and both to align with the sound of your voice.
• Vocal variety is all about the sound of the voice and, in this case,
that vocal image is created through several aspects of your sound,
including pace, pitch, pause, and power.
I. Pace:
• Pace is the speed of your delivery of message. In general, for
vocal variety you are encouraged to vary your pace by speeding
up and slowing down appropriately for the message you are
delivering. However, some people have trouble with pacing due
to poor breathing. If you speak too quickly, or if your speaking is
labored or too slow, consider the following:
– Speaking too fast is often the result of not stopping to breathe
often enough.
Solution: To slow down your speaking with the breathe, consciously
take a breathe before you begin. Remember to stop and breathe
between ideas. The next time you practice a presentation, take time
to inhale and exhale deeply five times before you start to speak.
Then take one more deep breathe and exhale vigorously into your
first words.
– Speaking too slowly can also be caused by not taking in and using
enough air.
Solution: Not using enough air can cause a person to sound dull
and lifeless. This may also be caused by poor posture. Practice the
breathing technique mentioned above, paying special attention to
posture. Be sure you move that air with the abdominal muscles as
you speak. Overdo the latter when you practice so you really feel
the breathe in the sound. By breathing deeper and then using all
the air in your sound, you create a more energetic sound and you
feel more energized too.
II. Pitch:
• Pitch is determined by the notes we use when we speak. Yes, we use
notes when speaking just as we do for singing. Speaking notes, however,
are random, informally ordered, and usually of shorter duration than
notes we sing. To create vocal variety, one uses different pitches to make
their sound more interesting. Sometimes problems with creating variety
in pitch can be result of poor breathing technique. Here are two such
problems, their likely causes, and some ways to fix them:
– A voice that is too high-pitched and thin can be the result of shallow breathing, i.e.
without abdominal expansion and support.
Solution: The solution to shallow breathing is to relax the abdomen and drop the
air in lower. This also relaxes the larynx so it doesn’t ride so high. A high larynx can
create a higher, thinner sound.
– If your voice sounds squeezed or strained, or too low, you may not be using all the
air you take in.
Solution: You can improve a strained sound by practicing a breathy sound and then
gradually adding more and more vocal sound to it. This can be called as ‘energizing
the voice’. It also has the effect of making pitch variety much easier to achieve
because the voice becomes free to move and create more pitches. If you do this
correctly, you will definitely feel the freedom in your voice.
Some tongue twisters:
• The blue bluebird blinks.
• Three free throws.
• Strange strategic statistics.
• Freshly fried flying fish, freshly fried flesh.
Effective Listening
Listening is an important part of the process of communication. It
means making effort to get the full meaning of speaker’s message.
It involves not only understanding the content of the message, but
also understanding the feeling of the speaker. Understanding the
feeling is called ‘Empathy’ or ‘Effective Listening’.
Listening is a positive activity and it needs a good deal of
hardwork. It involves effort and self-discipline to listen attentively.
It is the responsibility of the speaker to make effort to be
understood, similarly the listener has the responsibility to be
attentive and to make effort to understand the message conveyed
by the speaker.
The success of any seminar, meeting or function also depend on
this fact. If there is no listening in a communication, it will be only
a wastage of time and energy of the speaker and organizers.
The meaning of ‘listening’ must be understood different from
‘hearing’. Hearing is just a part of listening. Listening means
understanding the message properly. For example, if a person
gives a message to some rural person in English then the
message was just heard not understood. Thus, it cannot be
called ‘listening’, because listening means ‘decoding’. The
process of listening starts with receiving the message and
ends with understanding and reacting to the message.
Types of Listening
• Content Listening: Under this type of listening the message is easily
understood and the message is also preserved in the written form.
• Active Listening: This means listening and having new ideas crop
up in the mind on the same subject.
• Pretending Listening: Under this type of listening the audience’s
facial expressions and gestures reveal whether he has got the
message or not.
• Attentive Listening: In this type of listening the audience pays full
attention to the message.
