PRESENTATION OUTLINE
CULTURE AND COMMUNICATION
CULTURE DEFINED
- Complex system of values, traits, morals, and customs shared by a society.
- Molds the way we think, behave, and communicate,.
- Culture is a powerful operating force that molds the way we think, behave, and communicate.
CULTURE IS LEARNED
- Rules, values, and attitudes of a culture are learned and passed down from generation to generation.
- Cultural rules of behavior are conditioned from early childhood.
- What may be normal to you may not be normal to others. (Talking nose to nose Arab cultures)
CULTURES ARE INHERENTLY LOGICAL
- Rules in any culture reinforces that cultures values and beliefs.
- Acknowledging the inherent knowledge of a culture is extremely important when encountering behavior that differs from ones own cultural norms.
- Japan: women exposing teeth when smiling, aggressive, and immodest.
- Important in business to know each countries different cultural beliefs.
CULTURE IS BASIS OF SELF IDENTITY AND COMMUNITY
- Culture is the basis of how we tell the world who we are and what we believe.
CULTURE IS DYNAMIC
- Overtime culture changes.
- Changes can be caused by advancement in technology, migration, wars, natural disasters, and communication.
KEY DIMENSIONS OF CULTURE
LOW CONTEXT CULTURES
- (North America, Scandinavia, and Germany)
- Depend little on context of a situation and shared experience to convey their meaning.
- Assume that messages must be explicit and listeners rely exclusively on written or spoken word.
- Tend to be logical, analytical, and action oriented
- Business communicator stress clearly articulated messages that they consider to be objective, professional and efficient.
- Use linear logic. Proceed from point a to b to c and then arrive at a conclusion.
HIGH CONTEXT CULTURE
- (Japan, China and middle eastern countries)
- Much is left unsaid because the listener is assumed to be already contested and does not require much background information.
- More likely to be intuitive and contemplative. Pay attention to more than spoken or written words.
- Emphasize interpersonal relationships, non verbal expression, physical setting and social setting.
- Communication cues are transmitted by posture, voice inflection, gestures, and facial expressions.
- Use spiral logic, circling around a topic indirectly and looking at it from tangential or divergent viewpoints.
- A conclusion may be implied but not argued directly.
INDIVIDUALISM AND COLLECTIVISM
- Attitude of independence and freedom from control characterizes individualism.
- Members of low context cultures, particularly Americans, tend to value individualism. They believe in individual action and personal responsibility, and they desire a large degree of freedom in their personal lives.
- Members of high context cultures are more collectivists. They emphasize membership in organizations, groups, and teams; they encourage acceptance of group values, duties, and decisions. Resist independence because it fosters competition and confrontation.
TIME ORIENTATION
- North Americans consider time a precious commodity to be conserved. They correlate time with productivity, efficiency, and money.
- In other cultures time may be perceived as an unlimited and never ending resource to be enjoyed.
POWER DISTANCE
- Introduced by geert hofstede.
- Measures how people in different societies cope with inequality; how they relate to more powerful individuals. In high power distance countries subordinates expect former hierarchies and embrace authoritarian paternalistic power relationships.
- In low power distance Cultures subordinates consider themselves as equals of their supervisors. Confidentially voice opinions, and participate in decision making.
- Japan vs. America (soft spoken vs. outspoken)
COMMUNICATION STYLE
- People in low and high context cultures tend to communicate differently with words.
- Americans and Germans, words are very important especially in contracts and negotiations.
- People in high context cultures, on the other hand, place more emphasis on surrounding context than on the words describing a negotiation.
- N. Americans tend to take words literally, whereas Latinos enjoy plays on words; and Arabs and South Americans sometimes speak with extravagant or poetic figures of speech that may be misinterpreted if taken literally.