the benefits of transparency

Post on 21-May-2015

3.346 Views

Category:

Education

2 Downloads

Preview:

Click to see full reader

DESCRIPTION

4º Class

TRANSCRIPT

Business Communication

Transparency

Ricardo Leiva

I. TRANSPARENCY

• The benefits of transparency: • Leadership + Transparency = Trust• Honesty, candor, clarity, full disclosure • Trust and transparency are always linked

I. PLANNING AND WRITING

• Transparency is a matter of survival

• It is unavoidable• 50.000 blogs are created

everyday • Reputations can be destroyed by

the click of a mouse

I. REVISING

• We know more than ever, but we often feel less in control

• World more anarchic, overloaded with information and stimilus

• The need to know. The fear of knowing

I. REVISING

• The flow of information is similar to a central nervous system: the organization’s effectiveness depends on in.

• The intelligence of the organization—the capacity to compete, solve problems, innovate, meet challenges, and achieve goals—depends on an healthy information flow.

I. REVISING

• Information flow: critical information to the right person at the right time for the right reason.

• The successful flow of information is not automatic. It often requires the leader’s commitment, and sometimes, the leader’s intervention.

I. REVISING

• Transparency is the publicity of the goods actions and the good management.

• If we act well, we have to communicate it.

• Transparency is the consequence of a well oriented and done policy.

• To the most relevant and leaders, transparency is a way of control and accountability.

I. REVISING

• Secrecy makes leaks more likely• Secrecy is a way to hide our

mistakes• Openness favor external feedback

and a wide range of solutions. • Sometimes secrecy intents to hide

bad management • Taxpayers need and want to know

how their money is used

I. REVISING

• People often forgive mistakes. • They do not forgive deceit,

deceitfulness, dishonesty, lying, mendaciousness, mendacity, untruthfulness.

• Most of crisis communication cases have a secret or a lie at the bottom

I. REVISING

• If the organization tell more the public, the public don’t ‘fill the vacuum’ with misinformation

• Each of us is always under scrutiny and on display.

I. PLANNING AND WRITING

• Complete transparency is not possible—nor even desirable, in many instances.

• Central banks need embargoes and silent periods.

• They must be justified and short.

I. PLANNING AND WRITING

• Central banks are now respected, powerful, and healthy institutions

• They are accountable organizations

• People know how they work, why they are important, and why their independence must be preserved

• If central banks were opaque, people wouldn't support them

I. PLANNING AND WRITING

• Central banks are now respected, powerful, and healthy institutions

• They are accountable organizations

• People know how they work, why they are important, and why their independence must be preserved

• If central banks were opaque, people wouldn't support them

I. PLANNING AND WRITING

•One third of your time planning and organizing•Better ideas at the start, fewer drafts• If ideas don’t come:•Brainstorm •Freewrite

I. PLANNING AND WRITING

I. PLANNING AND WRITING

• Triple-check:• Numbers• Headings• The first and last paragraphs• The reader’s name

I. PLANNING AND WRITING

• Cycling:• Drafting• Getting feedback• Revising• Getting more feedback

• To get good feedback, tell people which aspects are more important to you

I. CREATING GOODWILL

•You-attitude: • Look at things from the reader’s point of view•Respect the reader’s intelligence• Protect the reader’s ego• Emphasize what the reader wants to know• Talk about the reader—except in negative situations

I. CREATING GOODWILL

•You-attitude: •Readers want to know how they benefit or are affected•When you give this information, you make your message more complete and more interesting

I. CREATING GOODWILL

• You-attitude: • Don’t talk about feelings, except to

congratulate or offer sympathy (condolences)

• All the reader cares about is the situation from his or her point of view

I. CREATING GOODWILL

• You-attitude: • When you have good news, simply give the

good news. • In positive situations, use you more than I:

“You will receive health insurance as a full-time employee”

• Use we to include the reader• Avoid it if it excludes the reader: “What we in

management want you to do.”• I says that you’re concerned about personal

issues, not about the organization’s problems, needs, and opportunities

I. CREATING GOODWILL

• You-attitude: • Avoid You in negative situations• To avoid blaming the reader, use an

impersonal expression or a passive verb

• Talk about the group to which the reader belongs

• Protect the reader’s ego by using an impersonal construction

• Things, not people, do the acting

I. CREATING GOODWILL

• Positive emphasis: • Avoid negative words and words

with negative connotations • Focus on what the reader can do

rather than on limitations • Justify negative information by

giving a reason or linking it to a reader benefit

• If the negative is unimportant, omit it

I. POSITIVE EMPHASIS

• Positive emphasis is a matter of the way you present something

• Bury the negative information and present it compactly

I. POSITIVE EMPHASIS

• The beginning and end are always positions of emphasis

• To deemphasize a negative, put it in the middle of a paragraph

• Give it as little space as possible only once in your message

• Don’t list it vertically• Important: Be honest!!!

