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- Introduction
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1. Introducing the field of managing organizations
- Prof. Stewart Clegg
- Managing people
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2. An introduction to managing people in organizations
- Dr. Tyrone Pitsis
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3. Managing teams and groups
- Prof. Michael West
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4. Leading extraordinarily positive performance
- Dr. Kim Cameron
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5. Leading in organizations
- Prof. Ray Gordon
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6. Understanding coaching
- Dr. Anthony Grant
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7. The self-determination theory perspective on motivation in organizations
- Prof. Edward L Deci
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8. The organization of human resource strategies
- Prof. Miguel Martínez Lucio
- Managing key practices
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9. Managing cultures
- Prof. Stephen Linstead
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10. Organizational politics
- Prof. Richard Badham
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11. Managing organizational decision making
- Prof. Susan Miller
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12. Improvising improvisational change
- Prof. Miguel Pinha e Cunha
- Dr. Joao Vieira da Cunha
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13. Organization design: its evolution within a changing context
- Prof. John Child
- Managing representationally
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14. Managing messages
- Prof. James R. Barker
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15. Expressing organizations through corporate branding
- Prof. Majken Schultz
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16. What does knowledge work do?
- Dr. Tim Ray
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17. Mastering business action: implications for management learning in business schools
- Prof. Elena Antonacopoulou
- Managing socially responsibly
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18. Managing sustainably
- Prof. Suzanne Benn
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19. Business ethics
- Prof. René ten Bos
Printable Handouts
Navigable Slide Index
- Introduction
- "Managing"
- Managing messages
- Managing messages effectively
- Direct: what is the right value for your organization to create?
- Direct: what you want - value that passes two tests
- Direct: key indicator - forward movement
- Direct: why are we doing?
- Direct: watch out for - "well, I don't know"
- Monitor: what you want - systemic integrity
- Monitor: key indicator - supported ethical decisions
- Monitor: how well are we doing?
- Monitor: watch out for - "yeah, right"
- Correct: what you want - condition sensitivity
- Correct: key indicator - stakeholder faith and confidence
- Correct: how do you feel?
- Correct: watch out for - off course pull
- Moving forward
This material is restricted to subscribers.
Topics Covered
- Creating and articulating the right value in the right way
- Direct
- Monitor
- Connect
Talk Citation
Barker, J.R. (2021, May 30). Managing messages [Video file]. In The Business & Management Collection, Henry Stewart Talks. Retrieved December 22, 2024, from https://doi.org/10.69645/PKQH6093.Export Citation (RIS)
Publication History
Transcript
Please wait while the transcript is being prepared...
0:00
Hello, I'm Professor James Barker from Dalhousie University in Canada.
I'm a professor of Organizational Behavior and Leadership and that's where I
primarily teach the courses that I teach in general management principles,
organizational behavioral principles, and leadership.
That's really what I'm going to talk about today.
When we talk about managing messages,
I'm going to talk about how you manage those messages as a manager and
how you use messages to help you manage in a useful and positive way.
0:32
When we use the word managing we tend to give it a negative connotation.
We think that it's bad somehow,
but it's critically important that we manage messages so that
how we make sense of those messages moves in
a useful positive direction to help us create the value that we need to create.
In a human organization,
messages and making sense of messages is what we do minute-by-minute day-in-day-out.
Our world of managing,
our world of working in organizations is all about making sense of messages.
We don't give it the credit really that it deserves or
we don't see the importance that it has, but
it's pivotal that we be sensitive to how well the messages that we
send work and do they move us in the direction that they need to move us in?
That's going to be the subject of my talk today and
how we're going to proceed.
1:29
The first element of managing messages that we have to be sensitive
to and aware of is that it really looks easy.
We think that it's easy because we do it all the time,
but the reality is quite different.
We send messages all the time,
and thus it looks easy to us and we communicate all
the time and that's what we do day in and day out in the organization.
The issue is that we assume that our messages get across as we intended.
That's a very bad assumption.
It goes back to the point of making sense.
We forget when we send a message,
the various stakeholders whether it's employees like internal stakeholders,
say our direct reports,
or whether it's an external stakeholder to the organization like a customer.
They're always trying to make sense of that.
What you do not have when you send a message is
control over how sense is made of that message.
That's the different reality of it.
It's that lack of control that you have over how the message is understood and acted on.
It's very complex.
Again, we fail oftentimes to give our sending of message is in organizations
the appreciation for the complexity that it has. Our ability to make sense is very complex,
very sophisticated, very complicated.
That's why we have to focus on managing the messages.
Because we do not have any kind of guarantee
of the successful communication. Any time that we send a message,
there's no guarantee that it's going to be
interpreted or the sense made of it in the way we intended.
That's why managing messages becomes key.
We can never rest on the assumption that what works
today will work tomorrow because it very well may not work.
We have to focus in on thinking through
and working with managing the messages that we send.
What do we need to do to effectively manage messages and to help improve
the probability that the sense that the stakeholders will make of that message again,
whether it's internal or external stakeholders,
what can we do to help ensure that we can manage that message effectively and
that our intent comes across
generally with a good probability of coming across in the way that we intended?
Three key things that we need to do.