issues in criminal justice discussion

Business Communication Quarterly75(4) 449 –452 © 2012 by the Association for Business Communication Reprints and permission: http://www. sagepub.com/journalsPermissions.nav DOI: 10.1177/1080569912458966 http://bcq.sagepub.com 458966 BCQ 75 4 10.1177/108056991245896 6 Business Communication QuarterlyDeKay 1St. John’s University, USA2BNY Mellon Corporation, USA Corresponding Author:

Sam H. DeKay, BNY Mellon Corporation, 101 Barclay Street, Floor 9E, New \ York, NY 10007, USA Email: [email protected] Interpersonal Communication in the Workplace: A Largely Unexplored Region Sam H. DeKay, Section Editor 1,2 Recent research has identified interpersonal communication skills as critical attributes for new employees and more experienced workers seeking promotion. However, despite the significance of interpersonal communication in the workplace\ , our knowl- edge of these skills and how they may be taught is limited. The two arti\ cles comprising this theme section are intended to extend our understanding of these ski\ lls. Nineteenth-century maps of the African continent—at least those print\ ed in the United States and Europe—contain a rather strange entry in the centra\ l section of that land mass. If you consult one of these old maps, you will notice, south \ of the “Mountains of the Moon” and north of the land of Moologa, a large territory labe\ led the UNEXPLORED REGION. Apparently, there yet remained a portion of the continent unoccupied by the soldiers and merchants of colonial powers. The topic of this themed section, Interpersonal Communication in the Wor\ kplace, also resembles a largely “unexplored region.” The reasons for our \ scanty knowledge are complex. Certainly, it is not due to a lack of research: The two art\ icles comprising this section offer useful bibliographies concerning numerous studies exa\ mining the people skills, the “soft” skills, and the personal skills often as\ sociated with interper- sonal communication. Yet the studies fail to provide us with clear definitions of these skills, their interrelationships, and their relevance to communication. \ In fact, much of the cited research informs us that managers and human relations professionals main- tain that “interpersonal skills” and communication represent two d\ istinct sets of behav- ior. It has proven difficult to explore the terrain of interpersonal com\ munication when we can’t agree on a common nomenclature with which to ask questions, \ frame hypoth- eses, conduct studies, and report findings.

Interpersonal Communication in the Workplace 450 Business Communication Quarterly 75(4) Nor is our knowledge of interpersonal communication in the workplace an \ unex- plored region because the topic is deemed trivial. In their presentation\ at the Association for Business Communication’s Annual Convention in Montreal, Reinsch a\ nd Gardner (2011) reported the results of a national survey revealing that senior business execu- tives maintain that employees with strong interpersonal skills are most \ likely to be considered for promotions. The study also indicated that writing ability\ —the develop- ment of which occupies considerable attention in most business communica\ tion courses—was not viewed as a primary concern when considering executives for pro- motion. The articles in this theme section extend the findings of Reinsc\ h and Gardner by indicating that employers would rather hire employees with well-devel\ oped inter- personal skills than those with demonstrated writing ability. I recently conducted an informal experiment to gain some sense of the si\ gnificance of interpersonal communication skills in work-related environments. For \ a 5-month period—from February through June 2012—I collected every e-mail me\ ssage received from vendors of business communication training. (I work in a technical communica- tion function.) During that period, I received 38 offers from service p\ roviders. Here are the results, arranged by type of training offered, number of offers,\ and the percent- age of total offers represented by each specific type:

Having Difficult Conversations 17 (44.7%) Speaking as a Leader 7 (18.4%) Giving Presentations 5 (13.3%) Coaching/Motivational Speaking 4 (10.6%) Communicating With Customers 3 (7.8%) Facilitating Meetings 2 (5.2%) I found the results interesting because they reveal the sorts of communi\ cation train- ing that, to the thinking of profit-minded companies that specialize in \ providing instruction to large corporations, will be most wanted. All of the training offerings focus on speaking skills—none were concerned with writing. The most popular topic, “Having Difficult Conversations,”\ comprised a mélange of courses, each focusing on very specific problems: reducing “drama” in the workplace, giving and receiving criticism, dealing with insubordination, handling employees with “bad hygiene,” resolving conflicts, making the tran\ sition from “buddy to boss,” dealing with rude employees, disciplining workers, conducti\ ng performance reviews, counseling employees, handling terminations, avoiding “bad b\ oss” behav- iors, working with disabled employees, and repairing relations with othe\ r departments.

