A Study on Communication System in UiTM Shah Alam by Mohd Sabri Bin a Rahman
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Transcript of A Study on Communication System in UiTM Shah Alam by Mohd Sabri Bin a Rahman
DEPARTMENT OF QUANTITY SURVEYINGFACULTY OF ARCHITECTURE, PLANNING & SURVEYING
UNIVERSITI TEKNOLOGI MARASHAH ALAM
A STUDY ON COMMUNICATION SYSTEM IN UiTM SHAHALAM
PREPARED BY: MOHD SABRI BIN A RAHMAN (2006127319)SEMESTER: JULY 2008 – NOVEMBER 2008
DEPARTMENT OF QUANTITY SURVEYINGFACULTY OF ARCHITECTURE, PLANNING & SURVEYING
UNIVERSITI TEKNOLOGI MARASHAH ALAM
A STUDY ON COMMUNICATION SYSTEM IN UiTM SHAHALAM
PREPARED BY: MOHD SABRI BIN A RAHMAN (2006127319)SEMESTER: JULY 2008 – NOVEMBER 2008
DECLARATION
“I declare that this Final Project is the result of my own research and that all sources areacknowledged in the references”
Student’s Signature : …………………………………..
Student’s Name : MOHD SABRI BIN A RAHMAN
Date : 26 SEPTEMBER 2008
ABSTRACT
The construction industry is one of the important sectors in the Malaysian economic and
the most complicated situation to be managed. The sector was really complex in their
program and involved so many stockholders to execute the project. One of the fields
identified that is able to manage projects is through communication. Communication
could be a huge scope to be discovered but one of the aspects that we could be looking
for is in organisational communication.
In order to deal with their nature of communication, process or important term in
organisational communication, this dissertation takes Universiti Tekonologi MARA as a
guideline to start our knowledge in this field as reference because Universiti Teknologi
MARA is one of the biggest institutions in Malaysia that provides educational services to
the student and staffs.
The aim of this project is to investigate the implementation of Organisational
Communication in UiTM Shah Alam which is useful to become role model to other
sector in their communication management especially for construction industry.
Construction project will suffer if there is lack of good organisational communication, so
this dissertation probably will generate information to improve that aspect to become
better and to avoid more problems in construction project.
In addition, the opinions of the staffs in UiTM were gathered through interview and
adoption information of survey also included in this dissertation as conclusion and
recommendation.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT
Along the final project completion, the author could have never seen successful without
the support and encouragement from some parties. Because of that, I wish to express
my thankful to the persons and all parties who involved in this research and offered a
valuable cooperation in carrying out this final project.
First of all, I would give my acknowledgement to my supervisor Cik Fadzida Bt Ismail
because of her guidance, support and giving the ideas in preparing of this dissertation.
Special thanks also for her because sincerely supervise, encouragement, thoughtful
criticisms in this dissertation and some creative suggestions for giving a good tracks
while preparing this dissertation. My appreciation also goes to my understanding family
while doing this dissertation especially to my beloved parents, A Rahman Bin Said and
Meriam Binti Mamat whom have given a lot of support in financial, sources, guidance
and permission for searching the information and sources from outside.
I am also thankful to interviewees and all my friends especially my classmates for their
helpfulness and encouragement while preparing this dissertation. For someone out
there who means a lot to me, you know who you are. Thanks for the support and for
being there when I need you. Thank you for all participants whom have given a lot of
uproot that I really need in completing the dissertation.
Thank you.
PRELIMINARIES
ABSTRACT i
ACKNOWLEDGEMENT ii
TABLE OF CONTENTS iii
LIST OF FIGURES ix
LIST OF TABLES xi
CHAPTER ONE
1.0 INTRODUCTION
1.1 BACKGROUND 1
1.2 AIM 2
1.3 OBJECTIVES 2
1.4 ISSUES/PROBLEM STATEMENT 2
1.5 SCOPE OF STUDY 3
1.6 METHODOLOGY 3
1.7 TENTATIVE CHAPTER HEADING 6
TABLE OF CONTENTS
DESCRIPTION PAGES
TABLE OF CONTENTS (Cont’d)
CHAPTER TWO
2.0 INTRODUCTION TO COMMUNICATION SYSTEM
2.1 GENERAL 8
2.1.1 Communication 9
2.1.2 Communication Process 10
2.1.3 Function of Communication 12
2.1.4 Barriers to Effective Communication 14
2.2 COMMUNICATION TYPES
2.2.1 Internal Communications 17
2.2.2 External Communications 17
2.2.3 Function of Internal and External Communications 17
2.2.4 Formal and Informal Communications 18
2.2.5 Upward and Downward Communication 19
2.2.6 Lateral Communication 20
2.2.7 Diagonal Communication 20
2.3 TELECOMMUNICATIONS 21
2.4 ORGANISATIONS
2.4.1 Concept 22
2.4.2 Features of Organisation 23
2.4.3 Organisation Structure 23
DESCRIPTION PAGES
TABLE OF CONTENTS (Cont’d)
2.4.3.1 Span of Control 25
2.4.4 Principal of Organisational Structure 28
2.4.5 Types of Organisational Structure 31
2.4.5.1 Different Structures 30
2.4.5.2 Centralised and Decentralised Organisation 36
2.4.5.3 Advantages and Disadvantages 38
2.4.6 Organisation Function 41
2.4.6.1 Factors of Production 41
2.4.6.2 Finance Production 43
2.4.6.3 Human Resources Function 43
2.4.6.4 Sales and Marketing Function 44
2.4.6.5 Administrative Function 44
2.4.6.6 Research and Development Function 45
2.5 COMMUNICATION IN ORGANISATION
2.5.1 General 46
2.5.2 Organisational Communication 47
2.5.3 Shannon and Weaver Model of Communication 50
2.6 ISLAMIC PERSPECTIVE 53
2.7 SUMMARY OF CHAPTER 55
DESCRIPTION PAGES
TABLE OF CONTENTS (Cont’d)
CHAPTER THREE
3.0 UiTM SHAH ALAM AND ORGANISATIONAL COMMUNICATION
3.1 HISTORY 57
3.2 OVERVIEW 59
3.3 APPLICATION 60
3.4 STRUCTURE RELATED 62
3.4.1 Formal Communication 63
3.4.1.1 Downward Communication 63
3.4.1.2 Upward Communication 65
3.4.1.3 Horizontal Communication 67
3.4.2 Effectiveness of Formal Communication 69
3.4.3 Informal Communication 74
3.4.2.1 Grapevine 75
3.4.4 Communication Structure as a Network 77
3.4.5 External and Internal Networks 79
3.4.6 Formal and Informal Networks 79
3.5 ORGANISATION DESIGN 82
3.5.1 Organisational Form 84
3.5.2 The Divisional Form Structure 85
3.6 COMMUNICATION PROCESS IN UiTM SHAH ALAM 86
3.7 COMMUNICATION CHANNEL 88
3.8 TECHNOLOGY INNOVATION & ORGANISATIONAL
COMMUNICATION 89
3.9 SUMMARY OF CHAPTER 93
DESCRIPTION PAGES
TABLE OF CONTENTS (Cont’d)
CHAPTER FOUR
4.0 ANALYSIS AND FINDINGS
4.1 ANALYSIS 94
4.1.1 Communication Channels 95
4.1.2 Information during Communication 95
4.1.3 Communication Policy 97
4.1.4 Program 98
4.1.5 Delegated Authority 98
4.1.6 Superior/Supervisor 99
4.1.7 Human Resources 100
4.1.8 Employers-Employees Relations 100
4.2 FINDINGS 101
4.2.1 Develop Communication Program 101
4.2.2 Communication Program 102
4.2.3 Involving Employees 105
4.2.4 Human Resources Communication 107
4.2.5 Key Element of a Benefits Communication Plan 110
4.2.6 Encouraging Feedback 114
4.2.7 Evaluating Communication Programs 114
4.2.8 Communication Research and Change 116
4.3 SUMMARY OF CHAPTER 117
DESCRIPTION PAGES
TABLE OF CONTENTS (Cont’d)
CHAPTER 5
5.0 ANYLISIS AND FINDING
5.1 INTRODUCTION 118
5.2 RECOMMENDATIONS ON ORGANISATIONAL
COMMUNICATION 119
5.2.1 Changing Communication Needs 119
5.2.2 The Changing Work Force 121
5.2.3 Good Organisational Communication: A Big Reward 123
5.2.4 The New Professional Communicator 125
5.3 CONCLUSION 128
REFERENCES 130
APPENDICES 132
DESCRIPTION PAGES
LIST OF FIGURES
CHAPTER 1
1.1 Research Methodology 5
CHAPTER 2
2.1 Communication Process 10
2.2 Function of Communication 12
2.3 Types of Noise in Communication 15
2.4 External and Internal Communication 18
2.5 An Explicit and Obvious Organisational Structure 25
2.6 Organisation Hierarchy 26
2.7 Adding Party to an Organisational Hierarchy 26
2.8 A Hierarchy on Party 27
2.9 Using Accountabilities in Organisation Structures 28
2.10 Organisations Structure 31
2.11 Tall Structure 32
2.12 Flat Structure 33
2.13 Hierarchical Organisation 35
2.14 Functions of Organisation 45
DESCRIPTION PAGES
LIST OF FIGURES (Cont’d)
CHAPTER 3
3.1 Fayol’s Concept 67
3.2 Type of Communication 73
3.3 A Grapevine Communication 75
3.4 A Communication Network 78
3.5 Type of Grapevine Chains 81
3.6 Example of Division Form Structure 85
3.7 E.g of Communication Process 87
3.8 Communication Channel in UiTM Shah Alam 88
CHAPTER 4
4.1 Communication Channels 95
4.2 Information used during Communication 97
4.3 7-steps Communication Program 102
CHAPTER 5
5.1 Example of Technologies adopted then and now 123
5.2 Communication Variables 124
5.3 Recommendations 127
DESCRIPTION PAGES
LIST OF TABLES
CHAPTER 2
2.1 Example of Telecommunications 21
2.4.5.5 Advantages and Disadvantages 35
CHAPTER 3
4.1 Example of form to measure the performance 106
4.2 Benefits Communication tools 112
CHAPTER 5
5.1 Changing of work Force 121
5.2 Changing of Workplace 122
5.3 Changing of Actions 126
DESCRIPTION PAGES
CHAPTER 1
INTRODUCTION
1.1 BACKGROUND
Communication is an important process for every organisation such as educational
institution which accommodates more than one individual either to transfer the data, to
give the instruction or to give announcement. In term of educational places like
Universiti Teknologi MARA Shah Alam as the centre of all the UiTM campus in each
state in Shah Alam. So, largest University in Shah Alam needs the system for
organisational communication either inside or outside the boundary of UiTM Shah Alam
as medium to fulfil the University’s mission as provide higher educational service.
Toward enhancing the quality of management in each works among the staff or other
related person with UiTM there are medium that need to use as connection between
them. The suitable organisational communication system may resolve all the difficulties
among all parties in UiTM Shah Alam to give or get the information, announcements,
reminders or other transactions and also for relationship among the UiTM Shah Alam’s
staff that need communication system in all progress.
UiTM is one of the organisations that need communication as item relate to each other
only through some form of communication in organisational communication there types
of communication flow such as formal communication, informal communication,
downward and upward communication and etc. As a educational organisation UiTM
need best types of communication to archive the goal in many aspect especially in
organisation that involved staff (superior and subordinates). For each building in UiTM
Shah Alam the communication among the staff or related person might be via channel
as medium of communication. These channels also one of the factor in organisational
communication and important to all parties. In this study the communication is varies
and circumstances of organisational communication of population in UiTM Shah Alam
will be concentrate.
1.2 AIM
The study created to study about the organisational communication system in Universiti
Teknologi MARA Shah Alam as a guideline for future use as reference to improve their
knowledge about the organisational communication system such as education
institution, construction organisation etc.
1.3 OBJECTIVES
I. To identify the information of organisational communication system.
II. To study about the organisational communication system that implemented in UiTM
Shah Alam.
III. To identify the scenario and planning of organisational communication in UiTM
Shah Alam.
IV. To propose the strategic organisational communication plan for UiTM Shah Alam.
1.4 ISSUE / PROBLEM STATEMENT
UiTM is educational institution that provides the knowledge services and
communication system that suitable for achieve the goal to create the environment of
better communication as tool to avoid the failure of communication. Based on this study
there is a need to identify the organisational communication in UiTM. Tools that
incorporate the system also need to discover either in term of ability to perform the
better result for communication or worst. Each organisation in UiTM Shah Alam has
their communication but is there the best communication as a bridge to achieve the
goal. Organisational communication something that related to superior and
subordinates, via this study could be the relation between them may be increase and
help for communication in UiTM by producing the advantages to avoid the obstacles, by
this study also may create understanding for employee about the communication and in
their daily work in organisation which is can be come from varies sector such as
construction sector but UiTM Shah Alam become the subject matter for other
organisation in any sectors. Thought these issues organisational communication in
UiTM will be guide to become more suitable.
1.5 SCOPE OF STUDY
This study create to become guidelines for any sectors in Malaysia regarding
organisational communication that implemented in UiTM as educational institution
especially for construction sector that very fragmented in their activities and
management. In addition, interview with related person that clearly understand what is
organisational communication. This study focused on UiTM Shah Alam.
1.6 METHODOLOGY
1.6.1 Literature Review
In this section, those are discussed briefly. Information is obtained from various sources
such as related reference books, articles from internet and magazines. The purpose of
this is to get a general overview of the topic in organisational communication.
1.6.2 Survey and interviews
To let perceptively respondents give their opinion and point of view regarding the
research. Forms filled with survey will be distributed to staff (superiors and
subordinates). The survey is distributing randomly around UiTM Shah Alam (focal point)
only. The survey is based on the researches issues, articles and others. Interview will
be held to the UiTM’s staff (superiors). This method will allow better to gather the
information about scenario of organisational communication that implemented either
written or just a virtual but useful.
Figure 1.1: Research methodology flow chart
IdentifyProblem
LiteratureReview
Internet
Books
Articles
Survey
DataAnalysis
Interviewsession
RelatedDocument
Recommendationand Conclusion
1.7 TENTATIVE CHAPTER HEADINGS
1.7.1 Chapter 1- Introduction
The first chapter consists of general introduction to study, a highlighted issue of
the topic, main objectives to be covered, methodology, scope and limitation of
the study, and finally the overview of chapter arrangement in this study.
1.7.2 Chapter 2- Literature Review
This chapter shows the literature review on organisational communication
system commonly in general view regarding organisation. Inclusive information
about organisational communication, definition and items that involved in
organisational communication system, the process and related issue are
discussed in detail.
1.7.3 Chapter 3- Case Study
As mention in the scope of study above, UiTM Shah Alam will be the case study
in this dissertation. The application of organisational communication in an
institution as UiTM Shah Alam, the scenario of organisational communication
will be highlighted. The offices consists with unit, division, department and etc in
UiTM Shah Alam will be main source of data collection. The data and
information gathered will be precisely discussed in this part of dissertation.
1.7.4 Chapter 4- Findings and Analysis
As a sequence to the study made on the institutions, analysis and finding takes
part in the preparation of this dissertation. This is an important item to be
discussed to gather information of organisational communication implemented in
selected organisation in UiTM Shah Alam and some relevant details that stated
in the literature review provided.
1.7.5 Chapter 5- Recommendations and Conclusion
Further to the study on the overall process of data collection in the literature
review and on the study sites, the conclusion will be made based on the current
condition of study scope and objectives to ascertain the compliance of the main
objective stated before on the real site. Some extent of recommendation can be
progress based on the findings and analysis above. The recommendation can
be progressed on the findings and analysis above. The recommendation will be
made in accordance to the requirements and method on enhancing the
organisational communication system.