I. POSITIVE EMPHASIS

I. POSITIVE EMPHASIS

• 1) Give bad news a positive “spin”:• “The study found an alarming 10%

contamination rate in the area.”• “The study found that 90% of the area is free

from contamination.”

• 2) Compare bad news to something even worse.

• “Although the area has some contamination, the situation is not as bad as it could have been, and is much better than similar areas in other catchments.”

I. POSITIVE EMPHASIS

• 3) “Sandwich" the bad news between two items of good news. • “The recent environmental impact

review has resulted in an exciting new policy of resource management which is due to be implemented next month. At this stage the area has a 10% contamination rate. The goal is to reduce that figure to 5% within two years and less than 1% within eight years.”

I. POSITIVE EMPHASIS

• You are being completely honest about the situation without making it depressing

• The initial impression is good news, followed by the bad news, then ending on a positive outlook for the future

• Never begin with bad news! • This makes a very nasty first impression

that is difficult to recover from• The first sentence sets the tone for

whatever follows• Start on a positive note

I. POSITIVE EMPHASIS

• If you think about tone, politeness, and power you don’t offend people by mistake

• The desirable tone for business writing is:• businesslike but not rigid• confident but not arrogant• polite but not groveling

I. APOLOGIZING

• When you must give bad news, consider hedging your statement • Auditors rarely say directly that firms are using unacceptable accounting practices • They use three strategies to be more diplomatic: • specifying the time (“currently, the records are quite informal”)• limiting statements (“it appears,” “it seems”)• using impersonal statements that do not specify who caused a

problem or who will perform an action.

• Important: Be honest and don’t miss the crucial information

I. APOLOGIZING

• What’s the best way to apologize?

• When you are at fault, admit it forthrightly • Apologies may have legal implications• Some organizations prefer not to apology• Think about your audience and the

organizational culture• If the error is small, and you are correcting it,

no explicit apology is necessary

I. APOLOGIZING

•Negative: “I’m sorry the clerk did not credit your account properly.”

•Better: “Your statement has been corrected to include your payment of $263.75.”

I. APOLOGIZING

• If you’re not at fault, don’t apologize• Done everything you can and or it’s

not your problem, you are not at fault. • Include an explanation so the reader

knows you weren't negligent. • If the news is bad, put the explanation

first. • If you have good news for the reader,

put it before your explanation.

I. EXAMPLES

• Negative: “I’m sorry that I could not answer your question sooner. I had to wait until the sales figures for the second quarter were in.”

• Better (neutral or bad news): “We needed the sales figures for the second quarter to answer your question. Now that they're in, I can tell you that...”

• Better (good news): “The new advertising campaign is a success. The sales figures for the second quarter are finally in, and they show that...”

I. EXAMPLES

• You-attitude:

• Negative: “I’m sorry that the chairs will not be ready by August 25 as promised.”

• Better: “Due to a strike against the manufacturer, the desk chairs you ordered will not be ready until November. Do you want to keep that order, or would you like to look at the models available from other suppliers?”

I. EXAMPLES

•When you apologize, do it early, briefly, and sincerely.

•Apologize only once, early in the message.

•Let the reader move on to other, more positive information.

I. EXAMPLES

• If you produced a big problem, you don’t need to remember all the bad things that happened

•The reader know that

•Focus on what you have done to correct the situation

I. EXAMPLES

• If you haven’t produced a problem or you don’t know it, don’t raise the issue at all

• Negative: “I’m sorry I didn’t answer your letter sooner. I hope that my delay hasn’t inconvenienced you.”

• Better: “I’m sorry I didn’t answer your letter sooner.”

I. EXAMPLES

• Break!!!

• Practical work

• Next class

• Transparency by Warren Bennis, Daniel Goleman & James O'Toole

• http://www.bnet.com/videos/transparency-by-warren-bennis-daniel-goleman-james-otoole-book-brief/219866

top related