• Selective Listening: In this type of listening only the selected part
of the message is retained / paid attention to, whereas the
unnecessary details are chopped off.
• Critical Listening: In this type of listening the message is analyzed
and evaluated.
Requisites for Effective Listening
• Message retention
• Full attention to the speaker’s message
• Listening without arguments (put the speaker at the ease)
• Evaluation after complete listening
• Verification of reliability and truthfulness
• To be unbiased
• To find out the points of common interests
• Acceptance to change (ready for a flexible approach of learning)
• Proper eye contact
• Show a desire to listen (no disturbance through topping with foot or a pencil,
shuffling of papers, attending to other works, etc.)
• To note the main points and get them checked for correctness
• Keep an open mind (avoid any pre-judgement before listening to the speaker)
• Timely clarification
• Focus and Self Discipline
• Courtesy
Elements / Characteristics / fundamentals of Effective
Listening
Informative Presentation
• Report
• Goodwill
• Briefings
• Instruction
Persuasive Presentation
• Policy
• Procedure
• Values Judgement
• Fact
• Individual Presentation
• Group Presentation
• Sales Presentation
• Training Presentation
Factors affecting Presentation
• Nature of Presentation
• Audience Analysis
• Time and Venue
• Facial Expression, Postures and Gestures
• Personality of the Speaker
• Voice and Pronunciation
• Semantic Barriers
• Cognitive Barriers (feelings, opinions, experiences, views,
behaviour)
• Active Listening
• Mechanical Devices
• Use of Audio – Visual Devices
• Prepare for Stage Discussions
Process of Presentation
Soft skills are personal attributes that Hard skills are about a person’s skills set and
enhance an individual’s interactions, job ability to perform a certain type of task or
performance and career prospects. activity.
Soft skills are personal-driven and subjective Hard skills are teachable abilities which can
skills, and are hard to quantify / measure. be defined and measure.
Most Soft skills are not learnt well in school, Hard skills can be learnt in school and from
they are generally learnt by trial and error, books. We can also learn on how we can
books and guides. master our Hard skills.
Soft skills are related to our personal Hard skills are easy to prove with
characteristics and traits and are difficult to certificates, education degree, awards, and
prove. so on.
Soft Skills Hard Skills
Experience-based Rule-based
People-related Technological / Scientific
Attitudinal and Behavioral Industrial / Mechanical and Tools /
Techniques
Intangible Tangible
Interpersonal skills Learning a Foreign language
Teamwork Programming language
Communication Business Planning
Understanding Global Culture Financial Analysis
Public Speaking, Critical Observation and Budgeting and Data Analysis
Listening skills
Business Etiquettes Services Solution
Leadership , Creativity and Motivation Innovation, Product Development and
Construction Engineering
• Job Readiness Soft Skills: Job readiness skills are the soft skills
related to the job preparation process. These should be taught
and learn well before a person enters the workforce. Job
readiness soft skills are what most people think of when they
think of soft skills, and include the following:
– Attitude: a settled way of thinking or feeling about someone or something,
typically one that is reflected in a person’s behavior.
– Communication: the imparting or exchanging of information or news.
– Planning and Organizing: the process of thinking about and organizing the
activities required to achieve a desired goal.
– Critical Thinking: the process of skillfully conceptualizing, applying,
analyzing, synthesizing, and/or evaluating information gathered from, or
generated by, observation, experience, reflection, reasoning, or
communication, as a guide to belief and action.
– Interpersonal / Social skills: the social skills we use every day to
communicate and interact with other people, both individually and in
groups, including listening, speaking, reading and writing.
– Teamwork: the combined action of a group of people, especially when
effective and efficient.
– Professionalism: the competence and demonstrated behavior expected of
a professional.
– Media rules: the main means of mass communication (email, television,
video, newspaper, internet including social media) regarded collectively,
and the rules for their appropriate use in the workplace.