CHAPTER 2
INTRODUCTION TO COMMUNICATION SYSTEM
2.1 GENERAL
This chapter will introduce about the communication system regarding organisation as
general and explain the related information for the system that suitable and widely used
in many organisations. The word communication represented the process of
transferring information from a sender to a receiver with the use of a medium in which
the communicated information is understood by both sender and receiver. By requires
that all parties understand a common language that is exchanged in many ways that
commonly used such as speaking, singing and sometimes tone of voice, body
language, sign language, eye contact or the use of writing. Trough these commonly
ways communication is defined as a process by which we assign and convey meaning
in an attempt to create shared understanding. This process requires a vast repertoire of
skills in intrapersonal and interpersonal processing, listening, observing, speaking,
questioning, analyzing and evaluating.
Use of these processes is developmental and transfers to all areas of life such as at
home, school, community and also for work which is related to organisation.
Collaboration and cooperation occur through the communication and articulation of
sending a message through different media whether it be verbal or nonverbal, so long
as a being transmit a thought provoking idea, gesture, action, etc. each company have
their own organisation and this organisation will help the company or institution such as
Universiti Teknologi MARA to archive their goals as educational service provider to all
the students.
2.1.1 Communication
When we are discussed about communication in organisation there are basic issues
about communication need to be clear such as “Why communications fail?” ,
“communication methods”, “functions of communication”, “process of communication”,
“channel of communication” and “effective of communication”. All these issues need to
be clear because when these issues are totally completed of their information there are
ways for every organisation to develop very best communication system.
To create the communication in an organisation need to discover their suitable types of
communication. Types and method in communication are two different things which is
type in communication represent for what are the communication and how it is works
and for the example of type of communication are either formal or informal, upward or
downward and horizontal communication. But for method in communication explain
about how communication could be use as step to fulfil the function of communication
and for example are, via the spoken word, written report, telephone, video conferences,
meeting, newsletter, employees report, email, handbooks, loudspeaker, notices,
briefing groups even grapevine as long as the communication could be transfer to
receiver.
2.1.2 Communication Process
Figure 2.1: Communication Process
Based on previous page figure 2.1 shown the diagram of communication process which
is involves with seven elements and have the barrier that might be fail to complete the
process. This is a simple model of the elements in the communication process. This is a
way to summarise the major elements in the presentation. Every communication has a
beginning, middle and an end. At the start, it is important to encourage communication
and to acknowledge, and really listen to, what senders have to say. This helps establish
connection. The core of communication is a process of formulating (encoding) and
sending a message via suitable media that is heard (received) and interpreted
(decode). This highlights that there are many points at which the communication
process can go wrong. When ending a communication, decisions need to clarify and to
check from other party. It is good to ensure everyone knows who is going to do what, by
when in next meeting.
RESPONCEFEEDBACK
RECEIVERDECODINGMESSAGE
MEDIAENCODINGSENDER
BARRIERS/NOISE
Finally, be sure to summaries what has happened and assess the communication and
meeting process. Barriers such as noise may damage the information that transfer and
maybe the communication fail to achieve the goal and some precautions need to take
action as procedure to save the information from fail to operate.
Organisations can not operate without communication. Communication can take
various forms but all forms involve the transfer of information from one party to the
other. In order for the transfer of information to qualify as communication, the recipient
must understand the meaning of the information transferred to them. If the recipient
does not understand the meaning of the information conveyed to them, communication
has not taken place.
Communication is the life source of organisations because organisations involve
people. People cannot interact with each other without communication. In the absence
of communication, everything would grind to a halt. For example;
The workers in an organisation would not know the organisation’s objectives so they
would not strive to achieve the organisation’s objectives.
• The workers in an organisation would not know what their roles and
responsibilities were, so they would not be able to carry out their daily tasks and
duties.
• The managers would not be able to train their workers reports so the workers
would not possess the skills they needed to carry out their jobs.
• The managers would not be able to inform workers of changes
• The organisation would not be aware of their competitors activities
2.1.3 Function of communication
Communication functioned as a tool for every goal and some of them are very useful for
each organisation. For example in construction company the director ask his project
manager monitor the site to avoid any accident during construction works and the goal
to avoid the accident be achieve if the project manager take duty of care by remind the
workers via notices or briefing and instructed the safety officer to make sure all the
workers followed the rules and the goal are success. Below diagram shown the
examples for the functions of communication in any situation:
Figure 2.2: Functions of communication
FUNCTIONS OFCOMMUNICATION
ROLERELATED
ATTITUDECHANGE
SOCIALRELATIONSHIP
INFORMATION
INSTRUMENTALEXPRESSION
o Information
Communication is a medium for sender to transfer the information to the
receiver and receiver understand the message and the message act as
information receiver. For example in construction’s project the architect advice
the client to choose suitable material roof construction based on some important
reason. The advice was encoded as a safety reason and client have the
knowledge on suitable material for roof and the advice act as an information in
decision makes or action that need to taken in any situation. That the function of
communication.
o Expression
Communication also functioned to express the feeling, the condition or mood of
every single person. It’s not exactly in say something by words but might be via
face’s reaction or body language. This how we know the condition of every
person such as he or she in sad, mad, happy or something that keep the secret
without use voice. By this function the respond from the receiver may be
negative or positive.
o Attitude Change
Communication could be expressing the change of individual’s attitude. It could
as positive and negative. The receiver will detected the change and may be
understand what going on to the sender.
o Instrumental function
Communication also function to influent the receiver to understand or do
something once instruction given by manual, report etc.
o Role related
The function also called as habits or role of somebody to explain something
about his skill to receiver.
o Social related
This function more too contractual related and communication needed for
example relation between contractor and client.
2.1.4 Barriers to Effective Communication
Based on figure 2.1 at each stage in the process encoding, transference, and decoding
there is the possibility of interference which may hinder the communication process.
This interference is known as noise. Often a comparison is made between
communication and a leaky bucket. If we use a leaky bucket to carry water, water will
be lost at various points in our journey from the water tap to our destination. It is not
possible to stop losing water because the bucket contains holes. The amount of water
we will lose will be determined by the number of holes in the bucket, the size of the
holes, the route we take to our final destination and length of time it takes us to get to
our destination. There may also be other events that occur during our journey which
increase the amount of water lost. Similarly when information is transferred from the
transmitter to the receiver not all of the information may be received by the receiver
because of holes called noise. Each of the noise may be affect the amount of
information transferred. Just as in a leaky bucket, more holes decrease the amount of
water, more noise decreases the amount of correct information received. Noise can
take a variety of forms including items in diagram below:
Figure 2.3: Types of noise in communication
o Language issues and Cultural Differences: the receiver(s) may not (fully)
understand the language used by the transmitter. This may occur if the
transmitter’s language is foreign to the receiver. There may also be language
problems (that the communication process) if the message contains technical
information and the receiver’s is not familiar with the technical terms used.
Cultural differences created by an individual’s background and experience affect
their perception of the world. Such cultural differences may affect the
interpretation (decoding) of the message sent.
NOISE
Environmentissues
TransmissionsJourney
Languages issuesand CulturesDifferences
ChannelIssues
Receiverattitude and
behavior
o Environmental issues: If the environment that the transmitter or receiver are in,
is noisy and full of sound, the sounds may prevent the message being fully
understood. Background noise is often created by colleagues or machinery.
o Channel issues: If the channel used to transfer the information is poor it may
prevent all or some of the information being transferred. Examples include a
faulty fax machine, a crackling phone, handwriting that cannot be read or in the
case of oral messages incorrect facial gestures.
o Receivers attitude and behaviour: If the receiver(s) is not interested in the
message (or unable to give their full attention to decoding) this may reduce the
amount of information received or the accuracy of the information transmitted to
them. Similarly the receiver(s) may misinterpret the message by "jumping to
conclusions" or reading the message in a manner that suits their own
interests/objectives and distort the true meaning of the message.
o Transmission journey: i.e. steps in the message, If the message is
complicated or there are lots of steps taken to transfer the message it may affect
the accuracy or interpretation. Comparing with the leaky bucket if the leaky
bucket has to carry water over a longer distance more water will probably lost
than if the journey was shown.
2.2 COMMUNICATION TYPES
2.2.1 Internal Communication
This is communication that takes place within (or across) an organisation. In addition to
the usual face to face, telephone, fax or mail; modern organisations may use
technology to communicate internally. Technology may be used for e-mails or a linked
internal communication system such as the intranet which is an internet system
designed solely for use by those working for the organisation.
2.2.2 External communications
On the other hand external communication is communication between the organisation
and those outside the organisation. Modern organisations may design technological
systems so that they can communicate with customers and undertake e-Commerce.
Alternatively they communicate with other businesses through the internet or similar
systems and undertake e-Business.
2.2.3 Functions of Internal and External Communications
Technology has rapidly expanded the types of internal and external communication
available to organisations. The diagram illustrates the vast array of internal and external
communication available.
Combined together internal and external types of communications allow various sectors
of the local, national and international community to interact, liaise and conduct
business.
Figure 2.4: External and Internal Communication
2.2.4 Formal and Informal Communications
Formal communication is defined as communication which occurs through the official
organisational channels or is undertaken by an employee to do their job. For example
official meetings, letters and a manager asking an employee to carry out a particular
task. Conversely informal communication is that which occurs outside the recognised
communication networks such as talking in the lunchroom or hallways between
employees. Informal communication can be productive or negative. It has the potential
ExternalCommunicationo Letters
o Fax
o Direct Mail
o Internet
o Video
o Telephone
o Advertising
o Websites
InternalCommunicationo Team briefings
o Notices
o Reports
o Memos
o Face to face
o Email
to build teams, improve working relationships and generate ideas as employees are in a
relaxed environment.
2.2.5 Upward and Downward Communications
Downward communication is communication created by directors and managers and
passed down the hierarchy of workers in the organisation. In traditional organisations
this is the preferred method of communication i.e. Managers decide what the systems,
rules and procedures will be and then they pass these down to employees they manage
and supervise. Downward Communication can increase efficiency by synchronising
organisational procedures and can ensure that everybody is working towards the same
overall aims and objectives. Types of downward communication include job
descriptions, appraisals/evaluations, organisational policy, and organisational systems.
Although there are advantages to downward communication organisations have began
to encourage upward communication. This is communication which originates at the
lower level of the employment hierarchy and is then communicated up through the line.
Organisations encouraging upward communication believe that everybody is capable of
generating thoughts and ideas which may help the organisation to progress, particularly
when they are working closely in the area that the idea applies to. Upward
communication may increase motivation and make employees feel valued and
respected whilst enabling managers to understand how employees are feeling.
Furthermore if problems occur at they are more likely to be identified earlier by those
working closely in the area that they occur. Types of upward communications include
suggestion schemes, feedback forums/surveys, grievance procedures and employee-
manager discussions.
2.2.6 Lateral Communication
This is communication that occurs between employees on the same level in the
organisation. As this can involve decision making it can create efficiency as employees
do not have to wait for managerial approval. On the other hand, if the manager is not
kept informed or if the manager fails to set boundaries there is potential for conflict.
2.2.7 Diagonal Communication
This occurs when communication occurs between workers in a different section of the
organisation and where one of the workers involved is on a higher level in the
organisation. For example in a bank diagonal communication will occur when a
department manager in head office converses with a cashier in a branch of the bank
based on the high street.
2.3 TELECOMMUNICATIONS
Term Definition
TelecommunicationCommunication between parties based in different
locations by using a cable, telephone, broadcast or a
telegraph.
Networking
Linking to or more computers together so that information
and facilities can be shared. Computers in the same room
may be linked together or the organisation may decide to
link, computers in different parts of the world together.
Local Area Network
(LAN)
Computers linked by a network without the use of
telecommunications. Often the computers linked are based
in the same location, group of buildings or site.
Wide Area Network
(WAN) Computers linked by a network using telecommunications.
Often the computers linked are based in different locations.
Teleconferencing Through the use of telecommunication devices such as
video link participants based in different locations
communicating is known as teleconferencing.
Electronic Data
Interchange (EDI)Computer networks used to exchange standard business
transaction documents between organisations.
Table 2.1: Example of Telecommunications
2.4 ORGANISATION
Organisation could be varies and depend on the company or institutions, this word
represent for a social arrangement which pursues collective goals, which control its own
performance and which has a boundary separating it from its environments. There are
types of organisation such as in social and management as tools to archive the goals.
In organisation included structures and leadership which is play their roles to fulfil
organisations goals. Organisation also aware to optimizing the organisation structure
and included in management science.
2.4.1 Concept
The word organisations could be varies and two difference definitions given by previous
philosophers are:
"...organisation is a particular pattern of structure, people, tasks and techniques.. "
Source: Leavitt, H.J. 1962. Applied organisation and readings. Changes in industry:
structural, technical and human approach. in: Cooper, W.W., et al. New Perspectives in
Organisation Research. New York, NY: Wiley.
"... a system which is composed of a set of subsystems..." Source: Katz, D., and Kahn,
R.L. 1978. The Social Psychology of Organisations. New York, NY: Wiley. An
organisation is derived from Greek word which mean tool and the term is used in both
daily and scientific English in multiple ways.
2.4.2 Features of organisation
o Composed of individuals and groups of individuals
o Oriented towards achievement of common goals
o Differential functions
o Intended rational coordination
o Continuity through time
2.4.3 Organisation structure
An organisation included the structure in providing guidelines on hierarchy, authority of
structure and relationships, linkage between different functions and coordination with
environment. Structure is composed of three components: complexity, formalization and
centralization. Complexity is the degree to which activities within the organisation are
differentiated. Such differentiations may be horizontal, vertical or spatial. The definition
of organisation structure is "...institutional arrangements and mechanisms for mobilising
human, physical, financial and information resources at all levels of the system..." and
the utility in organisation structure are Division of work into activities, Linkage between
different functions, Hierarchy, Authority structure ,Authority relationships ,Coordination
with the environment .
Source: Sachdeva, P.S. 1990. Analytical framework for the organisation and structure
of NARS. in: Organisation and Structure of NARS: Selected Papers. The Hague:
ISNAR.
It seems that remarkably early in our lives we become familiar with organisational
structures. The classic management hierarchy appears on an organisation chart early in
our career, but even by then we’ve already come across the notion in plenty of places.
So in a way it should not be surprising that organisation structures crop up frequently
enough in business software too. I recognized many organisational patterns several
years ago and ever since they keep turning up again. A good way to start thinking about
modeling organisation structures is to think of the obvious way. Imagine a company
where people work in departments, which are organized into divisions.
Organisations are structured in a variety of ways, dependant on their objectives and
culture. The structure of an organisation will determine the manner in which it operates
and it’s performance. Structure allows the responsibilities for different functions and
processes to be clearly allocated to different departments and employees.
The wrong organisation structure will hinder the success of the business.
Organisational structures should aim to maximize the efficiency and success of the
Organisation. An effective organisational structure will facilitate working relationships
between various sections of the organisation. It will retain order and command whilst
promoting flexibility and creativity.
Internal factors such as size, product and skills of the workforce influence the
organisational structure. As a business expands the chain of command will lengthen
and the spans of control will widen. The higher the level of skill each employee has the
more the business will make use of the matrix structure to maximize these skills across
the organisation.
Division Department Person
2.4.3.1 Span of Control
This term is used to describe the number of employees that each manager/supervisor is
responsible for. The span of control is said to be wide if a superior is in charge of many
employees and narrow if the superior is in charge of a few employees.
Figure 2.5: An explicit and obvious organisational structure.
Figure 2.5 shows an explicit model for this where each part of the structure is a
separate class.
Explicit structures have two main disadvantages. They do not work well if there is much
common behaviour between the kinds of organisation. They also embed the current
organisational categories into the design. Should some bright spark decide to add
regions between divisions and departments, we have some modifications to do.
Figure 2.6: Organisation Hierarchy
Faced with these problems, the obvious move is to create a super type for the
organisation, which leads us to Organisation Hierarchy in Figure 2.6. The organisation
hierarchy works best when we do not have much different behaviour between the
organisation structures. It also allows us to stay very flexible if new kinds of
organisations appear. If we do have some varied behavior we can use subtypes to pull
this down.
