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Uma comunicação em escritórios chineses

Outubro 26o, 2007 por histórias do sucesso do negócio de China

O Politeness é mais importante do que a claridade

Por Greg Bissky

Uma comunicação em escritórios chinesesChina fascina o oeste. Não apenas diferente e mais do que meramente exotic, Westerners vê o chinês como “misterioso,” um pessoa de algum modo ao contrário de qualquer outro, um enigma nós-não pode - pareç-à-resolver… ou compreender.

Os povos chineses são não misterioso. O yes diferente, muito muito assim, mas eles pode ser compreendido. O enigma chinês pode ser resolvido. Tudo que você necessita é paciência, um voluntariedade fazer algum trabalho duro e bastante sentido comum tratar os chineses como povos, não mistérios.

Este livreto é em nenhuma maneira um criticism da cultura chinesa! Olha simplesmente a fonte de atitudes chinesas para uma comunicação e como a cultura chinesa afeta uma comunicação do negócio.

O livreto não garantirá o sucesso em Ásia chinesa, pesarosa, mas dar-lhe-á uma ferramenta necessária para o sucesso; abilidade a veja as coisas como o chinês. Você necessita vidros chineses. Fêz-me exame de muitos erros para começar meus, e eu espero que você possa aprender de meus erros em vez de de seus próprios. É uma maneira muito mais barata começa seus vidros!

Depois que os anos 20+ em Ásia eu sei que nada vem fácil. Como você começa determina onde você termina; seu voluntariedade mudar e a atitude para viver & trabalhar com o chinês decidirão seu sucesso… ou falha. Como Confucius o pôs, é somente o mais sábio e o mais foolish quem não pode mudar. Não seja nenhuns.

Boa sorte.
Greg Bissky

Que é uma comunicação?
Uma comunicação tem as mensagens somente uma objetivo-transmissoras. Body language, business presentations and smiles to strangers on the street all have the same basic goal, that the audience (the one receiving the message) clearly understands the message the speaker (or writer or “smiler”) intended.

There is nothing mysterious about communication. The same principles apply to everyone, everywhere, every time. Everything is a message. Facts, opinions, questions, requests or suggestions are different, but also the same. Different on the level of content or purpose, they are identical in how communication success is measured. Facts, opinions et al are “messages” (with different purposes) and we measure success for each in the same way—only when a speaker (or writer: ‘speaker’ herein means “person initiating the communication”) transfers what’s in his head 100% accurately into the audience’s head is the communication (of the message) considered “successful.”

There is nothing mysterious about communication. The same principles apply to everyone, everywhere, every time. Chinese and Western, adults and children, intellectuals and idiots all do the same things to try to achieve the same goals. All speakers follow the same sequence of steps: 1) decide what message (type and content) to transfer; 2) select a method of transferring it (maybe writing a letter, using a loud voice or relying on body language); and 3) use the method . . . and hope it works.

If the audience receives the exact content sent by the speaker, the message was successful. Please note a crucial distinction here though: communication success is not measured by whether the audience agrees or accepts the speaker’s message. That is another issue: communication effectiveness let’s call it, or perhaps rhetoric. For example, I may want my partner to do a specific task. Until I succeed in communicating the message, “this is what I want you to do” (i.e., until the audience knows exactly what the task is) he or she can not begin to decide whether to agree to do it. Understanding message content 100% clearly, accurately and completely—communication success—has to happen before the audience can decide whether or not to accept or agree with the message.

Understanding Misunderstanding
Before moving to communication in Chinese offices, a common misunderstanding about communication must be dealt with first. The problem? People misunderstand the difference between misunderstanding and confusion. There are only three things that can happen when an audience receives a message. One, the audience understands the message exactly as intended by the speaker (communication success). Two, the audience is unsure what the speaker’s message is (confusion). Three, the audience thinks they understand the message perfectly, but actually understand something different than what the speaker intended (misunderstanding). Of the three possible outcomes, the third is by far the most dangerous. Unaware that he has the wrong message, the audience makes a decision or chooses a response based on the wrong message; unaware that the audience has an incorrect understanding (because they act like they do understand) the speaker assumes he has been successful. Nothing causes more problems in relationships than misunderstandings. Confusion is far better: if the audience isn’t sure what the message really is they can ask the speaker to repeat it. Not so with misunderstanding: not confused at all—just mistaken—the audience not only won’t ask for clarification, they may do something totally opposite to what the speaker wished. The result is almost always bad: the wrong goods go into the wrong container delivered to the wrong port, staff spend time, money and resources doing the wrong job in the wrong order, the list is endless.

Misunderstanding is the largest hidden cost in international business.

Business relations in ChinaDoes misunderstanding happen in your office? You probably will say, “Yes. Too often, too.” And that is Western-to-Western communication (i.e., between people from the same culture). How about Western-to-Chinese communication (i.e., between people from totally different cultures)? The effects are far more serious: misunderstandings are more frequent, harder to solve and far more damaging to relationship building.

Lots of things can hurt a business relationship. Not trusting another person’s word is perhaps the worst. If there is no trust there is no relationship (or at least no relationship anyone would want if there was a choice). The bad news is, misunderstandings between Chinese and, well, Westerners of all nations, are much more common than either communication success or, second best, confusion between speaker and audience. The good news is that the frequency of misunderstandings between you and Chinese can be dramatically reduced, and, even better news, you already know how. Your only real problem is you don’t know you know how.

How to do business in ChinaMy goal is simple. I hope to open your eyes to the fact that the concepts of communication and relationship-building you use every day are in fact the same ones you should use when dealing with the Chinese. Of course it is not quite that simple, but it is nowhere as difficult as you might (and probably do) think. My most important advice to people working with the Chinese is, if you know how to make a friend at home you know how to do business with the Chinese. There is no “mystery” to it. All you need is some background about how Chinese think, why they think that way, and how this must affect the way you think and act. As much as the products or services you sell for what price, you will succeed or fail based on the actions you take. Your choice of actions depends on your assumptions of which actions are appropriate, and which are not. In a very real sense, success with the Chinese depends upon what and how you think, not on how or when you act.

Greg Bissky, http://www.treasuremountain.com/

"Communication in Chinese Offices" is a devided into four parts. Next week we will publish part two.

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