• Job Seeking Soft Skills: Job seeking soft skills are the skills related
to the job search process. These skills need to be taught and
learned in order to successfully find, apply, interview, and accept
a job.
• Job Secure Soft Skills: Job secure soft skills are the skills needed
to secure and keep a job.
When an individual combine the soft skills included in job
readiness, job seeking and job securing / keeping, the person
acquires the employability skills. Employability skills are the
essential soft skills that involve the development of a knowledge
base or mindset that is mindset that is increasingly necessary to
be hired in today’s workplace.
Significance of Soft Skills
The EQ concept argues that IQ, or conventional intelligence, is too narrow, that
there are wider areas of EI. Success requires more than IQ (Intelligence Quotient),
which has intended to be the traditional measure of intelligence, ignoring essential
behaviour and character elements. We’ve all met people who are academically brilliant
and yet are socially and inter-personally unskilled (i.e. inept, or unskillful). And we
know that despite possessing a high IQ rating, success does not automatically follow.
EI Framework / Elements
In his book, Daniel Goleman presents five categories of
emotional intelligence.
• Self-awareness: A person has a healthy sense of emotional
intelligence self awareness if they understand / observe their self
and recognize their emotions as they happen and have a strong
sense of one’s self worth and capabilities (i.e. strengths and
weaknesses), as well as aware of how their actions affect others.
A person with emotional self awareness is usually receptive to,
and able to learn from, constructive criticism more than one who
doesn’t have emotional self awareness.
‒ Emotional Awareness: recognizing one’s emotions and their effects
‒ Accurate self-assessment: knowing one’s strengths and limits.
‒ Self confidence: sureness about one’s self worth and capabilities
• Self-regulation: A person is being flexible in dealing with
changing situations and if required inhibiting (hinder, restrain)
one’s emotions in service of groups with a proactive bias
towards action. A person with a high emotional intelligence
has the ability to exercise restraint and control when
expressing their emotions.
– Self-control: managing disruptive emotions and impulses
– Trustworthiness: maintaining standards of honesty and integrity
– Conscientiousness: taking responsibility of personal performance
– Adaptability: flexibility in handling change
– Innovativeness: being comfortable with and open to novel ideas and
new information
• Self Motivation: A person is having a strong sense of
optimism and channelizing energies towards achievement of
life goals with consistency in values, emotions and behaviour.
People with high emotional intelligence are self-motivated,
resilient and driven by an inner ambition rather than being
influenced by outside forces, such as money or prestige.
– Achievement drive: striving to improve or meet a standard of
excellence
– Commitment: aligning with the goals of the group or organisation
– Initiative: readiness to act on opportunities
– Optimism: persistence in pursuing goals despite obstacles and
setbacks
• Empathy / Social Awareness: An empathetic person
understand others and take active interest in their concern
with an appreciation for the differences among people. A
person has compassion and is able to connect with other
people on an emotional level, helping them respond
genuinely to other people’s concerns.
– Empathy: sensing others’ feelings and perspective, and taking an
active interest in their concerns
– Service orientation: anticipating, recognizing, and meeting customers’
needs
– Developing others: sensing what others need in order to develop, and
bolstering their abilities
– Leveraging diversity: cultivating opportunities through diverse people
– Political awareness: reading a group’s emotional currents and power
relationships
• Interpersonal / Social skills: A person inspires and guide
groups, help others to improve performance, resolve conflicts
and build relationships with a shared vision. An emotional
intelligent person are able to build trust with other people,
and are able to quickly gain respect from the people they
meet.
– Influence: wielding effective tactics for persuasion
– Communication: sending clear and convincing messages
– Leadership: inspiring and guiding groups and people
– Change catalyst: initiating or managing change
– Conflict management: negotiating and resolving disagreements
– Building bonds: nurturing instrumental relationships
– Collaboration and cooperation: working with others toward shared
goals
– Team capabilities: creating group synergy in pursuing collective goals
Aspects of Emotional Intelligence