Figure 2.7: Adding Party to an organisation hierarchy
Making a super type for the organisation is a pretty obvious move, another common, if
less obvious; super type is Party: a super type between the organisation and person,
leading to Figure 2.7. Often we find that there is not much difference between the
hierarchic association between organisations and the association between person and
organisation so we can pull these associations up to the super type (Figure 2.8)
Figure 2.8: A Hierarchy on party
A hierarchy like this is a good choice for many organisations; it certainly captures the
usual org charts pretty well. But as organisations get larger then we tend to see a
number of different kinds of links between the parties. This might be matrix style
organisational structures where people are organized by job function and geographic
location at the same time. Obviously one way to do this is to create a second party
hierarchy, but this only goes so far. We do not want our party decorated with
hierarchies where we make the interparty relationship an object in its own right, typed
according to the kind of link we need to have (Figure 2.8).
Accountabilities represent the most powerful, and also the most complex way of dealing
with organisational structures. So like most of these power tools, we do not get them
out unless we really need them. But when we do accountabilities give us a very flexible
way of handling all sorts of relationships. When we have accountabilities there are often
rules that say what kinds of parties can be connected together.
Figure 2.9: Using Accountabilities in Organisation Structures
2.4.4 Principle of organisation structure
In organisation the basic principles are specialisation, coordination, de-centralization
and centralization, and line and staff relationships. Specialization is division of work into
components or units in which people specialize. It can be vertical (kinds of work at
different levels in the organisation) or horizontal (division into departments).
Specialisation facilitates application of special knowledge for achievement of goals. This
increases the efficiency of the organisation. Disadvantages of specialization would
include adverse effects on fundamental work attitudes, relationships and
communication.
Coordination is integration of activities of specialised units towards the common
objective. This involves placement of different units in the organisation together or
separately and deciding on patterns of relationship and communication. Coordination is
achieved through hierarchy of authority. This involves important principles of
organisation. Unity of command is being responsible to and receiving orders from only
one superior.
The scalar principle ensures a chain of command in a straight line from top to bottom.
Since this is not always desirable or possible, employees could also relate with each
other on a 'gang plank.' The responsibility and authority principle establishes the need
for authority along with responsibility for accomplishing tasks. Span of control refers to
the number of specialized units of persons less than one management. Discuss the
situational factors which affect the span of control. Departmentalization is the process of
grouping different types of functions and activities of the organisation.
Departmentalization may be functional, by product, or by users, territory, process,
equipment, etc.
Another important principle of organisational structuring is whether decision making is
delegated to lower levels (de-centralized) or concentrated at the top (centralized).
Observe that organisations have different blends of centralization and de-centralization.
Line authority refers to the superior-subordinate relationship through the hierarchy of
authority. Line employees are directly responsible for achieving organisational goals.
Staff employees’ aid and support line employees in their work. Thus, they have different
functions and goals, which could lead to conflicts, but they should be avoidable. Ask
participants about conflict between line and staff in their organisations. Issues in conflict
resolution will be discussed in another module.
Ask participants whether the structure of an organisation should remain stable
throughout or change in response to environmental changes. Obviously, the
organisation has to respond to changes in the environment as they affect its working.
One of the principles of management discussed during the previous session was
'departmentalization'. This principle is concerned with sectioning an institute into
administrative units to enhance the probability of the institute achieving its goals by
implementing its plans within the limits of its capabilities. There are two rationales used
for assembling, or sectioning, institutional units. These are concerned with the grouping
of the institute's staff into administrative units, and the flow of authority and
responsibility within an institute
1. Classic organisational structure
o Simple centralised design
o Bureaucratic organisation
o Divisional organisation
o Project organisation
o Matrix organisation
3. Adhocracy or Organic organisational structure
2. Modern organisational design structure
2.4.5 Types of organisational structure
Figure 2.10: Organisations Structures
2.4.5.1 Different Structures
o Tall Structure Organisation
In its simplest form a tall organisation has many levels of management and
supervision. There is a “long chain of command” running from the top of the
organisation e.g. Chief Executive down to the bottom of the organisation e.g.
shop floor worker. The diagram below neatly captures the concept of a tall
structure.
Figure 2.11: Tall Structure
However, tall structures rarely exceed 8 levels of management. This is firstly
because the number of layers (i.e. management levels) decreases the span of
control. Secondly the disadvantages of the tall structure begin to outweigh the
advantages of a tall structure.
o Flat Structure Organisation
In contrast to a tall organisation, a flat organisation will have relatively few layers
or just one layer of management. This means that the “Chain of Command” from
top to bottom is short and the “span of control is wide”. Due to the small number
of management layers, flat organisations are often small organisations.
Figure 2.12: Flat Structure
o Hierarchical Organisation
In a hierarchical organisation employees are ranked at various levels within the
organisation, each level is one above the other. At each stage in the chain, one
person has a number of workers directly under them, within their span of control.
A tall hierarchical organisation has many levels and a flat hierarchical
organisation will only have a few. The chain of command (i.e. the way authority
is organized) is a typical pyramid shape.
A traditional hierarchical structure clearly defines each employee’s role within the
organisation and defines the nature of their relationship with other employees.
Hierarchical organisations are often tall with narrow spans of control, which gets wider
as we move down the structure. They are often centralised with the most important
decisions being taken by senior management.
In the twentieth century as organisations grow bigger, hierarchical organisations were
popular because they could ensure command and control of the organisation. However
with the advent of globalisation and widespread use of technology, in the 1990’s tall
hierarchical organisations began to downsize and reduce their workforce. Technology
was able to carry out many of the functions previously carried out by humans.
2.4.5.2 Centralised and Decentralised Organisation
In a centralised organisation head office (or a few senior managers) will retain the major
responsibilities and powers. Conversely decentralised organisations will spread
responsibility for specific decisions across various outlets and lower level managers,
including branches or units located away from head office/head quarters. An example of
a decentralised structure is Tesco the supermarket chain.
Each store of Tesco has a store manager who can make certain decisions concerning
their store. The store manager is responsible to a regional manager .Organisations may
also decide that a combination of centralisation and decentralisation is more effective.
For example functions such as accounting and purchasing may be centralised to save
costs. Whilst tasks such as recruitment may be decentralised as units away from head
office may have staffing needs specific only to them.
Certain organisations implement vertical decentralisation which means that they have
handed the power to make certain decisions, down the hierarchy of their organisation.
Vertical decentralisation increases the input; people at the bottom of the organisation
chart have in decision making.
Horizontal decentralisation spreads responsibility across the organisation. A good
example of this is the implementation of new technology across the whole business.
This implementation will be the sole responsibility of technology specialists.
2.4.5.3 Advantages and disadvantages
NO. ORGANISATIONSTRUCTURE
ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES
1Tall StructureOrganisation
There is a narrow span of control ie eachmanager has a small number of employeesunder their control. This means thatemployees can be closely supervised.
There is a clear management structure
The function of each layer will be clear anddistinct. There will be clear lines ofresponsibility and control
Clear progression and promotion ladder
The freedom and responsibility of employees(subordinates) is restricted
Decision making could be slowed down asapproval may be needed by each of thelayers of authority
Communication has to take place throughmany layers of management
High management costs because managersare generally paid more than subordinates.Each layer will tend to pay it’s managersmore money than the layer below it.
2.4.5.3 Advantages and disadvantages (cont’d)
NO. ORGANISATIONSTRUCTURE
ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES
2 Flat StructureOrganisation
More/Greater communication betweenmanagement and workers,
Better team sprit.
Less bureaucracy and easier decisionmaking.
Fewer levels of management which includesbenefits such as lower costs as managers aregenerally paid more than worker.
Workers may have more than onemanager/boss.
May limit/hinder the growth of theorganization.
Structure limited to small organisations suchas partnerships, co-operatives and someprivate limited companies.
Function of each department/person could beblurred and merge into the job roles of others
3 Hierarchical Organisation
Authority and responsibility and clearlydefined.
Clearly defined promotion path.
There are specialists managers and thehierarchical environment encourages theeffective use of specialist managers.
Employees very loyal to their departmentwithin the organisation,
The organisation can be bureaucratic andrespond slowly to changing customer needsand the market within which the organisationoperates.
Communication across various sections canbe poor especially horizontal communication.
Departments can make decisions whichbenefit them rather than the business as awhole especially if there is Inter-departmentalrivalry.
2.4.5.3 Advantages and disadvantages (cont’d)
NO. ORGANISATIONSTRUCTURE
ADVANTAGES DISADVANTAGES
4
Centralised andDecentralisedOrganisation
Senior managers enjoy greater control overthe organisation.
The use of standardised procedures canresults in cost savings.
Decisions can be made to benefit theorganisations as a whole. Whereas adecision made by a department managermay benefit their department, butdisadvantage other departments.
The organisation can benefit from thedecision making of experienced seniormanagers.
In uncertain times the organisation will needstrong leadership and pull in the samedirection. It is believed that strong leadershipis often best given from above.
Senior managers have time to concentrateon the most important decisions (as the otherdecisions can be undertaken by other peopledown the organisation structure.
Decision making is a form of empowerment.Empowerment can increase motivation andtherefore mean that staff output increases.
People lower down the chain have a greaterunderstanding of the environment they workin and the people (customers andcolleagues) that they interact with. Thisknowledge skills and experience may enablethem to make more effective decisions thansenior managers.
Empowerment will enable departments andtheir employees to respond faster to changesand new challenges. Whereas it may takesenior managers longer to appreciate thatbusiness needs have changed
Empowerment makes it easier for people toaccept and make a success of moreresponsibility.
2.4.6 Organisation Functions
In order to produce and sell their product or service most organisations will need to
undertake for example 6 key functions.
v Design and Production
v Finance
v Human Resources
v Sales and Marketing
v Administration
v Research and Development
Each of the functions will need to work together so that the whole of the organisation
has the same aims and objectives. To achieve this communication across the various
functions is key activity. A starting point for this type of communication is the creation of
a clear set of company objectives which each function is aware of. These objectives
then need to be further broken down into specific objectives for each function. Regular
reviews of firstly how each function is performing against its objectives and secondly
how the company is performing against it’s overall objective should ensure that the
whole company is pulling in the same direction.
2.4.6.1 Factors of Production
To generate a product or service an organisation will need to combine labour, capital,
energy, materials and information.
Labour is the mental and or physical effort of employees and can take a variety of
forms including filing, lifting, data processing, decision making, and line management. In
fact labour is any effort/task an employee needs to undertake in order to produce the
product or service.
Capital is the machines and tools needed to produce the product or service. This
physical capital is purchased through financial capital such as loans, sale of shares in
the organisation and use of profit generated by the organisation.
Energy is provided through the use of gas, electricity, solar power and steam. Energy is
needed to heat/light up the premises, make the machinery work and to ensure that the
organisation is a comfortable place for the employees to work in.
Materials in their raw form are needed to produce the product or service. For example
a restaurant will need ingredients to make the food that they serve to their customers.
Information is the knowledge and expertise needed to produce the end product. For
example a restaurant will need to know what ingredients are necessary for each dish,
what quantity of ingredient to use, how to mix each ingredient and how long (if at all) to
cook each dish.
Factors of production have also been classified into land, labour, capital and enterprise.
In this type of classification natural resources such as water, coal and farm land are
grouped together as land. Despite the fact that enterprise, are all the factors which bring
together land, labour and capital to produce the end product.
2.4.6.2 Finance Function
The financial section of the organisation will keep manual/electronic records of money
received and paid out by the organisation. This information will then be used to produce
various financial statements for tax purposes and to comply with legal requirements.
The information will also be used to produce management accounts to enable senior
managers to plan and review business strategy.
The finance department or unit may also be responsible for administering employee
expenses and salaries. For payment of wages the finance department will need to take
into account statutory deductions such as tax, and employee contributions such as
pension or loan repayments.
2.4.6.3 Human Resources Function
Human resources or Personnel’s main responsibility is the recruitment, selection,
training and development of staff. This will involve developing staff to maximise their
potential in a manner that furthers the organisation’s objectives.
Human resources may also need to comply with legislation applicable to the country in
which they are based. For example in the UK employers will need to maintain accurate
personal records in a manner that is compliant with the UK Data Protection Act 1984.
Human resources often adopt a welfare role which includes looking after employees
whilst they are at work. They may also create policies that balance organisational needs
with those of the employee. They will also interpret employee welfare legislation and
ensure that the organisation is complying with the applicable legislation.
2.4.6.4 Sales and Marketing Function
The marketing department will research customer needs to develop strategy and
product to satisfy that customer need. In its research, the marketing department will
investigate the market they are aiming at; the type of consumer making up the market
(age, background sex etc) and the preferences of the consumer within that market. The
marketing department will then need to marry consumer preferences with producing a
product that is profitable. Once the product has been designed by the production
department marketing will then need to package, advertise, and promote the product.
Sales are responsible for persuading the consumer to purchase the end product,
manufactured through marketing’s research. The Sales Department’s selling strategy
could involve mail shots, travelling sales representatives, telephone sales and devising
the sales interview.
2.4.6.5 Administrative ( or Facilities Management) Function
This involves dealing with all administrative tasks including mail handling, dealing with
enquiries/complaints, catering, and computer services. They will also produce
documents (e.g. forms, stationary, and newsletters) for the organisation and maintain
the organisation’s premises and equipment.
This function although not always recognised is vital, as it is the glue that holds the
organisation together. Without an administrative department, customer complaints
would not be resolved, customer orders may not be processed, and the workforce may
not have the tools they need to complete their tasks.
2.4.6.6 Research and Development Function
The aim of research and development is to improve existing products, create new and
better products, improve production methods, and create effective processes. This will
enable the organisation to reduce costs, increase profitability and remain ahead of the
competition. As not all research will lead to new/improved products/processes
companies will need to allocate a specific portion of their budget to research and
development activities.
Figure 2.14: Functions of Organisation
OrganisationFunctions
Factors ofproduction
Sales andMarketingFunction
HumanResourcesFunction
Research andDevelopment
FunctionAdministrative
(or FacilitiesManagement)
Function
FinanceFunction
2.5 COMMUNICATION IN ORGANISATION
2.5.1 General
People depend on organisations for their living. Thus ours is an organised society. The
lifeblood of organisations is communication. Without communication there can be no
organisation. The importance of communication in organisations is well established by
the researchers taking into consideration the amount of time spent by members in
organisations. According to them, members in organisations spend 50 to 80 per cent of
their time engaged in communicate behaviour.
Communication in organisation is a something that related to people under same
organisation which were working together to achieve or collective goals of their
organisation needed such as in their services, product or something that related to
standard to become success in company goals. The modern field traces its lineage
through business information, business communication, and early mass communication
studies published in the 1930s through the 1950s.
Until then, organisational communication as a discipline consisted of a few professors
within speech departments who had a particular interest in speaking and writing in
business settings. The current field is well established with its own theories and
empirical concerns distinct from other communication subfields and other approaches
to organisations.
Several seminal recognized the importance of communication in the organizing
process, and in using the term "organisational communication". Nobel Laureate Herbert
Simon wrote in 1947 about "organisation communications systems", saying
communication is absolutely essential to organisations". In 1951 Bavelas and Barrett
wrote An Experimental Approach to Organisational Communication in which they stated
that communication "is the essence of organised activity".In 1953 the economist
Kenneth Boulding wrote The Organisational Revolution: A Study in the Ethics of
Economic Organisation. While this work directly addressed the economic issues facing
organisations, in it he questions the ethical and moral issues underlying their power,
and maintains that an "organisation consists of a system of communication in 1954, a
Weng Chris Argyris published Personality and Organisation. This careful and research-
based book attacked many things, but singled out "organisational communication" for
special attention. Argyris made the case that what passed for organisational
communication at the time was based on unstated and indefensible propositions such
as "management knows best" and "workers are inherently stupid and lazy." He accused
the emerging field of relying on untested gimmicks designed to trick employees into
doing management's will.
