Effective Communication

By Kenneth
$120
Subjects:
Research, Communication, Business
Level:
Expert, Diploma, Bachelors/Undergraduate, Masters/Postgraduate, Doctorate/PhD
Types:
Activboard activitiy, Homework, Assessment, Classroom Form
Language used:
English

There is evidence that demonstrates effective communication can reduce organizational conflict and improve supervisor-subordinate relationships. Effective communication will increase quality, innovation, efficiency, and customer responsiveness.
INSTRUCTIONS
Your completed assignment must include a cover page, abstract, introduction, conclusion, and reference section (which does not count towards the minimum word count). In this assignment, a case will be analyzed for a strategic management solution in communication to resolve a
complex situation.

For this assignment, assume you are a management consultant and Mark
Chen has retained your services. Chen has asked you to recommend a strategic management solution for an on-going communication problem. Therefore, you must create an effective organizational communication plan by applying the management functions of planning, organizing, directing and controlling. Most of your paper should provide an operational (not theoretical) communication solution showing how it would be implemented. Support your recommendation with peer-reviewed literature and integrate the Bible throughout, stating what the Bible or Christian literature says about planning, organizing, directing, and controlling in their respective sections in the paper. Note: Do not restate the case.

Case: A Problem in Communication
“Mark Chen supervises support staff for an online company that sells furniture over the Internet. Chen has always thought that he should expand his staff. When he was about to approach his boss with such a request, the economy slowed, and other areas of the company experienced layoffs. Thus, Chen’s plans for trying to add to his staff are on indefinite hold. Chen has noticed a troubling pattern of communication with his staff. Ordinarily, when he wants one of his staff members to work on a task, he emails the pertinent information to that person. For the last few months his email requests have gone unheeded, and his subordinates comply with his requests only after he visits with them in person and gives them a specific deadline.”“Each time, they apologize for the delay but say that they are so overloaded with requests that they sometimes stop answering their phones. Unless someone asks for something more than once, they feel a request is not particularly urgent and can be put on hold. Chen thinks this situation is dysfunctional and could lead to serious problems in the near future. He realizes,
however, that his subordinates have no way of prioritizing tasks and that is why some very important projects were put on hold until he inquired about them. Knowing that he cannot add to his staff in the short term, Chen has come to you for advice. He wants to develop a system whereby his staff will provide some kind of response to requests within 24 hours, will be able to prioritize tasks, identifying their importance, and will not feel so overloaded that they ignore their boss’s requests and don’t answer their phones.”

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