A presentation made by Ann Pilkington to the APM South East branch and People SIG on 6th February 2014, in Swanley near Kent.
Ann has kindly provided some notes with her slides.
7. This is where we start to introduce some theory. Quick open discussion
about what is missing from this model of communication, e.g. receiver’s
view of the ‘sender’, culture, the channel used etc.
Having done this, we can see that communication is rich and
complicated so why does so much communication adopt a mass media
approach?
Note that the mass media (ie newspapers etc) are good at telling you
what to think about, but don’t tell you what to think
7
8. How much of internal communication today takes a ‘mass media’
approach?
8
9. The point of these models are they aren’t appropriate ways to
communicate change but are, in fact, how it is often done
9
12. The danger with this and other models based on the same approach is
that those who are perceived to do of low power may not be given
sufficient attention. In an age of social media this is risky and also could
be considered less ethical
The Marks and Spender “We boobed” campaign is a good example
12
15. Sponsors: these stakeholders set the direction, hold the budget and
can release resources. They are comfortable dealing with a high level of
ambiguity.
Shapers: these stakeholders get involved at the design stage (this
could be the design of an IT system, new ways of working or a product).
They can see what the future looks like and are relatively comfortable
with ambiguity.
Schedulers: these stakeholders are often ‘gatekeepers’ they can get
things done and make the implementation of the project happen. To do
their job they often need detail on timescales and tasks so find
ambiguity unhelpful.
Those who will use the new service, adopt different ways of working
etc (according to what the project is delivering). This group is less
comfortable handling ambiguity because they want to know exactly
what they need to do differently. Everyone will be in this position at
some point in the project.
The secret is to understand that every time you engage with a
stakeholder they are thinking “what does it mean for me and what do
you need me to do?” If you can’t answer (which isn’t the same as not
wanting to answer) those questions, then maybe that person doesn’t
need to be fully engaged just yet. If the person doesn’t need to do
something to make the current project phase successful then they
shouldn’t be your primary focus. That doesn’t mean you ignore them,
but the approach is more measured.
15