2.5.2 Organisational communication
How interaction occurs and how communication is directed in groups are important
organisational processes - as important as what is being communicated. The process of
interaction itself affects the quality of communication. Human interaction involves not
just the messages (content) but also involves the meanings - intended or otherwise,
how messages (written , verbal and non-verbal) are received, the speed of delivery,
how messages can become jumbled and lost. We code messages by our selection of
language, how we sequence the things in the message and how we wrap and un-wrap
messages with our expectations, feelings and irritabilities.
As simple elucidation, communication is about share the meaning, process or
communication behaviour, real message or message that sent or received and study
about the process that involved in sent and received the message. Levels of
communication included intrapersonal, interpersonal, communication in minor group,
communication cross the cultural, organisation communication, public communication,
mass communication and international communication. Based on study by Nik Rashid
(1993) stated the second element in definition of leadership is about importance of
communication. Method of communication whether clear, exact or precise will effect to
behaviour and performance of follower.
Despite of that, the manager need to encourage his/her subordinate give opinion and
make suggestion to change. Unfortunately, from the view of leadership theory, two
ways communication not exactly good and suitable to use in all situations and time and
the main key is “situation”. In some situation, two ways communication not smart to be
use because using so much time. Problem in organisation that really structured is
routine, one way communication is more enough if fully controlling executed.
Best leader need to understand the process of communication that involved the things
such as communicator, news, channel, receiver and respond. There are many factors
that disturb the communication process such as receiver perception, noise as
mentioned earlier in previous topic, language and valuation are the simple barriers.
Best leader also need to understand this barriers and need to know the solution.
Communication concept shown the need for a leader remembers how the community
arises. To make sure the functions could be realise, Azahari (1998) said items in
communication involvement are words, meaning, belief and action.
Apart of that , communication is a important activity in organisation. Based on Zaiko and
Dance (1965) managers in big organisations in United State used 85-90 percentages
from their works for working in related to communication. Writers who wrote
organisation books stress about importance of communication in organisation since
Second World War. Barnard (1983) said that main task that needs to execute by
executive in organisation is produce and maintain the best formal communication
system.
That also need to effort on it to create the best communication season in organisation
beside encourage the growth the best un- formal communication system. Skill in oral
communication also use as condition for promotion in organisation. Jennings (1971)
found that peoples appointed to become president in organisation have their best face
to face communication skill.
In other study, Jennings (1978) found if a president in a organisation was dismiss and
reason is they are unable to face to face communicate. Communication is familiar with
moral value or ethics and supposes to realise what the base for moral value that need
to use (Zais 1976).
Figure 2.12: Shannon-Weaver Communication Model
2.5.3 Shannon and Weaver Model of Communication
One well-known model (Shannon and Weaver) of the elements of communication
identifies information exchange between a transmitter (Tx) and receiver (Rx). The
model stems from the world of communications technology: telephone equipment, radio
and satellite transmissions etc. As an explanation of some of the elements, it can assist
in the analysis of person-to-person communications?
People as Tx and Rx operate on the basis of
• their general or enhanced skills as communicators
• the perception each has of a message's content
• and their attitudes towards each other.
Human communication is fraught with problems of (mis)interpretation of intention as
well as the capacity of Tx and Rx to absorb complex messages and manage them. The
diagram points to some elements that enable the exchange: the processes involved
and the media in use.
v Message - Language and Encoding
With a model - even the S & W simplification - we can define the nature of
communication more carefully. You/me (Tx) has an idea/some information to
communicate. This is coded using language – Malay Language /English/Arabic/
dialect/gestures and rules (what to say first, what is rude to say and so must be
excluded etc). The content and structure of the message may be weakened by
Tx's inability to use the language, the language's own limitations for expression.
Certain words in the language may be more important (reserved words) than
others in transmitting essentials.
We sequence words/phrases and link words and phrases into a coherent
package. We may make use of rules/logic to do this in a controlled way. We
may just blurt something out which may be nonsense or which may
embarrass/upset. The outpourings may be encoded further by emotion - evident
via the choice of words. Their sequence may be embellished by non-verbal
trappings: smiles, snappy behaviour, frowns to give emphasis and/or
communicate other messages.
v Filtering
The human Tx as a decision-maker may decide to withhold information, delay its
release, treat it selectively and even add irrelevancies (deliberately or not). The
Tx may suffer because of speech impediment or lack of time to transmit the
whole package of information.
The Tx may have intentions to transmit all or only part of a complex packet of
objective information. It may be delivered shrouded in other subjective
messages that arise from the Tx's hidden or overt agenda. The sequence and
style of delivery may reflect the importance the Tx attaches to the information
and their perception of the receiver (peers equals, subperior-sub-ordinate and
vice versa). These intentions will be interpreted or misinterpreted by the Rx.
v Media or Channel
The Tx chooses a channel or media for communication. The Rx must be
plugged into the channel. It is useless sending an E-Mail message if the
recipient hardly ever uses E-Mail or does not indeed have an E-Mail address.
The media may be simple speech, use of the telephone, a letter, or other
physical action: a pat on the back, wink or a movement of the legs. A poker face
communicates much in the context of the situation. Multi-media may convey the
message visually (text, images - still or moving) and/or verbally. The media may
stimulate the tactile or olifactory senses of the Rx. We only have to see children
playing with blocks or clay or a car sales person asking a customer to sit behind
the wheel to reference the myriad of everyday examples. Even olfactory
messages are delivered by supermarkets which pump fresh bread smells out
into the shopping area.
The media used may be inappropriate to the message being delivered and the
expectations of the Rx to whom the message is directed.
v Spillage, Leakage, Hacking, Message Security and Integrity
The media used may spill over and the message received by someone for
whom the message is no intended. Spillage may be a device used by the
receiver to "leak" information. Information may be confidential - only
communicated on a "need to know basis". Information may be held in two or
more places - it gets up-dated in one place but not the other i.e. there is a loss
of data integrity. A message received from one source may be at odds with the
same message being received from another.
2.6 COMMUNICATION IN ORGANISATION IN ISLAMICPERSPECTIVE
According to Islamic perspective Islam stress about Leadership Communication in
Organisation. Organisation in Islamic is very important in Islam and need to include in
any topic which is discussed about communication. By related to Islam we will got bless
from Allah S.W.T. in Al- Quran and Prophet’s Hades admit that any social activity need
leadership and related to communication in organisation. Leadership communication in
organisation is style, method and communication strategies that use by leader during
execute the role and formal duty in organisation. Formal duties including given
instruction, briefing and explanation, guidelines, advice, conduct the meeting,
supervise, given solution on problem, decision making and etc. According to Dr. Mohd
Yusof Hussain (1995) leadership communication in organisation need to discus in
Islamic perspective and he diagnosis the communication interaction with study the
motive behind the information that received, separated the fact, supervising and
assume the information received and use the suitable criteria to value the information
received.
Stech (1983) suggested to leaders to use the best leadership communication such
below items:
1. Always communicate and enjoy it,
2. Communicate by oral,
3. Give good respond and good listener,
4. Asking and not instruct the workers to do the work and give them praise after
they done the best result,
5. Express the best moral during communicate,
6. Focus while informal communication
Apart from that, Stech (1983) also stated, leader that have career’s mission and
organisational leadership that oriented to instruction need to use the communication via
below items:
1. Less communicate to others because it can be wasting workers time,
2. Chose to write than oral communicate,
3. Like to conquer the conversation,
4. Give instruct and critics,
5. Stress on information and conditions,
6. Focus on using formal language
2.7 SUMMARY OF CHAPTER
This chapter is discussing the introduction of communication system in organisation.
This chapter discovered the definition, general information about the communication
and organisation. Communication is process of transferring information from a sender
to a receiver with the use of a medium in which the communicated information is
understood by both sender and receiver. Meanwhile organisation represent for a social
arrangement which pursues collective goals, which control its own performance and
which has a boundary separating it from its environments.
The basic information for communication was explained in scope of related to
organisation and the topic that explained are communication process, type of
communication, barriers of communication, model related to communication process
and etc. Meanwhile for organisation the concept of organisation is a particular pattern of
structure, people, tasks and techniques and this concept include all the type of
organisations, structure, principle, related model and etc.
This chapter also explained about the communication in organisation and
communication in organisation is a something that related to people under same
organisation which were working together to achieve or collective goals of their
organisation needed such as in their services, product or something that related to
standard to become success in company goals. This topic also explains a model that
related to communication in organisation.
Apart of that as additional information to communication in organisation included
communication in organisation according to Islamic perspective. According to a study
about it stress about leadership in communication in organisation. Leadership
communication in organisation is style, method and communication strategies that use
by leader during execute the role and formal duty in organisation and according to Dr.
Mohd Yusof Hussain (1995) leadership communication in organisation need to discus in
Islamic perspective and he diagnosis the communication interaction with study the
motive behind the information that received, separated the fact, supervising and
assume the information received and use the suitable criteria to value the information
received.
Meanwhile Stech (1983) suggested to leaders to use the best leadership
communication such as always communicate and enjoy it, communicate by oral, give
good respond and good listener, asking and not instruct the workers to do the work and
give them praise after they done the best result, express the best moral during
communicate, focus while informal communication and Stech also stated leader need to
use communication via such items less communicate to others because it can be
wasting workers time, chose to write than oral communicate, like to conquer the
conversation, give instruct and critics, stress on information and conditions, focus on
using formal language.
CHAPTER 3
UiTM SHAH ALAM AND ORGANISATIONAL COMMUNICATION
3.1 HISTORY
When discuss about communication system in Universiti Teknologi MARA Shah Alam
firstly we need to discover the history of UiTM. Before UiTM Shah Alam start in this
large area on hilly area of Section 1 Shah Alam there are many communication arise
among the founder or important person before the operated at that time. Universiti
Teknologi MARA or UiTM is closely linked to the development of the independent
Malaysian nation. It began in 1956 as Dewan Latehan RIDA (Rural and Industrial
Development Authority Training Center) in Petaling Jaya, Selangor. The school became
known as Maktab MARA (MARA College) in 1965.
The name change meant that the college no longer operated under RIDA and instead
became the most important unit of the MARA Training Division. MARA stands for Majlis
Amanah Rakyat (Council of Trust for the Indigenous People) under the charismatic and
dynamic leadership of Tan Sri Arshad Ayub. In 1967, the school was renamed as
Institut Teknologi MARA. Its establishment came as a response to a need in Malaysia
for trained professionals, especially among Bumiputeras.ITM's development took three
major stages: From 1967 to 1976, ITM was an autonomous body with its own 300 acre
(1.2 km²) campus in Shah Alam, operating under the Ministry of Rural Development.
From 1976 to 1996, ITM advanced as an institution of higher learning and not only a
professional training institute, operating directly under the Ministry of Education. In
1996, an amendment to the ITM Act of 1976 put ITM on a par with all the universities in
Malaysia, but its historical name was retained until 1999.
Now UiTM Shah Alam consists with 25 faculties, 3 learning centres and more than 200
academic programs and UiTM’s main campus started with the laying of its foundation
stone on 14 October 1967 by Tun Abdul Razak and by mid 70s, the campus was
already in full operation. It acts as the focal point of development and expansion to a
network of 21 other campuses. In the year 2004, Shah Alam campus had approximately
36,000 full-time and 6,500 part-time students. There are 13 residential colleges within
the campus that house no less than 16,800 students. Apart from that, many homes
around the university also open their doors to off – campus students. This campus is
very close to Shah Alam city centre and therefore public facilities and services are
within easy reach. An added advantage is the fact that Shah Alam is the hub for
information technology and multimedia applications. It is also easily accessible via the
major highways that link the city to strategic locations in the country.
Based on history above there are much activities that related to organisational
communication. Communication among unit, division, department, and faculties around
the Shah Alam as focal point for all the campuses all over Malaysia is very large to
explain but each single unit have its own organisation and organisational
communication might the one of the engine to generate all planning or function to
achieve the goal of UiTM Shah Alam as educational provider for all the Bumiputeras
students. UiTM recently reach so many achievements in national level and also
international. So that organisational communication could plays its role to improve and
improve its performance and can roles model for any organisation such as Bumiputeras
Construction Company in Malaysia.
3.2 OVERVIEW
As an institution of higher education used varies aspect of communication is one of
characteristic for UiTM Shah Alam as effort to achieve the excellent mission in
management of administration and academic. During the effort, management division in
UiTM Shah Alam always structuring and planned the execution method that can give
maximum benefit to all persons under the UiTM’s authority. Despite there are still a little
gap between the employees especially for the thing that related to execution of basis of
administration and via this gap there will arise the blurred in overcome some issues by
employees and admin side.
Because of that there are some UiTM Shah Alam employees asking about the policy
that practice by Top Management. From that they try to find an outcome in execution
the responsibility according to what they felt right about the issues and not based on
their understanding about it. Implication from that action occur some opinion and
suggestion to the style or pattern in management that exercise by UiTM’s Administrator.
There are various factors that can be encouraging the work and one of that is
communication process and systematic of information transfer in organization. For
UiTM Shah Alam, problem in using the communication channel to tell the information
not in best position of focus item. Because of that situation, certain information that
informed to employees has misunderstood and occurs several of reactions to received
information.
Another issue that always occurs and makes the communication breakdown is there
are certain individual that want to give their opinion to management side in open
situation and not trough the communication channel as formal. As a result, opinion
receivers or UiTM Shah Alam’s employees adding the opinion far from root meaning of
opinion once they heard or read until deliver the uncertain issue as hearsay without the
fact. Thing like this suppose not to be arise if communication channel in UiTM Shah
Alam could be functioned as good and perfect, so some employees need to practice by
using the channel as provided.
3.3 APPLICATION
Based on interviews there are varies of understanding about organisational
communication for UiTM Shah Alam’s staffs. From this situation some staffs understand
and some staffs understand but not too much information and a few does not know
anything about the organisational communication. We cannot say that they are right or
wrong but once they are doing their works, the organisational communication already
occurred.
The meaning or definition of organisational communication could be varies in their
understanding but sometimes they do not realised that every single day in their working
day need communication. For example in doing the assessment for upgrade their
services to get the reward from ISO something that related to standard of work areas
need communication to give the information how to do it, what the best step or how long
to arrange the program all this absolutely organisational communication that occur
either they are realised or not.
The communication is about the information and the information was transfer to the
receiver through the media and the media that familiar with UiTM Shah Alam are
telephone, letter and etc as long as the information safely reach to the right person in
organisation or inter organisation trough out the university. And this called channel and
be the one of the factor successful for communication purpose.
According to a respondent from administration officer in Faculty of Business
Management, communication in UiTM Shah Alam occur once there are instruction
given from upper management parties to the subordinate or to their same level of
position, and the channel that used to give the instruction via their meeting, briefing and
strengthen by official letter.
As a world Class University, UiTM Shah Alam not only used the instruction or opinion
from upper level of position but opinion from lower position also given as priority. That
means there no one way communication but also two-communication by ask or accept
feedback or opinion from subordinates and not only the employees but from their main
client or in other word is students. Via this beneficial attitude can be reduce the border
between upper and lower employees and as added value lower staff will given their
respect to upper positions of staffs and at the same time prevent any unsatisfactory
between them.
Sometimes there are lack of communication happened not only come from facilities
such as internet or some new technologies that helping the communication but also
come from attitude of employees. Employees not always right because there some
employees does not alert with new technology and still suitable with using traditional
method. This is normally happened to senior staffs. Apart of that used new technology,
attitude problems of staff. This situation familiar with theory X and Y that produced by
McGregor there some staff that more toward negative side and positive side. So to
make all the works in their scope of work, staffs which more toward negative attitude
need to practice the theory Y which expenditure of physical and mental effort is natural
as play or rest but imaginative, creative and ingenuity to solve work problem even in
large scope of work.
