There are many factors to consider when thinking about communication – the audience, content, tone and place and time. These all begin and end with how individuals express themselves when interacting with others: called your communication style.
Exploring several personality models can provide valuable insight into different communication styles. We will go through how one engages the audience, from your employees to clients, and then explain how different styles may bring different results in your business.
How to Keep Your Listeners Engaged
Engagement is more than just another metric to measure the productivity of employees. Employee engagement is a comprehensive organizational approach that motivates employees to actively contribute to its goals and values. Job satisfaction should be as important as attitude and performance. All three components reinforce each other.
Modern engagement is broken down into five key elements:
- Meaningful Work
- Hands-On Management
- Positive Work Environment
- Growth Opportunities
- Trust in Leadership
Modifying our behavior to meet people where they are helps our message be heard. We have one southern colleague who has trained himself to speak formally, because he generally works for conservative business types. When encountering groups from more casual organizations though, he easily turns to his slower southern approach, setting his audience at ease too. Anticipating a range of needs before the conversation will help you work through alternatives in advance.
Another way to keep people engaged is to tell a story. Instead of stating what someone should do and why, tell a story about someone who took the action and how it helped them. Stories are great for connecting with people.
Counseling Engaged Employees with Emotional Intelligence
Virtually all aspects of HR and management practices impact employee rights. Think hiring, performance appraisals, quality control, references or employment disciplinary actions taken. Providing proper coaching and advice to your supervisors and managers is essential. Understanding employees’ rights and showing respect will go a long way when communicating. No matter how important your message is to you, don’t interrupt someone to deliver it. Get straight to your purpose or request, and find out when and if they are able to address it. Likewise, in meetings, contribute, but don’t dominate and hold up proceedings.