Class Exercise 2
In-class Interview Analysis
A new manager has just been assigned to a division of a company. The manager, Kim Smith, set up individual appointments with each employee to give an orientation to the new management style and goals. The following conversation took place:
Note: M = manager, E = employee
M:Hello, my name is Kim Smith, your new supervisor for this department.
E:Well, it is good to meet you. My name is Jo Dalbert--I’m in charge of accounting for this department.
M:As you know, Jo, I’m calling each member of the department into my office to discuss the new directions for the department and to get to know the personnel.
E:New directions?
M:Well, your previous supervisor was given a lateral move in the company.
E:Oh, we heard that he was given a promotion because things were going well in our department. After all, he was given a larger office.
M:Be that as it may, he was moved laterally and changes are needed in this department!
E:Oh, I see.
M:Let me outline very briefly my philosophy of managing. First, I expect the very best work from my staff--I want to improve the efficiency of this department by 10% over the next 6 months. As I examined the efficiency reports over the last several years, I noted that 40% of the division’s time was spent in departmental meetings. We will cut this time by 50% by having only regularly scheduled meetings during the week. Ad hoc meetings will be virtually eliminated. This measure alone should increase our productivity way beyond that 10% mark.
E:I see....
M:You seem to disagree...
E:Well, ahh...we had recognized this problem before and had come up with a plan, which included cutting our regular meetings to only two per week, and then allowing time for a number of ad hoc meetings as needed.
M:Look, I want to get things straight--I don’t know how you ‘used to do things’ around here, but from now on, we will do things my way or not at all.
E:I see...well, I didn’t mean to suggest that your plan wouldn’t work or anything.
M:Let me move on to how I want to specifically change your responsibilities. I’ve never had much use for accountants, per se, but I recognize the necessary evil. Anyway, I want you to divide your time equally between your accounting work and your new responsibility of mapping out a marketing strategy for the department. I know you haven’t been trained in this area, but we will provide you the training.
E:Wow, that is a bombshell! I feel overworked now! I can barely keep up with the accounting work I have to do.
M:Do you mean you can’t do the work assigned to you?
E:Of course not!
M:Then you will just have to make time for these new responsibilities.
E:Look, I can barely keep up with the accounting workload now and keep it at that ‘very best’ level. I know you think I can do it, but that is really off-base.
M:You’re just saying that to make me think you’ve been working hard--and I believe you’ve been a hard worker--your record shows that. But you do have the time and you ‘really’ know that you can do it.
E:What? I can’t believe this!
M:Oh, you accountants can always figure something out...I’ll see you next week with the plan in your hand.
E:Plan? What plan? What do you want in the plan?
M:Look, just get some thoughts together on how you can equally divide your time. See you next week with the plan!
Questions:
- Pinpoint the problems caused in this dialogue by each of the undesirable characteristics of language (i.e.: abstraction, inference, bypassing, stereotyping, false polarization, links). Find examples of each.
- Discuss how each of the basic propositions about communication help explain this interaction (i.e.: process, risk, symbols, intentions, meaning construction, multi-level). Find examples of each.
- Map out the FIRO-B profile of the manager and employee. Evaluate the effectiveness of the communication chosen by the manager and employee in light of the profiles.
- Analyze the issue, “there is time to do the marketing work”/”there is not time to do the marketing work” in the dialogue and map out the different perspectives (direct, meta, metameta) of the manager and employee on this issue.
- Evaluate the degree of effectiveness achieved by the participants in the interview.
- In light of your analysis above, select the 3 major communication factors (propositions, FIRO B, perspectives, communication barriers) that created the climate in the interview.
- Suggest some communicational alternatives for each of the participants that could have changed the outcome of the dialogue or could change the relationship in the future.
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