3.4 ORGANISATIONAL STRUCTURE RELATED TO UiTMSHAH ALAM
The concept of communication structure is one of the most important ideas in the study
of organisational communication. It is also most complicated because the way we
understand structure depends very much on the perspective from which we study it.
There are several different ways to think about the structure of organisational
communication, but there are three of them in particular will give you a fairly
representative review of the concept and a good idea of just how complex the concept
of structure can be. First, to define it as a system of pathways through which messages
flow-the so called lines of communication in an organisation (Goldhaber,1993;Koehler,
Anatol, & Applbaum,1981) this is the channels perspective, and it is the traditional
definition of communication structure.
The second approach defines communication structure as the pattern of interaction
among people who comprise the organisation. In this sense, structure depends on who
communicates with whom. We will call this the observables network perspective where
a network “consists of interconnected individuals who are linked by patterned flows can
be observed, the second definition also is consistent with the traditional focus on
objective features of organisational communication property of communication but an
idea that is shared by organisation member (Trujillo, 1985)
For the third idea about structure is really is a good version of the network idea, the
perceived network perspective. Sometimes figure out the network structure from
organisation members’ own report of their linkages with other, that is, with whom they
communicate and how often.
3.4.1 Formal Communication
Formal communication refers to communication through officially designated channels
of message flow between organisational positions. In many organisations such as all
the units, department and faculty in UiTM Shah Alam, the formal system of
communication are specified in policy manuals and organisation chart. In other
organisations, the formal system is implicit; nevertheless organisation members
understand it well.
3.4.1.1 Downward Communication
Downward Communication involves the transmission of message from upper levels to
lowers of the organisation hierarchy ( i.e., from high officer in each unit in UiTM Shah
Alam to employee, superior to subordinate). Smith, Richetto and Zima (1972) claimed
that downward communication has been the most frequently studied aspect of formal
communication. Twenty years ago there is great evidence that the most of the message
flow in formal systems was downward (Tompkins, 1967). So UiTM Shah Alam also
applied downward communication either realised or not. Classical and scientific
approaches to organisations considered communication primarily as a tool for
managerial control and coordination. Consequently, these approaches focused on
downward communication of orders and regulations from superiors to subordinates-
messages concerned with production and maintenance functions.
Classical theorist assumed that subordinates would accept and comply with downward
communication on the basis of superiors’ legitimate authority. As the Hawthorne
Studies illustrated, compliance with managerial authority is not such a simple matter.
The human relations movement stressed the use of downward communication
strategies that would promote morale in the belief that satisfaction would lead to
compliances with authority (Miles, 1965). Much of the research that followed human
relations assumptions has attempted to determine the conditions under which
subordinates comply with messages received from superiors (Smith, Richetto, & Zima,
1972). More recently, contemporary theorist have argued that organisation members
have a “need to know” for their own purposes. Satisfaction of this need is important to
the successful assimilation of members into an organisation. As Koehler and colleagues
argued, “The best integrated employees are those who are told what goals and
objectives are, how their jobs fit into the total picture, and the progress they are making
on the job” (1981), p.10)
Penley’s (1982) work focused on the role of information adequacy in bringing about
members’ involvement in and identification with organisation goals rather that on
downward –communication strategies for producing compliance with authority. Katz and
Kahn (1978) identified five types of message that usually are reflected in downward
communication:
1. Job instructions involving the work to be done and direction for doing that
work.
2. Job rationales explaining the purpose of a job or task and its relationship to
other organisational activities or objectives.
3. Procedures and practices information pertaining to organisational policies,
rules and benefits.
4. Feedback providing subordinates with appraisals of their performance.
5. Indoctrination of organisational ideology that attempts to foster member
commitment to the organisation’s values, goals and objectives.
3.4.1.2 Upward Communication
Upward communication involves transmission of messages from lower to higher level of
the organisation namely, communication initiated by subordinates with their superiors.
The role of upward communication in classical theories of organisation was limited
primarily to basic reporting functions concerning task-related matters. The human
relations movement expanded the role of upward communication by emphasizing “two-
way” communication between superiors and subordinates as a means of promoting
morale.
Later, human resource development theories emphasized the necessity of upward
communication for integration of organisation members and improved decision-making
processes. Upward communication is a prerequisite for employee involvement in
decision making, problem solving, and development of policies and procedures (Smith,
Richetto, & Zima, 1972). Katz and Kahn (1978) point out that upward communication
can provide superiors with information in the following areas:
1. Performances on the job and job-related problems.
2. Fellow employees and their problems.
3. Subordinates’ perceptions of organisational policies and practices.
4. Task and procedures for accomplishing them.
In addition Planty and Machaver (1952) stated that upward communication can provide
valuable ideas from subordinates and facilitate acceptance of downward messages;
and by providing a better picture of performance, perceptions and possible problems at
all levels of the organisation.
3.4.1.3 Horizontal Communication
Horizontal communication refers to the flow messages across functional areas at a
given level of an organisation. Although classical approaches to organising made little
provision for horizontal communication, Fayol recognized that emergencies and
unforeseen day-to-day contingencies require flexibility in formal emergencies, so some
provision has to be made for horizontal bridges that permit people at the same level to
communicate directly without going through several levels of organisation . Fayol’s
concept (1949) is illustrated in below figure.
Figure 3.1: Fayol’s Concept
Horizontal communication introduces flexibility in organisational structure. It facilitates
problem solving, information sharing across different work groups, and task
coordination between departments in institution likes UiTM Shah Alam or any project
teams. It may also enhance morale and afford a means for resolving conflicts regard
horizontal communication as an essential feature of participative decision making and
organisational adaptive ness (French, Bell & Zawacki, 1983). Reliance on horizontal
communication for decision making and problems solving does not mean that the
process is more efficient that simple downward communication of decisions made at top
levels of the organisation, but horizontal communication may be more effective. The
idea is emphasized in human resource development theory and broadly in modern
country such as in Japanese organisation where decision making and problem solving
usually occur through horizontal communication at lower levels.
The result of this process is transmitted to top management for review and approval.
Ryutard Nomura (1981), chairman of the board of Japan’s Triyo Industries, observed
that a decision making under this system can be lengthy and difficult process, but once
a decision has been made, its implementation is swift and certain. Organisation
members are committed to the decision because difficulties have been resolved and
opposing points of view reconciled through horizontal communication before plans are
presented to top management.
In the conventional western organisation, decisions are the made at the top, and then
orders for compliance and implementation flow downward. According to Nomura,
western-style decision making is fast because it is centralised near the top of
organisation at lower levels, however, is slow to develop. Lack of commitment to
decisions and conflicts over implementation arise at lower levels where members have
been excluded from the decision-making process.
3.4.2 Effectiveness Of Formal Communication
a) Downward Communication
Problems with downward communication include inadequacy of information,
inappropriate means of diffusing information, filtering of information and a
general pervasive climate of dominance and submission. Adequacy of
information obtained from downward messages present a puzzling paradox. On
the one hand, downward-directed messages frequently create overload in
organisations (Davis, 1972). Advances in information technology (the
mechanical and electronic ability not only to manipulate information more
efficiently but also to send more messages to more people) and ironically the
importance attached to the idea of effective organisational communication have
led to floods of memorandums, bulletins, newsletter, technical report and data in
reams of computer printouts.
The method of information diffusion that is used for downward communication
also can create problems. According to Goldhaber (1963), organisation often
rely too heavily on mediated (written, mechanical and electronic) methods of
transmitting messages rather than on personal, face-to-face contact.
Goldhaber, Yates, Porter and Leniak (1978) concluded that organisation
members generally desire more face-to-face interaction. Downward
communication also is subjected to filtering. As messages are relayed from
superior to subordinate through levels of the organisational hierarchy, they may
be changed in various ways. Information may be left out, added combined or
otherwise modified as it passes through a chain of serial reproduction (Pace &
Boren, 1973).
Downward messages also may be filtered deliberately. Information power is
valuable commodity in many organisations. Culbert and Eden (1970) pointed out
that manager often “base their power on withholding, rather than sharing
information because ability to control situations and outcomes may depend on
having knowledge that others do not possess. When managers do choose to
share information, their subordinates may prevent it from being relayed to lower
levels of the organisation. In general, the greater the number of steps or
linkages in a serials reproduction chain and the greater the perceptual
differences among participants in that chain, the more likely it is that some form
of message distortion or filtering will occur. The type of information also has a
bearing even on the extent to which it will be distributed.
b) Upward Communication
When upward communication does occur, it may be to the subject to the same
filtering problems that affect downward communication. While upward
communication can be encouraged through means such as suggestion system,
systematic reporting methods, grievance procedures, attitude surveys and
employee meetings, the presence of such systems may be only a token gesture
in many organisations.
Suggestion system such as suggestion box can be very effective when
managers actively encourage their use and employees take them seriously.
Goldhaber (1993 state most organisation members would rather receive
information than provide information to other. Koehler and Huber (1974) found
that mangers tend to be more receptive to upward communication when the
information is positive (good news rather than bad news), is in line with current
policy (criticism and boat rocking are unwelcome) and has intuitive appeal (fits
the managers’ own biases). Subordinates are likely to become quite dissatisfied
in organisation in which superiors endorse the idea of upward communication
but in practice actually ignore it. When subordinates develop the impression that
superiors only want to hear good news and support for their own ideas, it should
not be surprising that upward communication with those superiors is filtered
extensively. Krivonos (1976) reported that subordinates tend to tell their
superiors what they think the superiors want to hear only what they want their
superiors to hear. Information distorted so that it will please superiors and reflect
positively on subordinates. However the accuracy of upward communication is
greater when subordinates trust their superiors Reid, (1962), Maier, Hoffman,
Read (1963) and O’Reily (1974).
c) Horizontal Communication
Horizontal communication problems occur because of territoriality, rivalry,
specialization and simple lack of motivation. Organizations that traditionally have
functioned under rigid authority structures with fixed lines of communication may
find that the values and expectations that members have acquired under such
systems inhibit attempts at horizontal communication. One inhibiting value is
territoriality. Organisation members who control task-related activity within a
defined and fixed jurisdictional area often regard others involvement in that area
as territorial encroachment. Department value their turf and strive to protect it.
This problem may be compounded through interdepartmental rivalries that arise
from win/lose competition for rewards and resources.
Specialisation also may hamper horizontal communication when having great
difficulty in communicating by same terms in different ways. Horizontal
communication often fails simply because organisation members are unwilling to
expend the additional effort that it requires. When we engage in upward or
downward communication those with whom we communicate are easy to reach
because of proximity or clearly designated channels.
In contrast, horizontal communication may require contract with people in units
that are well removed from our own but the channels and rules of interaction
may be unclear because we not really know these people. The need to
communicate with them makes uneasy or takes too much time.
Legend: Division within organisation
Department or Organisational Unit
Upward communication
Horizontal Communication
Downward Communication
Figure 3.2 Type of communication
3.4.3 Informal Communication
The informal system involves episodes of interaction that do not reflect officially
designated channels of communication. Much of the research on informal
communication is concerned with the study of grapevine communication. The terms
informal system and grapevine often are used interchangeably as if they refer to the
same thing (Davis, 1953);(Hellweg, 1987) the use of the word grapevine as a metaphor
for a communication system began in the 1960s as description for telegraph lines that
were strung through trees in such a way that they looked like grapevines during war.
Nearly a century later, organisational communication research indicated that pattern of
grapevine communication even look something like a cluster of grapes. Consider the
pattern of message flow in figure 3.3. Person A initiates and transmits a message to B
and C. B relay it to D while C relays it to E and F. The clustering continues as the
message is diffused throughout the organisation. Some participants in the grapevine act
only as receivers. They do not relay information to anymore else. Others relay it to
several different people.
Figure 3.3: A grapevine communication cluster
3.4.3.1 Grapevine
Grapevine communication has many other important features. Susan Hellweg (1987)
summarized these features in a list of thirty-three general conclusions that she based
on a review of nineteen research studies which states under five topic areas below.
1. Function And Extent Of Grapevine Communication
The grapevine emerges from the social and personal interest of employees rather
than from formal requirements of the organisation. It is the system in which most
organisational communication actually occurs, emphasizing “people-oriented” and
“news” events.
A
C
B
E
F
D
2. Participants in Grapevine Communication
Secretaries and liaisons play key roles in grapevine communication, although
relatively few people are grapevine liaisons, and many people who receive
grapevine information do not transmit it to others. Use of the grapevine is just as
prevalent among managers as it is among other groups of employees.
3. Pattern and Media of Grapevine Communication
Grapevine communication usually is oral and generally occurs in cluster
transmission patterns. It may begin, flow and end anywhere in an organisation.
4. Volume, Speed and Reliability of Information
Although grapevine communication usually is incomplete, information in the
grapevine tends to be more accurate than inaccurate and diffusion of information
through the grapevine is fast.
5. Role in Rumour Transmission
Three types of rumours are diffused (spread) through the grapevine: anxiety
rumours, wish-fulfilment rumours and wedge-driving rumours. Rumours are
distorted through sharpening, levelling and assimilation. Once a rumour is
assigned credibility, other events in the organisation are altered to fit in with and
support the rumour.
In this system communication is fast and more often accurate than inaccurate,
through much of the information is incomplete and concerned with people-oriented
social information, although other forms of information are diffused through the
grapevine.
3.4.4 Communication Structure As A Network
While the problems in the traditional concept of formal and informal communication
have not been resolved, they can be avoided or at least reframed to some extent by
focusing on the patterns of interaction that occur among organisation members, or the
communication network. Figure 3.3 shows a diagram of a communication network.
According to Noel (1981), such networks can be understood by examining four
properties: member roles, characteristic of links, structural characteristic and content.
Beginning with roles, consider the circles in figure 3.4 as people in UiTM Shah Alam.
The lines connecting the circles are links that show communicates with whom. The link
is the fundamental unit of any network (Stohl, 1995).
This particular diagram shows several distinct network roles that, members of this
organisation assume. Assuming that the diagram represents a small organisation, the
communication network is comprised of three groups. Basically, a group is defined by
members who interact more frequently with one another that than with members of
other groups. Most of the people in this network are group members. Person A is a
liaison. A liaison link different groups but is not a member of any of the groups in that
link. Individuals B and C from a bridge link between two groups and unlike liaisons,
people in a bridge link are group members. Person D is an isolate who is not linked to
anyone else in the network but does not mean D never communicates with anyone else
in the organisation. It does mean that D has relatively little contact with others. For
B
A
C
D
example the amount of interaction that D with others is negligible in comparison with the
amount that occurs among other organisation members.
Figure 3.4: A Communication Network
3.4.5 External And Internal Networks
Scenarios of communication in UiTM Shah Alam not only carry information inside the
organisation but also to outside the organisation in each unit or division but also outside
the boundary of UiTM Shah Alam. Typically, external networks carry advertising
messages, messages related to public relations and messages relaying information
about consumer complaint (normally students and academic staffs), concerns and
recommendations (i.e. suggestion box).
External networks do not function independently. In order to communicate to external
audiences, internal agents must be connected to other internal populations. As is the
case with most organisation interaction, there is an interdependent relationship between
the external and internal communication networks. Any channels within the organisation
that carry information are called internal networks. This can refer to intradepartmental
routes and interdepartmental routes in UiTM Shah Alam. Often the internal channels
exist, but they are crudely constructed and there impede traffic and have traditionally
spent little time engineering the internal network and ineffective internal communication
is an inevitable result.
3.4.6 Formal And Informal Network
a) Formal Network
Formal network are those that are prescribed by the organisation in UiTM Shah
Alam. These are the official, appropriate channels for people to follow when relaying
information. Most often these official channels have not been described as
“communication network”. They have come to be the appropriate channels because
they conform to the corporate organisational chart. These charts indicate who is to
report to whom and what the appropriate chain of command is in an organisation.
