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The
Secret of Internal Communications
Used
with permission of the author:
Author: Chris Moerdyk
cmoerdyk@mweb.co.za
As the
article appeared in Bizcommunity.com
1
May 2007
Ironic,
isn't it? - that the very thing so fundamental to business is
something that human beings are so singularly useless at.
Communication. More specifically, inter-personal communication. Of
all living organisms, homo sapiens comes stone last. Even bacteria
communicate better.
Think I'm exaggerating? Well, how often does a colleague pass his
cold on to you just by being in the same office? And equally, how
often did he cock up that telephone message he took for you?
If you're still not convinced about how bad we are at the art of
communication try the good old broken telephone test. Get a dozen
or so people to sit round a table and write down on a piece of
paper a simple message. Something like: "Better late than
never." Now whisper this simple little phrase into the ear of
the person next to you. He in turn whispers it into the ear of the
person next to him and so on. Each person is allowed only one
chance to hear and then transmit the message.
Never ever has the original message gone round the table and
stayed intact. By the time "Better late than never" is
halfway round the table it will be something like: "Louis
Luyt is a mother..."
It is without doubt one of the most depressing tests of human
intellect.
So, how does one handle internal communications in business?
Certainly the most popular system of "cascading" doesn't
work. This is where, for example, a message that needs to go out
from a board meeting to an entire organisation is passed on from
the various directors to their senior managers who pass it on to
middle managers, who pass it on to their underlings who eventually
pass it on to supervisors and ultimately the workers.
Sometimes it actually works - usually only when it is in the
personal interests of the person passing on the message. Otherwise
it hasn't a hope in Hades. And even when it does work it takes
ages - anything up to three months or more to filter through an
organisation of a few thousand people.
That's human nature. But why not use human nature to do the job?
Why do we insist on using systems we're bad at instead of things
we're really good at? Like rumour-mongering and trying to get
other people into trouble so we can have their jobs?
I'm not joking. I was once asked by the board of a multi-national
to suggest ways of improving internal communications after years
of frustration at the lack of success of the cascade system. The
directors wanted the entire organisation, some 3000 people and a
network of retailers, to hear about a new product as quickly as
possible and preferably before the press and public found out
about it. I suggested the "grapevine" method - something
I'd pondered over in the bath a few months earlier.
Basically this meant setting up a simple system - starting with
the MD's secretary, who in every organisation tends to be the
centre of office political intelligence. I asked her for the names
of five of the company's most active rumour-mongers. One of these
was selected and the marketing director was charged with the task
of getting the message across to the company. I suggested he
corner the rumour-monger in question in the gents toilet or a
convenient quiet passageway and, in passing and as part of idle
conversation, say to him: "Don't tell anyone but we've
decided to go ahead and launch this new product..."
It took 45 minutes for the first retailer to phone in asking if
the rumour was true... It took less than that for the message to
get to everyone inside the company. Beats hell out of the cascade
system.
Another communications myth in business is that it is the
responsibility of a company to keep its staff informed, usually
induced by employees continually bitching about not knowing what
is going on. A nice idea but totally impractical.
For a start, how does one know what staff want to be informed
about? In even a medium sized business if the communications
department wanted to cover all the bases and keep employees well
and truly satisfied, it would have to produce a newspaper roughly
the size of the Sunday Independent every week!
What managers should do when staff whinge about not being informed
is to put a finger under their noses and tell them that when they
want to know something to try asking! In fact, chief executives
should insist on managers encouraging staff to ask questions and
impose dire penalties for not finding out and passing on the
answers.
The beauty of doing things this way it that it gives the cascade
system of communication a better chance of working by going at it
from the bottom up. Rather like clearing a blocked lavatory by
reversing the flow of water through the U-bend. A carefully chosen
analogy this, because in both cases a lot of crap is cleared from
the system at the same time. It is enormously cost-effective and
obviates the need to "shotgun" masses of information at
employees on the assumption that it will all be of interest.
Another communications myth concerns confidentiality in board
meetings. There is no such thing as confidentiality in board
meetings.
For a start, the very fact that minutes need to be typed,
duplicated and distributed to board members means that the cat is
already out of the boardroom. Secondly, finding a human being who
is capable of keeping mum for any length of time is extremely
rare. Finding five or six in the same room is impossible.
So, the basic rule of business communication is: "Keeping
secrets is as impossibly difficult as getting a message across to
everyone..."
Chris
Moerdyk
was listed in a 2006 corporate survey as one of South Africa's top
marketing thought leaders and in an earlier Financial Mail poll he
was voted one of the 20 most influential people in the SA
advertising industry. He now spends his time as a marketing
analyst and consultant as well as commentator on marketing for
newspapers, TV, magazines and online. He is a member of the
advisory board of the Journal of Marketing. In September 2002 he
was appointed by President Thabo Mbeki to the inaugural board of
the Media Development and Diversity Agency, a unique, statutory
organisation in global terms. In 2001 he was awarded a prestigious
Fellowship of The Institute of Marketing Management. In 1999 he
was presented with the SA Communicator of the Year Award by
Technikon Pretoria. He trained the SABC's very first TV news
team. He is a founder member of the Government/private sector
national communications partnership for the 2010 World Cup and
heads up the 2010 NCP Media & Communications Cluster. In 2003
he was appointed a Brand Ambassador by the International Marketing
Council. He is also a member of the Superbrands Council of SA.
Chris is a marketing advisor and analyst. He can be contact at cmoerdyk@mweb.co.za.
Short Summary
Secrecy and effective communication in the workplace are important
concepts in managing information in the organisation.
Keywords and
relevant phrases
Cascade system, confidentiality, communication, communication
management, information, information flow, information sharing,
integrity, internal communication, reputation management, rumour,
secrets.
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