Small Group Communication Final
Communication Skills in a Small Group
20 core skills, 20 leadership skills, 9 followership skills, and 12 deviant communication behaviors
Work Against Premature Consensus
A group must facilitate an analysis of the problem and a consideration of the advantages and disadvantages of proposed solutions
Hold Group Consensus Meetings
A group's final face-to-face discussion of a plan of actions is important in terms of gleaning commitment from members on the group effort
Avoiding
A noncompetitive and noncollaborative response in the face of interpersonal and team conflict. The belief that conflict is bad so you do not deal with it. Strategies are no response and delay
Aggressing
Abusive, overly dominant
Observing/Self-Monitoring
Act as an observer, and check the group
Perform Leader Role
Act as the leader if necessary
Rules and strategies when planning and calling a meeting
Advance notice, Create a realistic agenda, Schedule meetings at the best time, Start and end meetings on time, Regulate participation, Get the agenda covered, Follow up the meeting
Six Sigma Step 3
Analyze and identify. Run studies to ensure that the causal analysis is correct
Competing
Assertive and noncooperative. You look to achieve your goals. Strategies are use of legitimate power, and use of higher authority
Collaborating
Assertive and very cooperative. You look for a solution that lets everyone win. Strategies are comparing needs and creating win-win solutions
Relationship management Patterns of Talk
Avoid deviant behaviors, use face-saving behaviors, assess risk-taking ability
Team Management Patterns of Talk
Avoid extreme CR states, build pride on work behavior, use identity renewal meetings
Focus on Role
Avoid personalizing
Encourage Reciprocal Communication
Best to use incremental reciprocity. If you compromise a little, others will compromise a little
Esprit de Corps
Build team spirit
Differences in Professional Consciousness States
Burnouts, Young Hawks, Old Buffaloes, Company Loyalists, and Cynics
Monthly Meetings
Calls for a "sell" leadership style. There is a need to spend time celebrating the group and how good its doing. Often have guests speakers. Report presentations. Don't let it become a "shopping list" of complaints built up throughout the month
Monday Morning Meetings
Calls for a "tell" leadership style on the part of the supervisor. Communicating directions from higher up in the organization. Don't let it become a social event. Finish it within a brief time
Dysfunctional Group Problems
Communication Skills, Egocentric Behavior, Nonparticipation, Interruptions, Poor Leader Behavior, Negative Attitudes
Hedgehog Method Step 2
Confront the brutal facts. Team needs to develop high tolerance for open debate.
Complaining
Continuous dissatisfaction
Six Sigma Step 5
Control the new product. Measure and maintain performance with a clear plan
Hedgehog Method Step 5
Create a measuring stick for assessing economic sustainability of your company.
Central Negative
Criticizes ideas
Negative Attitude
Defensive, evasive, argumentative, personal accusations
Six Sigma Step 1
Define and identify problems. Starts and ends with customer needs
Hedgehog Method Step 3
Determine the core values. What does the company feel passionate about?
Hedgehog Method Step 6
Discover your Hedgehog Concept. What are your core values?
Cynic
Distrust the company. Does not want to be part of the group, and would prefer to be independent of the group's and organization's influence.
Assist in Procedure
Do routine tasks
Egocentric Behavior Problems
Dominating conversation, one-upmanship, show of power, talking to hear self-talk, clowning around
Understand Meeting Rituals
Don't violate the norms that are in the office
Master Time
Everyone guards his or her own time jealously. Use rules when planning and calling meetings.
Playing the Clown
Excessive horseplay
Decision Making Defects of Groupthink
Failure to examine alternative ideas
Decision Making Defects of Groupthink
Failure to reexamine rejected alternatives
Decision Making Defects of Groupthink
Failure to reexamine the preferred alternatives
Roles in a Small Group
Five major roles, five minor roles
Airheading
Flaunting ignorance
Eggheading
Flaunting knowledge
Hedgehog Method Step 1
Form a council. Group should represent a wide range of perspectives within the company
Information Provider
Gives information to the group after doing the necessary research
Asses individual Risk-Taking Ability
Group must assess each member's ability to risk the consequences of the group's activities and decisions
Company Loyalist
Has an only positive view of the organization. Thinks that the organization is perfect
Young Hawk
Highly consciousness-raised group member. If there is no fire in the eyes of a burnout, their eyes are blazing. Constantly seeks ways to improve the group and raise its status in the organization.
Hedgehog Method Step 4
Identify what you are best at. What is your core business?
Groupthink: Invulnerability
If there are few alternatives, maximize ideational conflict
Groupthink: False Consensus
If there are no contingency plans, then use a problem solving agenda system
Groupthink: Unquestioned Morality
If there are no reexamination of plans, develop central negatives
Groupthink: Self-Censorship
If there is biased treatment of information, then examine the advantages and disadvantages of all proposals
Groupthink: Rationalization of Mistakes
If there is no reexamination of rejected plans, then reduce leader dominance
Groupthink: Vilification of Opposing Groups
If there is rejection of expert opinions, then keep group pride within limits
Signpost Ideas
If you believe some issues cannot be negotiated, the sooner you identify them the better.
Differences in Propensity to Take Risks
If you join a work group that has a tradition of high-risk taking, and you perceive yourself to be overly cautious, or vice versa, there will be conflict.
Blocking
Impedes decision making
Six Sigma Step 4
Improve the product. Test the validity of the solutions and standardize the new procedures
Maintain Role Stability
Know your role, and keep that in check
Task Leader
Lead the group
Decision-Making Meetings
Leader must allow a collaborative decision, Everyone should participate, Leader must be willing to live with the results
Avoid Deviant Interpersonal Group Behaviors
Like the dozen deviant communication behaviors.
Task Management Patterns of Talk
Maintain spirit of inquiry, work against premature consensus, encourage reciprocal communication, signpost ideas
Call Group Satisfaction Meetings
Major point is to increase member satisfaction, praise individuals for doing good
Theory X Management
Managers exercise authority and closely supervise
Six Sigma Step 2
Measure and gather statistical data. Measure company performance compared to company requirements
Decision Making Defects of Groupthink
No contingency plans
Self-Centered Follower
Works against group for their own agenda
Decision Making Defects of Groupthink
Selected bias in processing information
Encouraging
Show a positive attitude
Negative Predispositions Toward Groupthink
Some individuals often develop negative attitudes toward working in groups. If one or more of your team members brings a negative attitude to a group project, this can be a course of considerable conflict
Foddering
Spreads gossip
Planning Meetings
Successful planning committees typically go through three phases: Calls for the leader to adopt a "tell and sell" leadership style to explain the project. Requires the leader to change to a participatory or collaborative leadership style to gather info. The structuring of the activities that the planning committee will perform to reach final goal
Theory Y Management
Supervisors are sensitive to the needs of their workers and the workers are allowed input
Active Listener
Supports ideas
Expand Your Role
Take on a new role if you need to
Recorder
Takes notes, the secretary role
Groupthink
Teams tend to avoid ideational conflict when this occurs. The group stamps out a deviant idea before it has the chance to spread, but the group also develops insulation to protect itself from any ideas outside the group that threaten the group's consensus
Self-Centered Behaviors
The Dirty Dozen
Maintain Spirit of Inquiry, not Advocacy
The less the group resembles a formal negotiation group the better
Groupthink
The practice of thinking or making decisions as a group in a way that discourages creativity or individual responsibility
Hedgehog Method
Three basic questions: What are your core values? What is your core business? What does the company feel passionate about?
Number of People in a Small Group
Three to eleven, ideal five to seven.
Help Seeking
Unnecessary sulking, wastes time with talk
Poor Leader Behavior
Unorganized, not prepared, lack of control
Recognition Seeking
Wants attention
Accommodating
Noncompetitive and cooperative response to conflict. Belief that one should be obliging, complacent, pliable, yielding, unselfish, etc. Strategies are apology and disclaimers
Social Emotional Leader
Nurtures group members
Compromising
One should engage in mutual yielding or mutual concessions. Give a little to get a little. Strategies are restate your opinions, and state others' opinions
Self-Confessing
Overly personal, wastes time with personal talk
Doormatting
Overly submissive
Nonparticipation
Passive, does not show up
Communication Skill Problems
Poor listening, lack of clarity, use of jargon
Engage in Face-Saving Behavior
Positive and consistent image people have of themselves, and their desire of approval
Questioner
Probes ideas by asking many questions
Old Buffalo
Provides stability. Puts in a reliable eight hours of work, the leaves their professional identity at work. Tells the young hawks to calm down, and the burnouts to keep up.
Burnout
Putting in your time until retirement. Police, high school teachers, etc. are common examples
Silent observer
Quiet, passive, listens more than speaks
Decision Making Defects of Groupthink
Rejections of expert opinions
Tension Releaser
Relieves tension through humor
Six Sigma
Represents a standard deviation of a population. The pursuit of perfection