The fact that a network is a formal network does not guarantee that communication
“traffic” can utilize the particular channel.
b) Informal Networks
Meanwhile informal networks are those channels that carry information on routes
that are not prescribed by the organisation. Typically, these informal routes referred
to grapevine as mentioned earlier in point number 3.4.2.1 and for a number of
reasons the grapevine is an important network. Keith Davis (1953) identifies several
types of grapevine pattern below;
o Single Strand: one person tells another who then informs a third in a single
linear format.
o Gossip. One person tells a host of others.
o Probability. Individuals random inform others.
o Cluster. (See figure 3.3) of those individual informed, one tells other. Of those
others informed, one tells others and so on.
All these type of grapevine are occur in UiTM Shah Alam either people realised or
not but via observation there are grapevine in organisation and mostly involved
subordinates on that.
a) Single strand b) Gossip
c) Probability
Figure 3.4: Types of Grapevine Chains
Y
A
B
C
B
E
L
A
H
K
D
G
I
M
C
J
F
A
F D
E
GK
IH
C
J
B
3.5 ORGANISATIONAL DESIGN
Organisation design in UiTM Shah Alam was really various and different between each
unit, departments, faculties and etc organisation. But there certain type of organisation
design that related to UiTM Shah Alam that implemented such as flat and tall
organisation design as mentioned in chapter 2. The example of organisation chart that
given by Register Officer from Faculty of Business Management are attached in
appendices sheet which contained elements that combination of two different field work
but the same goal to provide the services for the student.
While context suggests how an organisation is shaped by its organisation,
organisational design describes how the organisation actively shapes its structure.
Three different theoretical perspectives on organisational design have been identified:
strategies choice, member control and institutional isomorphism. Each perspective has
important ramifications for organisational communication.
The strategic choice perspective argues that the internal politics of an organisation
determine the structural form of the organisation as same as UiTM Shah Alam, affect
the way the organisation relates to environmental constituencies and influence the
choice of relevant performance standard (Child, 1972) but Simon (1957) argued that the
choices made by the organisation are based on the concept of “bounded rationality”.
This means that the organisation, faced with a multitude of environmental pressure,
must necessarily choose a direction from among many possible choices toward one or
many possible objectives.
Therefore, strategic choices are not always optimal ones; rather, they are those chosen
from among a range of possible options through political processes within the
organisation. The strategic perspective relates the concept of power to organisational
structure. Those who have power in an organisation decide what are and are not
organisational issues. Those in power, the “dominant coalition,” make the strategic
choices with regard to the organisation and its structure. Based upon their perceptions
of the environment, they select strategies for dealing with it, technologies for
implementing those strategies and additional strategies for arranging roles and
relationships to control and coordinate the technologies being employed.
From this perspective, organisational communication is critical to organisational design.
Organisational communication incorporates negotiation, struggle, power, values, shared
meaning, politics and decisions all of which comprise the wide array of messages that
document the strategic choice process. In fact, this perspective suggests that it is the
organisational communication process that yields the structural form and influences the
choices of relevant performance standards.
In contrast, the member control perspective is dramatically less dynamic that strategic
choice view. It argues that structure result simply from management’s desire to control
workers. Division of labour is caused by the desire for organisational control and the
need to apply advancing technology continually to production. This perspective, issued
by Taylor’s (1911) principles of “scientific management” views control and structuring as
strictly rational process.
From the vantage point, organisational communication comprises simply the formal and
structured messages that document necessary coordination and control activities.
However, organisations can also be viewed as largely irrational, driven by historical and
institutional forces surrounding the organisation and influencing its form and fate, thus
predetermining the nature of organisational communication.
3.5.1 Organisational Form
In this topic, there are six of the most prominent:
1. traditional, centralized structure
2. the centralised form with decentralized management
3. the divisional form
4. the decentralized (holding company) structure
5. the matrix structure; and
6. the “type-D” organisation.
3.5.2 The Divisional Form Structure
Figure 3.6: Example of Division Form Structure in anorganisation in Faculty of Business Management UiTM ShahAlam
Most of the organisation in UiTM Shah Alam used divisional form structure. The
divisional structure represents a major shift in organisational form. In this structure the
“M-Form.”, there is a central coordinating organisational entity, but there are also
divisions with their own management structure that have direct responsibility for their
organisation’ operation and performance.
This is an extension of a hierarchical structure it consist of a general office and several
product-based or regional divisions, each of which contains functionally differentiated
department. These departmental units are also subdivided into work units that are
DEAN
Stenographer
Vice Dean(Sources&student
Vice Dean(Quality&Research)
Exc.Officer
Exc.Officer
Exc.Officer
Exc.Officer
distributed on a geographical basis. The divisional structures have localized authority
and control structures and operate with considerable autonomy from centralized
planning.
The rationale for this approach is that each division needs flexibility to meet the
specialized needs of its market(s). Most communication between division and the
central coordinating entity contains messages related to policies, procedures and
detailed transaction or summary report. However, organisational communication may
vary across divisions because each division may provide differing products and
services, serve clienteles, be situated in separate operating environments and have
distinct organisational cultures.
3.6 COMMUNICATION PROCESS IN UiTM SHAH ALAM
Each organisation in UiTM Shah Alam (focal point) has their different type of how the
communication in organisation delegate through until reach to the end of feedback from
authorised individual. Based on interview the communication about the instruction
started after received formal communication from superior or corporate individual to do
something. But before that the communication come informally as brief if there are in
same organisation but if the instruction or information come from very higher superior it
might be come in letter (Surat Pekeliling).
After the organisation received any instruction they will discuss in meeting which is one
type of communication channel to make some explanation and study about the
instruction and find any method to perform the task or make it simply as can but
achieve the goal after the pro and contra about it discussed. After that the instruction
execute and along the process of performing the task there are still need to monitor to
avoid any leakages during the process and settle the barrier related until the final user
of this communication received the information. The process summarized into below
figure.
Figure 3.6: Example of communication Process in a unit in UiTM ShahAlam
Ideas/Instruction/information etc
Understand the ideas/Instruction/information
Meeting/Briefing toFind the best method
and pro or contra
Perform/send theinformation/
Execute the ideasetc
Monitor/Control/
Supervise/Guide
Mission achieve/Information
received
Barriers /
3.7 COMMUNICATION CHANNEL
Figure 3.7: Communication Channel in UiTM Shah Alam
Refer to figure above stated the communication channels that normally and currently
used in focal point UiTM Shah Alam. The communication channel not only used by
student but also for all staff (superior and subordinates). Some of the communications
channels really work for apply in organisation. These channels helping the
communication process reach their right and correct person and achieve its goal.
Suggestionbox
Telephone
Wirelessnetwork
Internet(Portal/email)
Walkie-talkie
Advertising/Poster
Transportation
Interactivescreen
PAsystem
Radio(UFM)
COMMUNICATIONCHANNEL
Formalcommunication Informal
communication
Others
3.8 TECHNOLOGICAL INNOVATION AND ORGANISATIONAL
COMMUNICATION
We have seen that technology provides new channels for communication that
fundamentally affect how work is done, how decisions are made and how organisations
are designed. Organisations use technology to improve communication and to
coordinate people, resources and work so that the institution likes UiTM Shah Alam is
more efficient and effective and better able to survive in a rapidly changing
environment. Hotch (1993) argued “the next generation of technology will make current
telecommunication look as awkward as the crank telephone of 1910. They will come by
fits and starts, but they will transform the way business is done as surely as the
telephone has”. He noted that until this point in time, the kind of information transmitted
was typically wed to a particular kind of technology hardware. For example, voice
messages use telephone wires and phones, telephone, television and radio signals are
broadcast via air waves or cable to television sets and radios.
However, computer technology allows voice, text, images, sound and video to be
digitized into pattern of 1s and 0s that computers can receive, understand, process,
copy, store and transmit. Any information in this format can be delivered to any device
that is capable of receiving, processing and displaying it. Hence, Hocth argued,
televisions equipped with digital technology can support computer text, a radio can
receive a phone call and computer equipped with multimedia capabilities can handle it
all. Computers and networks allow many forms of communication to mesh on a single
video display terminal. In this final subtopic in this chapter will examine current
technological innovations and preview some that are on the way which is capable for
UiTM to use it as a higher education institution in Malaysia.
3.8.1 Current New Technologies in UiTM Shah Alam
o Local Area Network
Wireless technology has helped to simplify networking by enabling multiple
computer staff UiTM Shah Alam to simultaneously share resources in an
organisation scope of work without additional or intrusive wiring. These
resources might include a broadband Internet connection, network printers, data
files, and even streaming audio and video. This kind of resource sharing has
become more prevalent as computer users have changed their habits from
using single, stand-alone computers to working on networks with multiple
computers in each room of unit, each with potentially different operating systems
and varying peripheral hardware.
Wireless networking enables the same capabilities and comparable speeds of a
wired 10BASE-T network without the difficulties associated with laying wire,
drilling into walls, or stringing Ethernet cables throughout an office building.
Laptop users have the freedom to roam anywhere in the office building without
having to hunt down a connector cable or available jack.
Every room in a wireless office can be “connected” to the network, so adding
more users and growing a network can be as simple as installing a new wireless
network adapter. Reasons to choose wireless networking over traditional wired
networks include:
v Running additional wires or drilling new holes in office could be prohibited
(because of rental regulations), impractical (infrastructure limitations), or too
expensive
v Flexibility of location and data ports is required
v Roaming capability is desired; e.g., maintaining connectivity from almost
anywhere inside UiTM
v Network access is desired outdoors; e.g., outside office building
o Wireless LANs
Wireless communication is one of the faster growing technologies in world
implemented in all over institution included UiTM Shah Alam for information
purpose especially for student to gather the information for their assignment.
This technology use electromagnetic waves (radio or infrared) to communicate
information from one point to another without relying on any physical
connection. The data being transmitted is superimposed on the radio carrier
frequency, so that it can be accurately extracted on at the received end. This
generally referred to as modulation of the carrier by the information being
transmitted. Wireless LANs provide mobility for with user usually a much lower
data rate.
In a typical WLAN configuration, a transmitter / receiver (transceiver) device,
called an access point, connect to the wired network from the fixed location
using standard Ethernet cable. At a minimum, the access point receives buffers
and transmitted data between wireless LAN and the wired network
infrastructure. A single access point can support a small group of users and can
be function within the range of up to several hundred feet. The access point (or
the antenna attached to the access point) is usually mounted high, but it may be
mounted essentially anywhere that is practical as along as the desired radio
coverage obtained.
End users (staff, students) access the wireless LAN through adapters, which are
pc cards in notebook computers, PCI cards in desktops computers, or fully
integrated devices within handheld computers. The adapters provided an
interface between the network operating system (NOS) and the airwaves (via an
antenna)
3.9 SUMMARY OF CHAPTER
This chapter discussed about the organisational communication that related to the case
study (UiTM Shah Alam). There is overview of organisational communication in UiTM,
the related organisational communication in some of the organisations in UiTM. The
structure of UiTM consist with formal and informal which formal represent for
downward, horizontal and upward communication and each types have their own
potential to achieve the goal of organisation and worth it for UiTM Shah Alam
implemented it. In this chapter also discover the informal communication such as
grapevine. Grapevine is one of the situation normally create by subordinates and
sometimes grapevine help the organisation to improve the performance. Currently there
are many channels that implemented in UiTM Shah Alam either realised or not but each
channel used based on suitability of organisation. Finally, to follow the modernisation
UiTM Shah Alam not excluded in follow the new technology. New technology helping
organisations in UiTM Shah Alam improve their services and to become standard
University equal to other high class university.
CHAPTER 4
ANALYSIS AND FINDINGS
4.1 ANALYSIS
The analysis done by interpreted data from survey which executed to gather the
information about the scenario of organisational communication in UiTM Shah Alam.
The survey done by selected persons in selected unit, faculties, division and centres.
Places that selected in this survey are, Unit Zakat, Perpustakaan Tun Abdul Razak 1
(PTAR 1), Centre of Islamic and Thinking Understanding (CITU), Faculties of
Architecture, Planning and Surveying (FSPU), Faculty of Mass Communication, Faculty
of Office and Management Technology (FORMAT), Faculty of Business Management
(FBM) and Human Resources Department of UiTM Shah Alam.
The survey conducted to gather information related to how communication has been
carry out during work among the staff, the program that related to organisation, roles of
superior, roles of human resources , information about the staff (subordinates) and also
relation among superior and staff (superior). All these information was very useful to
discover the scenario of organisational communication from the opinion or what
respondents (UiTM Shah Alam’s staff) felt about the organisational communication in
UiTM Shah Alam. Through these information helped this study to find the reality of
organisational communication in UiTM Shah Alam and problems that occurred. If there
are positive it is means UiTM Shah Alam was really good in organisational
communication and could role model for other organisation in other sectors.
4.1.1 COMMUNICATION CHANNELS
COMMUNICATION CHANNELS IN UiTM SHAH ALAM
16%
18%
14%16%
18%
12%6%
InterpersonalTelephoneLetterMeetingEmailBriefingOthers
Figure 4.1: Communication Channels
Based on pie chart above there are percentages of communication channels usually
used in UiTM Shah Alam. There are few of channels for communication such as
interpersonal, telephone, letters, meeting, email, briefing and others (walkie-talkie, radio
UFM, suggestion box, websites and etc). Uses of these communication channel used
based on situation and facilities that provide in organisation which is the communicator
located. From the survey stated the highest communication channel that used are
telephone and email (18%). Telephone is the main method that we can use and the
transaction between sender and receiver happened in live or the respond happened
during that time and also fast. So that, if both parties (sender and receiver) achieve their
goal during communication the communication is suitable and reduce any lack of
information when use mediator to send the information. By this advantage, telephone is
become most useful for organisations in UiTM Shah Alam. This situation also goes to
new technology started around 90s. This channel is very fast method to send the letter
and attach the document, because of this it is become popular used in organisation.
The second higher are interpersonal and meeting which is share the percentage of 16%
of communication uses. These channels have its same method which used human to
communicate. Sometimes its can be in discussion or conversation which is done face to
face and normally popular for employees that located in the same organisation. These
two channels sometimes did not realized by them but these channels are suitable when
superiors need to communicate in personal in the office as privacy and for all their
subordinates.
Third channel is by letters (14%) and this channel familiar with traditional method but it
is still useful especially for the information that need to signature or authorised by
superiors or corporate persons in UiTM and this cannot be done by using email. But
uses of paper and take time made this method not really popular but is useful. Followed
the letter is briefing with 12%. This channel not really popular because it is not formal
and UiTM Shah Alam always supervise by ISO and need to be follow the protocol but
via briefing help UiTM’s staff to understand the view of communication purpose and
easy.
Lastly, there are still other channels that contribute to organisation communication as
channel such as websites, radio UFM which is monitor by Faculty of Mass
Communication; walkie-talkie useful for security units and suggestion boxes useful for
customer normally student and etc. These ancillaries’ channels reached 6% from the
survey.
4.1.2 Information during Communication
SOURCES OF INFORMATION
19%
16%
23%
13%
19%
10%HEAHEPEmployee informationDevelopmentInstructionOthers
Figure 4.2: Information used during Communication
From the survey information that usually used in organisation based on its roles in their
own department such as HEA (academic affair) 19%, HEP (student affair) 16%,
employee information 23%, development of work or physical of UiTM 13%, instruction
of works 19% and the rest is 10%. Based on percentages the information focus on
employee and instruction of work, that mean UiTM Shah Alam really concern about
employees because as a university employees need to serve their works very smart,
dedication and allow accountability. This will produce the best services and high quality
as educational institution. Organisational communication also good in their and
become bridge to reach the mission, vision and goal of UiTM.
4.1.3 Communication Policy
Communication policy is about the policy that provided in each organisation about the
communication. Sometimes the policy exists in virtual and not officially stated in written.
The understanding about the communication policy for staffs are varies but from the
survey of selected UiTM Sham staff, almost 63% of staffs agreed that written
communication policy is exist and provide two ways communication so there instruction
and feedback are exist. This policy creates to support the management and helped to
raise the quality and standard of work and claims for staff honesty or integrity regarding
their work. But the objective of the communication survey is not highly stated in the
policy and this make an individual not highly responsible for administering the policy.
