What is effective communication?

As it is Effective Communications Month, I thought I’d begin my series of blog articles with a reminder of what communication really is.  Here is an article I wrote a while back that puts it best.

Communication is a word you’ve probably heard since you were young, but I’ll bet you can’t define it. Some people think communication is talking, conversation, making a speech, persuading someone of something or badgering them into coming to church. Others think it’s manners, etiquette or social graces.

Merriam Webster defines communication as “an act or instance of transmitting,” “information transmitted or conveyed,” “a verbal or written message,” “exchange of information,” “personal rapport,” or their most comprehensive definition, “a process by which information is exchanged between individuals through a common system of symbols, signs, or behavior.”

Wikipedia has one of the most complete definitions of communication I have ever seen:

Communication is the activity of conveying information. Communication has been derived from the Latin word “communis”, meaning to share. Communication requires a sender, a message, and an intended recipient, although the receiver need not be present or aware of the sender’s intent to communicate at the time of communication; thus communication can occur across vast distances in time and space. Communication requires that the communicating parties share an area of communicative commonality. The communication process is complete once the receiver has understood the message of the sender.“

I know I was subtle by putting it in bold letters, but didja catch that last part? I’d go one step further. Effective communication is complete when the receiver has understood the message of the sender, the way in which the sender had intended.

True communication, effective communication requires that the listener understands the sender’s message in the spirit it was intended or the message is skewed, misunderstood and the relationship between the sender and receiver has changed or is damaged in some way.

Everyone talks, but not everyone truly communicates. Everyone gets a message across, but not everyone has the ability to relate his message so effectively that his listener understands his message as it was intended. Anyone can lecture, but not everyone can truly teach, enlighten. Manners will only get you so far in a relationship. A speech will not endear you to your neighbor. A presentation will not help you resolve a conflict with your brother. Social graces will not persuade a nation to elect the right candidate. Etiquette cannot help you share your faith. And the communication skills required for each of these activities are different.

Everyone learns to talk. Very few learn to communicate effectively. It isn’t because it’s a set of skills only important for lawyers and politicians. It’s because society fully understands when communication is done badly, but does not understand that the reason behind the conflicts, divorce, lost job opportunities, and failed businesses is most often an inability to effectively express the vision.

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Peruse: it may not mean what you think!

This week’s word is: Peruse and it may not mean what you think it does.  I was surfing the net last week and found a few articles on the meaning of this word which suggested that it doesn’t mean what most poeple think it does.  Most people use the term to mean glancing through something quickly without paying much attention to detail, but according these articles and to Dictionary.com, peruse means “to read with thoroughness or care, examine in detail.”
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I decided to look it up and what I found both confused and explained the issue.  Here’s what I mean.  Merriam Webster defines peruse as:
1a: to examine or consider with attention and in detail : study b: to look over or through in a casual or cursory manner   2: read; especially: to read over in an attentive or leisurely manner
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Hold on there!  Did you catch that?  Merriam seems to contradict herself, doesn’t she?  Merriam Webster, herself, defines cursory as “rapidly and often superficially performed or produced : hasty. ”  While hasty suggests rushing through something such that you don’t get all of the details,  casual and leisurely suggests that you take your time.  Clear as mud, right?  So which is it, Merriam?
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Now that you know, how should you use the word?
1. You may continue to use it the way most people understand it to mean (to gloss over, glance at).
2. You may enlighten others with your vast knowledge of vocabulary and come off sounding like a know it all.
Either way, you may never be sure what others mean or how they will take your meaning.  I suggest you use another word and avoid the confusion.  What do you think?  Share your thoughts here.
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The Meaning of Debate is Debatable

I had been debating whether or not to write an article on the word debate because the meaning of debate is  debatable.  I didn’t want to get into a debate about it, but you can debate the issue on many levels so I think I will.

Debate is quite a versatile word that can be used as a verb or a noun.  Merriam Webster defines debate as “the formal discussion of a motion before a deliberative body according to the rules of parliamentary procedure” and “a regulated discussion of a proposition between two matched sides.”  It further defines it:

* to contend in words

* to discuss a question by considering opposed arguments

* to argue about <the subject was hotly debated>

* to engage (an opponent) in debate

* to turn over in one’s mind <he’s still debating what to do>

* a contention by words or argument.

So debate can mean anything from an orchestrated and heavily regulated event where two sides formally discuss a particular political issue to a slight disagreement.  The true meaning lies in the context of the communication.

I’m working on a series of studies coming out in the next few weeks that discuss debate as it is used in various settings.  Say What You Mean: Debating the Issues is my latest release talking about how to discuss political issues in a more familiar and conversational environment.  I’m currently working on Say What You Mean: Avoiding, Reducing and Resolving Conflicts which is due to be in editing soon.  And before January, I have plans to finally release my formal debate study.  I’ll be sharing more about them in the coming months.

To give you a fun look at formal debate, I have included for your giggling pleasure a video clip from Welcome Back Kotter where the Sweathogs are entered in a formal debate.  My book will be a bit more traditional in its approach.

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Literally is Literally the Most Overused Word

Literally, according to Merriam Webster, the word “literally” literally means:

Main Entry: lit·er·al·ly
Pronunciation: ?li-t?-r?-l?, ?li-tr?-l?, ?li-t?r-l?
Function: adverb
Date: 1533

1 : in a literal sense or manner : actually <took the remark literally> <was literally insane>
2 : in effect : virtually <will literally turn the world upside down to combat cruelty or injustice — Norman Cousins>


Usage: Since some people take sense 2 to be the opposite of sense 1, it has been frequently criticized as a misuse. Instead, the use is pure hyperbole intended to gain emphasis, but it often appears in contexts where no additional emphasis is necessary.

People use the word “literally” when they literally mean it actually, really, literally happened. And it has become literally accepted to literally use the word “literally” as emphasis.  Unfortunately, the overuse of the word “literally” has literally moved the word “literally” into literal oblivion leaving it literally bereft of all meaning.

So the word “literally” can sometimes literally mean literally the opposite of what the word “literally” literally means, however, it can be literally overused to the point where the word “literally” literally means nothing much whatever…literally.

Words mean things, don’t they?  Stay tuned for next week’s edition of Word Wednesday featuring another misused word or term.

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