🚧 Barriers to Communication
Big Idea: Barriers to communication are anything that prevents a message from being received and understood correctly. Identifying and removing barriers is essential for effective management.
Types of barriers
- Language barriers -- different languages, jargon, technical terms that the receiver does not understand
- Physical barriers -- distance, noise, poor technology, different locations or time zones
- Cultural barriers -- different cultural norms about communication style, formality, directness, body language
- Organisational barriers -- too many management layers (message gets distorted), rigid hierarchy discourages upward communication
- Psychological barriers -- stress, lack of trust, fear of speaking up, personal biases, preconceptions
- Information overload -- too much information at once makes it hard to identify what matters
- Channel barriers -- using the wrong method (e.g. a complex decision communicated by text message instead of a face-to-face meeting)
How to overcome barriers
- Use clear, simple language and avoid unnecessary jargon
- Choose the right channel for the message (face-to-face for sensitive topics, email for records)
- Encourage feedback to check the message was understood
- Flatten the hierarchy or use open-door policies to encourage upward communication
- Train employees in cross-cultural communication if operating internationally
- Use visual aids to support complex messages
- Reduce layers in the chain of command to prevent message distortion
MNCs like DA, operating across multiple European countries, face language and cultural barriers. Marketing messages, product instructions and internal communications must all be adapted for different markets. Miscommunication between French headquarters and operations in other countries could lead to quality problems, missed deadlines or cultural misunderstandings.