4.1.4 Program
If 63% from the survey agreed that communication policy in their organisation are exist
is there any program that organised to implement the policy and from the survey said
that there 63% also agreed that written procedures are exist to implement the policy.
They are also agreed about 88% that communication activities and media conform to
the policy and both are coordinated to achieve the goal. The program also regularly
reviewed for effectiveness and compatibility and top management take an active part in
the program.
4.1.5 Delegated Authority
Respondents agreed that there communication channels in their organisation chart.
They realized or not in their communication channels exist in their organisation chart, it
can horizontal or vertical. The accountability in communication is defined and the
superior/ supervisors knew their accountabilities for relaying information up and down
the line.
4.1.6 Superiors/ Supervisor
From the survey, superior/ supervisor given advance information about the
organisation’s plans and progress and all the matters transmitted directly through them
to employees, so that they can discuss the subject intelligently and answer any
questions that may arise. The specific method for keeping superior/ supervisor regularly
informed about employee thinking and rumours are average, because some
organisation agreed there are exist and some organisation not.
Staffs in UiTM Shah Alam agree that superior/supervisor meet them regularly for
discussion either informal or formal. Superiors / Supervisors also encourage their
subordinates to seek information from them and supervisor/ superiors also trained to
transmit information to subordinates. Superiors / supervisor also placed the
bulletins/letter/ instruction etc on bulletin boards so that communication are transfers to
their subordinates. Some of the superior provide their manual for subordinates as
reference on all important problem and some superior are not. Finally, manual of
policies and procedures which is up-to-date might be exist and available for them.
4.1.7 Human Resources
Human resources also important in organisational communication because they
persons that manage all the staff affairs. Based on survey from staff about human
resource in UiTM Shah Alam, the Human Resource considered in determining what
information to present to organisation about the employee’s basic want and interest to
serve in UiTM Shah Alam such as security, recognition, fair wages and opportunities to
advance. Human resource gives information to the staff about the salary and benefits,
opportunities for advancement and also training opportunity. All these information was
really important for employees, so that they can serve to the organisation without any
negative behaviour as persons that explained in theory Y which is illustrated by
McGregor in his research.
4.9 Employers-Employee Relations
The survey about the relation between employer and employees is really important to
see the communication behaviour between them either positive or negative. The
organisational communication was success if there are positive. The organisations in
UiTM Shah Alam “sell” itself to the staffs which mean that, organisation try to attract
peoples who are qualified to fill the position in their organisation. This procedure could
be in advertising in websites, newspaper or by informal communication such grapevine
etc.
The top position of staff in each organisation in UiTM Shah Alam based on survey
practiced talk with employees in a group either in meeting or any informal discussion.
This effort had shown the good organisational communication. They also meet the
subordinates in social program either inside or outside the organisation. Finally there
also visit their subordinates at their work station to supervise the condition of
employees. These roles were really important to make relation between superiors and
subordinates really good and avoid any unsatisfied condition but to create very
conducive relation.
4.2 FINDINGS
The findings in this study are about planning the best organisational communication.
This finding could be really helpful for UiTM Shah Alam to improve their organisational
communication in next suitable level as the world Class University.
4.2.1 Develop Communication Program
Every work need program to start and end the task or event and same with how to plan
the communication program and to create the program the simple need could be use
which is involved three activities with employee or UiTM Shah Alam staff and the
activities goes to below bulleted:
v organisation’s meeting about the objectives of UiTM Shah Alam( 7 steps of
program)
v basic information of organisations told to UiTM’s Shah Alam staff
v enhance human resource communication
4.2.2 Communication Program
Figure 4.3: 7-Steps Communication Program
§ Step 1. Recruit a navigation committee
The program need to start with top management of UiTM Shah Alam staff, which
should put together a committee or task force and the group, include top
management, human resources managers, communication employees and line
management. Via this step some assumptions could be predict such as UiTM Shah
Alam staff will support the goals and objectives of organisation once they understand
both items and top manager will do better job of communicating after train them.
Step 1: recruit anavigationcommittee
Step 7: evaluateand revise
Step 6: set up abudget
Step 2: establish acommunicationpolicy
Step 5: developtargeted programs
Step 4: benchmark
Step 3: identifyactivities and assignresponsibilities
§ Step 2. Establish a communication policy
Once the policy was establish UiTM Shah Alam staff will understand the UiTM’s goals
and improve the effort to achieve it. Via this policy all action regarding communication
will inform to all UiTM’s staff about the information and responsible on it. For the top
management they give their commitment toward the communicating with
subordinates.
§ Step 3. Identify activities and assign responsibilities
Before this mentioned about three jobs in staff communication are strategy,
toolmaking and delivery. Via these jobs could help to decide what must be
communicated to whom and how, after decide it the activity will be out as writing or
other type of media and helping to dictate the budget. Finally the jobs will be finish
with deliver the information by media or top manager or both.
§ Step 4. Benchmark
Benchmarking always familiar with total quality management (TQM) in fix the
performance at specific point in time to create a standards measure for future actions
and to determine whether there has been any change or not. For example to reduce
any information lacking and via benchmarking staff will aware from happen by
consider as serious problem if the lack arise. In this step those three jobs (strategy,
toolmaking and deliver) also need to implement.
§ Step 5. Develop targeted programs
To develop might be take time and need to try one approach and see the impact and
try another if there are no better result. During this step ask us to evaluate for the
feedback and the effort will be successful and this no different for others sector such
as construction sector. The long-range goal will be to achieve higher profitability and
short-range objective might be to cut grievance and lost time to accidents or to reduce
scrap.
§ Step 6. Set up a budget
Cost will vary, but normally investments in employee communication are not very
high. The greatest results usually come from improved supervisor-to employee
communication. If the employee communication approach with commitment and the
top manager can see a benefit use, lower waste or higher productivity linked to
communication effort, the organisation able to substantial the return.
§ Step 7. Evaluate and revise
The final step is to evaluate what to see if the program worked and do the essential
things and revise the program for better evaluate to see overlooked or any errors.
4.2.3 Involving Employees
Involving employees need to appreciate the need for a comfortable, friendly
environment that will be conducive to communication or in metaphor from tech to touch.
Top management in UiTM Shah Alam have responsibility to talk to their employees
about the work some likes specific message about the UiTM’s objectives. Top
management parties can be discuss with subordinates about the mission, vision and
values but need to concern with subordinate’s own division rather than general issue.
UiTM Shah Alam staffs need to know what related to their responsibilities where they
will be judged on and what they are expected to do and this situation suitable conduct
at the time they are in their first day of work when staffs is most impressionable and
excited about it.
Generally in more institutions, compensation is being linked more to performance and
less to seniority. During teamwork each staff needs to get feedback on a frequent basis.
Annual performance reviews are not enough to keep people motivated. Performance
feedback should be continuous, even weekly, so that when the annual evaluation is
made there are no surprises. Non-stop conversation on performance can also help lead
to successful staff development. Performance can be identify by construct the form
regarding staff’s performance to see the outcome on it. Form to identify the
performance that related to top manager for communicating with constructed on table
4.1 as example.
Table 4.1: Example of form to measure the performance
Project Milestone Date of communicate Remark
Student’sresult analysis
A week 8 June 2008 Completed on time
Updatefinancial data
Two weeks 10 June 2008 Lack of staff tocompleted on time
As big educational institution, UiTM Shah Alam understood and concern that personal
problems can impact job performance, and because of that, top management have to
develop staff assistance programs not only for students but also UiTM’s staffs also
need assistance on it. Counselling session is the best assistance to help the
inconveniences such as substance abuse, economics problems and family
complexities. Some parties in each organisation need to be train to identify these
inconveniences and try to find the solutions on it when necessary.
As explanation in previous topic, staff’s ideas and suggestions for improvement are
important and seem likes sending staffs across the country to deal directly with
customers, or look at some product commercial in television. Via this concern able to
use to get constructive feedback from staff.
In UiTM Shah Alam there are 25 faculties, 3 learning centres and a lot of units as
mentioned in chapter 3. From this situation could be use as plan to make competition
among the units and unit’s own previous record. To realise the best result via
competition need to create standards of comparisons for own unit and other unit and
completed with suitable activities or programs. Below there are bulleted points of
suggestion for making immediate improvements in employee or staff communication:
§ Increase contact and communication between management and the shop floor.
§ Make supervisor and manager accountable for relaying information.
§ Develop channels that get information to supervisors and managers quickly.
§ Tell staffs how their unit is doing compared with other unit and the company as a
whole.
§ Expand upward communications.
All bulleted point above represent for explanation about how to improve organisation
communication that involving all staffs not only for UiTM Shah Alam but for all sectors.
4.2.4 Human Resource Communication
Currently organisations are making a number of strategic human resource changes by
reducing benefits, restructuring and downsizing, putting more compensation at risk,
linking rewards more closely to performance and providing increased training and
employee assistance. These trend used to reduced the personnel cost as much as
possible without losing ability to attract and retain good employees.
To make the organisation more competitive, management must get employees to buy
into the each unit’s mission, vision and values. This strategic role is new and often
linked between communication and human resources officials. An organisational
communication program strongly support human resources programs. As a matter of
fact, the linkage is so strong today that in as many as one third of all institutions or
companies, the function of employee communication is located in Human Resources
(HR).
Human resource managers need to help professional communicators to identify
communication priorities, establish capabilities and assign responsibilities, develop and
implement programs which are linked to organisational goals. To complete there are
must include human resource strategy for communications department with
benchmarking staff concerns via an attitude survey, developing specific program
activities along with HR, producing materials and executing programs, and evaluating
results for linkage to corporate objective.
Certain work environment there are staff that want to hear information from their
supervisors, internal communications people must produce materials that supervisors
can use for targeted work audience-production workers, office staff, managers and
unionized labour.
But giving managers information to communicate to employees is only part of the
process-those managers must understand how important this is to their job. Managers
must be given training in interpersonal communication and their financial reward must
be at least partially based on how well they communicate with their employees in order
to make the system work. The development of appropriate HR communication
materials must be a joint exercise between HR and communications that result in
messages which are clearly matched to specific corporate HR objectives, delivered
according to a specific timetable and evaluated in term of measurable behavioural
changes.
Using media to communicate depends on the demographic profile of employees such
as how many locations are involved, organisational style, budget concerns and whether
the communication will be reused during orientation. Possible media might include
§ letters or memos, which are best for announcement of programs,
§ Articles in staff publications, which are best for updates on the program’s
progress. Key points should include representation from all parts of the
company that are involved in the process.
§ Employee meetings utilizing audiovisual and question and answer sessions.
By using a visually-oriented is the best method such as video or slides with a take-away
brochure that graphically shows the entire process. The brochure should also feature a
message from the CEO, a diagram of the pay evaluation program, and the most
commonly asked questions and their answers. Other ways to communicate include
highlight folders, payroll stuffers, telephone hotlines or tape message systems, posters
and bulleting boards and employee handbooks. Communication plan need to be link to
milestones, beginning with the start of the evaluation process and concluding with a
major communication effort during roll-out. This period can run from to a year.
Compensation program not suppose to communicate in nothingness. Benefits are part
of total compensation, so performance evaluations should be closely linked to
compensation. These links must be communicated to all employees. The best way to
communicate this information is through supervisors in their subject areas. From
communication its produce some priority as:
§ Companies install new flexible benefits programs that give employees the
opportunity to get involved in designing individualized programs.
§ Company or institution likes UiTM Shah Alam seek to provide more cost-
effective benefits in the face of rising health care cost, often through new cost-
sharing arrangements with employees.
4.2.5 Key Element of a Benefits Communication Plan
There are eight-steps method for improvement in process to develop a benefits
communication plan includes:
Step 1: Conduct Research
The best way to find out is to ask employees through focus group how they would like
to get their information. If UiTM Shah Alam has been going through hard times, then it
will make sense to be low-key. The reason for glitzy communications is they get through
to people.
Step 2: develop a strategy
The most important step in the whole process of communication is determining the
audience and the correct messages to relay. While all employees may be covered
under the plan, a good communication strategy recognises that there are a number of
staff subgroup-new hires, mid-career people, those near retirement with different needs.
Today, benefits are designed with the needs of these subgroups in mend and the
accompanying communications must address them but the program not only to be
informed but also motivate employees to take action.
Step 3: hand out Materials
These can include descriptions, benefits statements, worksheets and enrolment and
beneficiary forms. Top management need to develop and present to subordinates.
Step 4: schedule presentations
Presentations are ideal for small groups and should be conducted whenever major
changes are made. Small groups allow more opportunities for questions and answers.
Larger groups are more time efficient, but can add to downtime cost and require
supplemental question and answer materials or forms. For larger or dispersed
organisations, new technologies such as email or voice mail can be used but they
remove the people factor.
Step 5: prepare visually based communications
These should be a part of all presentations. Staffs now are video watchers. The
problem with so many benefits videos and slide shows is that they look as through they
were produced by a tax accountant. Calculations and complex explanations should be
saved for printed materials. The power of the visual medium is to use real-life examples
to demonstrate concepts to people. Try to keep visual communications simple. Stick
with highlights and use diagrams and easy-to-understand flow chart and graphics.
Step 6: prepare coordinated print pieces
Handouts should accompany all visual presentations. A take-away print piece reminds
staff of the highlight of the presentation.
Step 7: use interactive components
A number of interactive computer programs are now available. The overall goal is to
address individual questions concerning complex programs.
Step 8: evaluate the results
Evaluations will tell you if the program worked. Simple mail-back with questions
designed to test the effectives of the communication effort will help ensure that the
program is working
Table 4.2: Benefits communication tools to choose from include thefollowing
Standard packagesDevelop generic communications and enrolment
packages that can be adapted for UiTM’s budget
Television
Good delivering and impressions or feeling about
program. Serve to point out highlights and to
deliver the UiTM Shah Alam message
Interactive Computer Software
One of the most advance to the main frame and
not only look at possible benefits but also others
areas such as financial planning, training and
development
Automated Voice Response
Allows users to enter their selections via mail
after they read over material sent to them by
mail.
Table 4.2 Benefits communication tools to choose from include thefollowing (cont’d)
Is oldest and most basic communication tool for
explaining benefits to employees and seen as a
supplement to more advances communication
technologies.
meetingsMost staff employees still prefer to get
information on a one-on-one basis from manager
Slides and overheads
Traditional method benefits information is
presented in meeting and not very high-tech but
it allows the presenter to interject himself into the
presentation and this tool familiar for accounting
presentation.
Video Conferences
This is good but expensive by satellite across the
nation or around the world to spread the
program.
Hotlines
Suitable for medium and large organisation as
UiTM Shah Alam for staff to have access to for
getting very specific answers to their questions
and need specialist on it.
Payroll processing systems
This tool will cut down many of the employee’s
question when information directly
communicated to employees via each payroll
statement.
4.2.6 Encouraging Feedback
Feedback from staff is the first step to finding out how closes top management to them.
Staffs feedbacks provides an even greater value staffs not willing to talk about
themselves but are also willing to suggest ideas that may help to improve the
organisation’s performance. In create feedback system evolving organisation frank and
candid comments from identifiable staffs will be valued. The larger organisation more
difficult it is to accomplish upward communication.
Sometimes by provide incentives such as monetary reward for the new ideas has been
as an effective of encouraging employee feedback. But via a token and high praise will
work just a well. Putting a picture of the employee/staff with this month’s “Bright Idea” in
the UiTM Shah Alam’s magazine will go a long way toward communicating to everyone
that ideas, suggestions and feedback are being rewarded. For employee/staff the final
reward is when their ideas will be implemented.
