Articles

Translate Page To German Tranlate Page To Spanish Translate Page To French Translate Page To Italian Translate Page To Japanese Translate Page To Korean Translate Page To Portuguese Translate Page To Chinese
  Number Times Read : 14      
Categories

Arts & Entertainment
Business
Career
Cars and Trucks
Celebrities
Communications
Computers
Culture and Society
Disease & Illness
Environment
Fashion
Finance
Food & Beverage
Health & Fitness
Hobbies
Home & Family
Inspirational
Internet Business
Legal
Pets & Animals
Politics
Product Reviews
Recreation & Sports
Reference & Education
Religion
Self Improvement
Travel & Leisure
Vehicles
Womens Issues
Writing & Speaking
 
Stats
Total Articles: 67405
Total Authors: 2826
Total Downloads: 712883


Newest Member
Michele DeKinder-Smith
 

The Effective Communication Principle

[Valid RSS feed]  Category RSS Feed - http://articles.artigos.com/rss.php?rss=213
By : Jonathon Hardcastle    9 or more times read
Submitted 2008-03-26 17:19:01
According to Peter Drucker in his article "The Transnational Economy" written back in 1987, "To maintain a leadership position in any one developed country, a business-whether large or small-increasingly has to attain and hold leadership positions in all developed markets worldwide. It has to be able to do research, to design, to develop, to engineer and to manufacture in any part of the developed world, and to export from any developed country to any other. It has to go transnational." But is going international as simple as it sounds in this passage, or business leaders and executives need to consider another usually unforeseen barrier commonly referred to as "the effective communication principle?"

Companies in developed countries such as the United States must engage in international business transactions or lose an important competitive advantage. Such firms have not only found tremendous commercial opportunities a thousand or ten thousand miles from their plants, but they have also found cooperative partnerships because of a community of interest. Community of interest is in fact the common ground upon which a business relationship can be based and later flourish. If a firm in Japan, for example, finds an American company with expertise in marketing and handling its products in foreign markets, then a community of interest has been found and remains to be exploited to the advantage of both. But how is that possible and on which factors does it depend upon?

Although the answer is rather complex, undoubtedly one factor is that the worldwide level of technology has greatly advanced easing the process of communicating among people located in different countries. Their ability to share information almost instantly has turned the globe to resemble a village, and as a village its citizens can communicate with one another quickly and easily with the use of various technology-based methods. But then again how come and the message is not received in the manner intended when sent by the messenger? The answer is simple: worldwide we share the much of the same information and technology, but no the same culture. Our family, recreational, financial and other values are different, as these values spring from diverse experiences, expectations and habits. Even if the language used to communicate is the same, the cultural differences between states are evident and a message can be distorted or at least not understood as one intended.

Technological advances in the last 100 to 200 years have spread and been adopted and refined worldwide. But cultures based on thousands of years of development are slow to change. For many, they should not change, as these cultural differences among societies and nations give individual identity to each group. In fact, this persistence diversity in the thinking of human beings has made this world an exciting place to be in. But at the same time it has also created barriers that constitute a major challenge for communicators. Even with the advancement in the transition of information, when words and actions are not understood in the same way because of differences, communication can suffer. This is a key factor for people to remember when dealing with different cultures or employed in different countries from that of their origin. Verbal or nonverbal communication can have different meanings to different people and thus careful consideration and examination of the others' environment can ensure a better delivery of a message and overall a much more successful communication process.
Author Resource:- Jonathon Hardcastle writes articles on many topics including Employment, Consumer Information, and Employment
Article From Artigos.com International Articles

HTML Ready Article. Click on the "Copy" button to copy into your clipboard.




Firefox users please select/copy/paste as usual
New Members
select
Sign up
select
Learn more
 
Articles
Articles
Login
Submit Articles
Submission Guidelines
Top Articles
About Us
Contact Us
Privacy Policy
RSS Feeds

Actions
 Print Article
 Add Favorites

 
Sponsors

 

 


Warning: main(http://articles.artigos.com/articles/websitetranslator/flags.php?page=/1/10269/213/The-Effective-Communication-Principle.html) [function.main]: failed to open stream: HTTP request failed! HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found in /home/artigo/public_html/articles/inc/bottom.inc.php on line 12

Warning: main(http://articles.artigos.com/articles/websitetranslator/flags.php?page=/1/10269/213/The-Effective-Communication-Principle.html) [function.main]: failed to open stream: HTTP request failed! HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found in /home/artigo/public_html/articles/inc/bottom.inc.php on line 12

Warning: main() [function.include]: Failed opening 'http://articles.artigos.com/articles/websitetranslator/flags.php?page=/1/10269/213/The-Effective-Communication-Principle.html' for inclusion (include_path='.:/usr/lib/php:/usr/local/lib/php') in /home/artigo/public_html/articles/inc/bottom.inc.php on line 12