Most of the vendors promised that these issues could be resolved by the \ use of videos, audio programs, written scripts, flash cards, or a combination of these \ methods. In most instances, course content focused on various “rules” that wou\ ld permit managers to modify the undesirable behaviors of employees. (Some courses, though\ , devoted attention to rules intended to modify the behaviors of managers.) Interpersonal Communication in the Workplace 451 The listing of possible “difficult conversations” presents a brief catalog of certain interpersonal communication in the workplace—especially those dealing\ with situa- tions that hold the potential of embarrassing managers, employees, or bo\ th. But the other types of training offerings, including “Speaking as a Leader” and “Coaching/ Motivational Speaking,” are also forms of interpersonal communication. Clearly, from the standpoint of vendors whose business consists of providing corp\ orations with the kinds of training deemed most saleable, interpersonal communication \ in the work- place is considered a moneymaker. These trainers for hire agree with Rei\ nsch and Gardner (2011), as well as the articles in this section: Interpersonal skills are critical attributes, necessary for successful employees. But even this plethora of behavior modification training does not add gr\ eatly to our knowledge of interpersonal communication. We are merely told that certain “rules” or scripts, if followed correctly, will cause certain problems to disappear\ . In short, the vast terrain of interpersonal skills in the workplace remains an “une\ xplored region.” The two articles presented in this section represent genuine attempts to\ explore the terrain and invite future researchers to join this ongoing effort. Robles contributes to our knowledge by developing a clear nomenclature w\ ith which to discuss “interpersonal skills” and its relation to commun\ ication. According to Robles’s formulation, the term soft skills is a composite of interpersonal (people) skills and personal (career) attributes. Personal attributes consist of behavioral traits unique to an individual, such as effective time management. Inter\ personal skills, however, involve traits exemplified when the individual engages \ in social interaction. The ability to communicate effectively—to handle difficu\ lt conversa- tions in such a manner that problems are resolved—is an interpersonal\ skill. “Soft skills” refers to all attributes or traits associated with personal s\ kills as well as those dubbed “interpersonal.” Hynes describes a consulting engagement in which she developed a curricu\ lum intended to provide training in interpersonal communication competencies\ to employ- ees of a major corporation. Her discussion emphasizes that assessment is\ a compli- cated matter when interpersonal skills are the focus of instruction. (The nettlesome topic of assessment was never broached by the 38 vendors who forwarded t\ o me their training proposals.) Hynes reveals to us that thorough assessment invol\ ves not only the reactions of employees who have been trained but also the observatio\ ns of manag- ers who are requested to assess employees many weeks after training has concluded.

Conducting surveys and interviews and then collating and interpreting th\ eir results are time-consuming tasks. Both Robles and Hynes, working independently, reach similar conclusions. One of these findings, which may also partially explain why the topic of interp\ ersonal skills is largely an “unexplored region,” is that organizations have not developed methods for measuring the long-term value of training. Many of the participants find\ employment with other companies; others transfer to different departments within th\ e organization.

Thus, the actual return on investment of interpersonal skills training i\ s elusive. 452 Business Communication Quarterly 75(4) The second finding, with which both authors concur, is that business com\ munica- tion curricula at the college and graduate school level are well served \ by including an interpersonal skills component. As Hynes indicates, most curricula curre\ ntly include instruction in business writing and verbal presentations. However, given\ the signifi- cance attributed to interpersonal communication in business environments\ , the topic should not be ignored or given short shrift. Perhaps, if this recommenda\ tion were seri- ously considered and implemented by instructors of business communicatio\ n, the topic of interpersonal communication in the workplace would not remain l\ argely unexplored.

Reference Reinsch, N. L., Jr., & Gardner, J. A. (2011, October). Do good communi\ cators get promoted?

Maybe not! In L. G. Snyder (Ed.), Proceedings of the 76th annual convention of the Asso- ciation for Business Communication. Retrieved from http://businesscommunication.org/ wp-content/uploads/2011/10/2011-ABC-01-REINSCH.pdf Bio Sam H. DeKay, Section Editor, is a vice president for corporate communications at BNY Mellon Corporation in New York City. He is also an adjunct associate pro\ fessor at the Graduate School of Education, St. John’s University, Jamaica, Queens,\ New York. Copyright of Business Communication Quarterly is the property of Association for Business Communication and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use.