4.2.7 Evaluating Communication Programs
There are two types of measurements for employee communication: attitude survey
and communication audits. The attitude survey sometimes focuses on communication
but is also sometimes broader in scope, telling us what the climate and perception of
employees are, and what can be done to improve them. An employee attitude survey
can measure a wide range of subjects, including job climate, security, satisfaction,
opportunities for communication, management, compensation and benefits. A
communication survey measures:
§ Communication philosophy
§ Topics which are important to employees
§ Whether employees feel sufficiently informed
§ Employees’ preferred sources of information
§ The readership levels for publications
§ Communications’ credibility and usefulness
§ Managers’ or top management communication skills
§ Awareness by employees of the company’s mission, vision and values
In communications audits can measure employee attitudes and their knowledge of the
company, the effectiveness of feedback program and the impact of corporate media.
Techniques used in communication audits may include:
§ Focus groups: small groups of people representing the various demographics of
employee groups. Focus groups provide qualitative information, which means
that they show not only employees’ opinions, but also the context of those
opinions.
§ Management climate assessment: generally a series of interviews with top
management and key unit managers used to determine the culture and values
of the organisation in relation to communication. This can also be used to
identify the effects of individual personalities and to define the context of jobs
and roles.
§ Content evaluation of published material” looks at the subject matter of memos,
policies, form, newsletter and the paper that a corporation uses to determine
what is important based on what is written down and maintained.
§ Surveys: provide a means to let everyone in the organisation get involved in the
audit process. Surveys allow people to participate anonymously. This data is
more quantitative that qualitative.
§ Network analysis: look at the interaction among people in an organisation to
determine or map such things as communication nodes or bottlenecks. The
theory is that the more people interact, the more successful an organisation is.
An attitude survey or communication audits is normally used when there has been
some major change in organisation, such as alignment, downsizing or reengineering.
4.2.8 Communication Research And Change
Via research its’ discover information about might be hard to hear the truth about what
employees thought about their top management but important to set up process for
getting past this problem:
§ Provide feedback that makes sense
§ Get commitment to take action before doing research
§ Relate actions to research; tell people that their input helped.
§ Measure how actions worked; find out if what you did worked.
The level of reaction to research can range from full implementation to full rejection,
with the worst outcome probably being a decision to do nothing. Communication
research is most helpful in choosing among possible alternatives while designing
communications and then making changes in the organisation to respond to that
feedback. Measuring the impact of communication programs becomes more important
that ever if we expect to convince top management that it pays, middle managers that it
works and everyone that it has true value.
4.3 SUMMARY OF CHAPTER
This chapter was discussed about two important things that help this study achieve the
objectives as mentioned in chapter 1. This chapter was elaborate about the analysis
from the interpreted data via survey and interviews. All detail is about organisational
communication to see the scenario of organisational communication in UiTM Shah
Alam. From the analysis, I concluded that UiTM Shah Alam was achieve a good level in
organisational communication because from the survey found the positive answer is
higher than negative answer which is agreed and disagreed about the statement that
ask in survey questions that given to respondents.
The findings also discover to improve the items that related to organisational
communication. Findings in this chapter discussed about the planning to improve the
organisational communication via program, research, evaluation and including tools.
The findings are all about to plan the best organisational communication.
CHAPTER 5
RECOMMENDATIONS AND CONCLUSION
5.1 INTRODUCTION
Based on history Universiti Teknologi MARA Shah Alam operated almost 30 years and
above in Section 1 Shah Alam and some of the organisation change time by time in
order to improve the services and fulfil the current demand for higher education. As a
title world class university, all the quality of work, management, infrastructures,
transportations, technologies and etc need to be enhance and by the way all the
aspects need to be start from the basis of organisation especially in communication.
This study about communication in UiTM Shah Alam also needs to discover the better
organisational communication as educational institution and this situation same with
other industries such as construction industry. There are many relations in construction
industry from client / employer to final user or consumer. There are lot work to do and
very complicated but if there any massive and good organisational communication all
the plans and work will be rolling better and find the best way to achieve the goals.
Next explanations are about recommendations and planning the best ways for UiTM
Shah Alam as guideline to develop better and strategic of communication plan.
5.2 RECOMMENDATIONS ON ORGANISATIONALS
COMMUNICATION
5.2.1 Changing Communication Needs
Many organisations that have downsized layers of managers and workers are trying
new approaches to boosting output, such as quality circles, self directed work teams
and renewed focus on mission, vision and values this situation also goes to UiTM Shah.
Management seems to be cutting back and, at the same time, giving more responsibility
to employees. In this new atmosphere, senior management knows it literally cannot
afford to look at employees simply as a labour cost; rather they must see them as
potential contributors to growth.
Traditionally employer-employee contract or in contact UiTM as public University of
longevity for loyalty but need the promise of a job for life for a lifetime of dedicated and
loyal services has evaporated as a result of cutbacks, downsizing and/ or realignment.
Organisations are finding a cynical, uncommitted and discontented work force that is
working longer hours and seeing more of its salary being put at risk in incentive
programs. Staff or employee communication can help turn around this situation. It is the
glue that can patch today’s tattered working environment.
The importance of communication in restoring a balance between the needs of the
organisation and those of employees and helping to restore and maintain credibility is
becoming apparent to more people. Strategic communication focused on accomplishing
concrete business or product or services objectives such education provider likes UiTM
Shah Alam is order of the day as companies go back to drawing board to reengineer
their services. There are complicated in communication job for everybody in current’s
flattened, spread-out organisation and no longer a work just for somebody at the top
management such executive and etc.
The approach in which messages are being communicated is also changing in this new
high-tech era. Electronic communication or could be tools for communication is
supplementing, even replacing, print while managers are being asked to increase one-
on-one and other high-touch forms of interpersonal communication.
Now, there can be email or voice mail sent to each employee from the top management
such as CEO for informal meeting. By this way it is a far cry from the formal
communications of yesterday. The content of organisational communication is also
changing as follow the high-tech era and reaching out to a new kind of employee, one is
more diverse and multicultural-and very media savvy. The old message of big
organisation as UiTM Shah Alam not really works in this new era, diverse workplace,
where non-stop layoffs and downsizings, strikes, management shift, reorganizations
and bad press have a daily reality.
5.2.2 The Changing Work Force
Time by time work force of current age is very different from many years ago. Activities
in communication must recognise and reflect these changes:
PREVIOUS TIME NOW
Homogenous Diverse/ multicultural
Authoritarian Shared responsibility
Stable Dynamic
Security and loyalty to the organisation Loyalty to self and
professional
Table 5.1: Changing of work force
In the new workplace, workers are diverse and multicultural even though UiTM open for
dweller student but other race can have profession here, and have different values.
They have less job security, but management wants expanded employees participation
in decision making. Employees who now often define their lives in terms of their work
have higher expectations for their jobs. In this environment, top management must now
lead rather boss. This requires even more communication.
5.2.3 The New Workplace and Communication
The changing profile or workers is reflected in how they relate to communication
techniques:
Table 5.2: Changing of workplace
PREVIOUS WORKPLACE CURRENT
Readers Viewers
Not computer literate keyboarders
Formal communications informal
Ideas images as ideas
Focused attention short attention span
What was said who said it
To reach the new workers, new information communication technologies are being
introduced.
Figure 5.1: Examples of technologies adopted then and now
5.2.4 Good Organisational Communication: A Big Reward
Good communication is good business as education provider. From the Japanese who
invest as heavily in their people as in their machinery. Peoples always working with
problem but with more people will increase the better chance for success.
Communication is the glue which bonds people working together toward a common
goal. The rush to install quality programs, empower employees in UiTM Shah Alam to
make decisions, solve problems at the lowest level, and reengineer the corporation will
only be successful if it is based on a geometric increases in communication at all levels
v Memos to
employees
v Newsletters
v Formal
supervisor/employee
meeting
v Bulletin boards
v Company
magazines
v Email
v Voice memos
v Video/ video
newsletters
v Weekly tip sheet
v Interactive computer
programs
TraditionalCommunication
technologies
New Communicationtechnologies
in the organisation. If the employees of UiTM Shah Alam are not given adequate
information nor allowed to contribute to the solution of problems, they may revert to
being the cause of them , resulting in increased absenteeism, lowers productivity,
grievance and so on.
There are two parts to communication: a systems side that utilizes the right media, and
a human side that delivers the information in a believable and empathetic manner. As
one expert has said, communication must have body and soul. Good communication is
carefully planned from the top down, supported in writing, made part of a upper party in
organisation of UiTM Shah Alam performance evaluation, and focused on the work.
There are three major variables that UiTM Shah Alam as educational provider needs to
look at in evaluating organisational communication processes:
Figure 5.2: Communication Variables
OrganisationalObjectives
Employees
CommunicationResultsContent
FlowImpact
Figure at above represented for three major variables of communication and the
variables are Flow, Content and Impact.
1. Flow is how information moves through the organisation to its
audience/staff.
2. Content is the type of information communicated and how it is targeted
to specific audiences.
3. Impact is the result produced by communications effort.
5.2.5 The New Professional Communicator
Now’s worker communicator has the job of providing managers and supervisors
throughout the organisation with the messages and media they need to get the word
out. The information that the employee communicator delivers can range from a revised
benefits program to better management tips. Once communications is more focused on
creating value, a new type of communicator is emerging, one who:
v Understands today’s employees
v Knows the mission of the organisation
v Understand the relative merits of new communication tools
v Is responsible for making sure top executives or management are
trained to communicate and relay feedback information.
Table 5.3: Changing Of Actions
That was then This is now
Craftspeople strategiesWriters propagandistsReporters storytellersPrimary communicators supporters of line communicationMakers of things sellers of ideasAlways part of public relations may be in Public Relations or HRReactive Pre-emptive
Currently professional communicator has more of strategic job-developing
communication strategies to achieve work’s objectives and then with the support of top
management, making sure top parties in organisation get the word out. This goes well
past the old skills of just writing and producing materials. The organisation in UiTM
Shah Alam should involve in three primary activities:
1. Strategizing: looking at a business issue and deciding how it should be
communicated.
2. Toolmaking: developing the communication materials based on the
information that must be communicated.
3. Delivering: communicating of the messages
From the topic 5.1.1 to 5.1.5, there are some factors that can help to improve the
organisation in UiTM Shah Alam to become more efficient in communication for
organisation.
Figure 5.3: Recommendations
RECOMMENDATIONS
THE NEWPROFFESIONAL
COMMUNICATOR
GOOD ORGANISATIONALCOMMUNICATION: A BIG
REWARD
CHANGINGCOMMUNICATION
NEEDS
THE CHANGINGWORK FORCE
THE NEW WORKPLACE ANDCOMMUNICATION
5.2 CONCLUSION
The conclusion are summarised to answer the objectives of the study. The objectives of
this study which explain in chapter 1 are all about the organisational communication.
Universiti Teknologi MARA as a case study had been discovered the information about
the organisational communication and others related information about it.
In chapter 2 explained details about the organisation, communication and other related
information that created for literature review that draw about the view of organisational
communication that need to discover in chapter 3 and chapter 4. By using the interview,
survey and search the information from internet about organisational communication
the scenario of organisational communication in UiTM Shah Alam was answered in
chapter 3.
In addition, by executed the survey and interview, at the same time the information that
gathered used to create as data that interpreted into figure such as percentages and
chart to understand the value about the issue that related to organisational
communication from respondents which is worked in UiTM Shah Alam. As a result the
positive answer more than negative answer and shown that UiTM Shah Alam is one of
the institution that consist with the best organisational communication in its organisation
but some items could be improve via finding that discovered in chapter 4.
Finally, in chapter 5 the recommendations was explained to improve the organisation
communication especially in issues that related to staff either superior or subordinates.
As an institution that consist with fragmented activities UiTM Shah Alam really need the
best organisational communication. Currently UiTM Shah Alam reached so many goals
in activities that related to organisational communication, because of that there are
compliment from many parties such as ISO, Ministry of Higher Education and many
award that belongs to UiTM Shah Alam as effected of effort in enrich organisational
communication by superior and subordinates.
As mentioned in abstract, hopefully the organisational communication that implemented
in UiTM Shah Alam will be as a guideline for any organisation in any sectors especially
for construction industry which consist fragment activities. Because of that this study
take UiTM Shah Alam as case to study the organisational communication even there
are from construction but it occur in all sector either we are realized or not.
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,2008)
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THESIS TOPIC: A STUDY ON COMMUNICATION SYSTEM IN UiTM SHAH ALAM
INTERVIEW SESSION: ORGANISATIONAL COMMUNICATION
NAME: :.............................................................................POST: :………………………………………………………..DEPT/DIVISION/UNIT/FAC:…………………………………………
Questions:
1. What do you understood about organisational communication?o Definitiono Types of communicationo Structure
2. Is there any communication in your scope of work and how the illustration of relation?o same levelo superior to subordinate
3. To execute the communication process, what are the tools that used to assist it?o Telecommunication technologieso Manual by lettero briefing
4. What type of organisation structure in your office?o Matrixo MultidimensionalØ UpwardØ DownwardØ Horizontal
5. What are the problems and impact of organisational communication?o beforeo duringo after
6. What are your suggestions to improve organisational communication?o Qualityo ISOo Example of best organisation
7. Could you please give me the written information that related to organisationalcommunication?
o Pamphleto Brochureo Documents
DEPARTMENT OF QUANTITY SURVEYINGFACULTY OF ARCHITECTURE, PLANNING AND SURVEYING
UNIVERSITI TEKNOLOGI MARA, SHAH ALAM, SELANGOR
EMPLOYEE COMMUNICATION SURVEY
UNIT/JAB/FAK:……………………………………………………………………………………
…….
Dear respondent: I would be grateful if you could kindly complete the survey which is arequirement of my final project (Dissertation-QSM 664)Check ( / ) yes or no for the answers that are appropriate to conditions in yourorganisation.
Application of Communication In UiTM
1. What is the main communication channel that usually used?
1. Interpersonal
2. Letter
3. Meeting
4. Email
5. Briefing
6. Others ,state:_____________________
2. What sources of information that used during communication?
o HEA information
o HEP information
o Employee information
o Physical development of UiTM
o Instruction of work
o Others state :_____________________
Communication Policy
1. Is there a written communication policy in your organisation?
2. Does the policy provide 2-way communication?
3. Does the policy have the active support of management?
4. Does the policy commit the organisation to honesty?
5. Are communication objectives stated clearly?
6. Does one individual have overall responsibility for administering the policy?
Program
1. Are there written procedures to implement the policy?
2. Do all communication activities and media conform to the policy, and they
coordinated?
3. Are the policy and programs regularly reviewed for effectiveness and compatibility?
4. Does top management take an active part in the program?
Delegated Authority
1. Is there an organisational chart that shows communication channels?
2. Is accountability for communication defined?
3. Do supervisors know their accountabilities for relaying information up and down the
line?
Keeping Superiors Informed
1. Are supervisors given advance information about the organisation’s plans and
progress?
2. Are superior given the “why” of all matters transmitted directly through them to
employees, so that they can discuss the subjects intelligently and answer any questions that
may arise?
3. Is there a specific method for keeping superior regularly informed about employee
thinking and rumours?
4. Do the supervisors meet regularly with employees for discussions?
5. Are employees encouraged to seek information from their supervisors?
6. Are supervisors trained to transmit information to employees and to answer their
questions?
7. Are bulletins given to supervisors before they are placed on bulletin boards?
8. Are there regular management meetings?
9. Do supervisors meet with each of their subordinates on a regular basis?
10. Is there a procedure for getting supervisor ideas on staff contract improvement?
11. Is there a procedure a supervisor’s manual for ready reference on all important
problems?
12. Is there a manual of policies and procedures which is kept up-to-date, and is
available to all supervisors?
Human Relations Communications
1. Are employee’s basic want and interest (security, recognition, fair wages and opportunities to
advance) considered in determining what information to present to organisation?
2. Are employees being given information about:
o salary and benefits
o opportunities for advancement
o training opportunity?
Information about Employer-Employee Relations
1. Does the company “sell itself to its employees?
2. Does the top officer of the organisation:
o talk with employees in a group
o meet socially with employees
o visit informally with employees at their work stations?