Who are you

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Who Are You? How YOU Communicate in the Workplace As adapted from Robyn Baker Showalter, Penn Line Service, Inc.

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Transcript of Who are you

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Who Are You?How YOU Communicate in the WorkplaceAs adapted from Robyn Baker Showalter, Penn Line Service, Inc.

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Your BEST Communication Style› Bold (Yellow)

› Expressive (Red)

› Sympathetic (Green)

› Technical (Blue)

The Four Communication Styles

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The Bold Communicator

› Style is usually direct

› Conversation is short and to the point

› Likes the bottom line

› Is a good problem solver

› Good at visualizing the big picture

Style One - Bold

Jesus: I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life. No one comes to the Father except through me. John 14:6

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The Expressive Communicator

› Style reflects a need to be involved with people

› Likes to talk and is good at it

› Can be a good presenter

› May speak in emotional terms

› Communicates a positive message

Style Two - Expressive

Jesus: These things I have spoken to you, that My joy may remain in you, and that your joy may be full. John 15:11

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The Sympathetic Communicator

› Style is calm and quiet

› Likes to listen more than talk

› Is sincere and people-oriented

› Displays a low-key approach

› Team player

Style Three - Sympathetic

Jesus: When Jesus saw their faith, He said to the paralytic, “Son, be of good cheer; your sins are forgiven you. Matthew 9:2

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The Technical Communicator

› Style is orderly, detailed and logical

› Likes to follow procedures

› Works well with numbers and systems

› May tend to be a perfectionist

› Needs to see the big picture in small steps

Style Four - Technical

Jesus: Jesus was a Carpenter. Mark 6:3

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› Why is your style the best?

› What about your style might irritate others?

› What about your style is vital to our faith?

Group Activity

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The Four Communication Styles

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Style-to-Style Communication

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To summarize:

› Communicate your message to other people in a way that they will “hear” it.

› Adapt your style based on interpersonal awareness.

› Always consider the receiver before you speak.

The Four Communication Styles

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Effective Communication Techniques

Part Two

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THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA

Where Are We?

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When you talk to your professor, colleague or friend for 10 minutes, they only really hear 2.5 minutes of the conversation.

The Listening Process

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“I know you believe you understand what you think I said, but what you heard is not what I meant.”

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Effective Communication

Common Barriers to Understanding

› Physical noise/distractions

› Mental noise/distractions

› Bias about the speaker or subject

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The Six Communication Commandments› Organize before you speak.

› Be specific.

› Be direct.

› Repeat and reinforce.

› Ask for feedback.

› Listen actively.

Effective Communication

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1. Organize before you speak.› Begin with the end in mind.

› Decide what you want to accomplish with the conversation.

› Say what’s most important first.

The Six Commandments

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2. Be specific.› Quantify and qualify. (Who, what, when where,

why and how)

› Give an example when appropriate.

The Six Commandments

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Go 270

Go to 70

Be Specific

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›Go Route 270 (North or South)

›Go to Route 70 (East or West)

›Take 270

›Travel on 70

Be Specific

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3. Be direct.› Say what you mean.

› Don’t “sugarcoat” or use vague language to avoid conflict.

› Make sure conflict ends in a resolution.

The Six Commandments

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4. Repeat and reinforce.› Rephrase the same statement a few different

ways.

› Recap/review at the end of the conversation.

› Use a visual when possible.

The Six Commandments

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5. Ask for feedback.› Pause often, and give the listener a chance to

speak.

› Invite participation

Examples

Does this interest you? Am I making sense? What do you think? How do you think we could make this better?

The Six Commandments

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6. Listen actively› Tune out mental noise. Silence “self talk.”

› Listen to understand, not respond.

› Ask questions to clarify what you think you heard.

The Six Commandments

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Pay attention to non-verbal cues:› Tone of voice

› Eye contact

› Facial expression

› Posture

› Proximity

› Gestures

Active Listening

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Review

› Know your style, and adapt it to your audience.

› Plan ahead. Know what results you want.

› Be detailed and direct.

› Two-way communication: invite the listener’s participation.

› Practice active listening techniques.

› Find the time to communicate.

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Questions?