Maria Stubbe has investigated instances of miscommunication in the workplace, where communication is ineffective or problematic, leading to negative outcomes for the individual or the organisation as a whole. The aims in doing this are three-fold:
- To explore how to usefully model miscommunication in the workplace context, to enable methods for more effective communication to be developed;
- To identify strategies effective communicators use to avoid or repair miscommunication;
- To consider implications for further research, training or organisational learning.
In looking at miscommunication, it is important to remember that any interaction takes place on more than one level. We have found it helpful to analyse discourse on two levels:
- Micro-level: viewing language as a tool for getting work done. In a workplace situation, this is usually the referential content of an utterance.
- Macro-level: viewing language as a way of constructing the institutional culture, the social identities of the participants, and the power relationships between them. Seen in this way, language is a means of 'doing' or contesting power.
Miscommunication can come about because of a breakdown in shared understanding of what is being conveyed on either of these levels, the second being as important as the first.
We have been investigating instances of effective communication and break-downs in communication among members of a factory production team.
The members of this team faced many complex barriers to communication that were inherent in the nature of their work:
- The factory environment: a high level of background noise, separation of workers from one another. This necessitated a lot of non-verbal communication and communication via other media, such as radio.
- The large range of different communicative tasks, varying from brief routine interactions to complex problem-solving interactions from one minute to the next.
- Changes in production procedure meant higher demands on workers' English language skills and literacy skills, which varied widely between co-workers.
- A move to a co-operative management framework, instead of a hierarchical structure, was changing the dynamics of communication at the factory.
- A lot of factory work is highly context-embedded, making it necessary to be part of the in-group to know what is going on:
Explanation of contextual information given after dialogue: