Receiving stage
(noun)
The first stage of the listening process, which involves hearing and attending.
Examples of Receiving stage in the following topics:
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The Receiving Stage
- The first stage of the listening process is the receiving stage, which involves hearing and attending.
- The first stage of the listening process is the receiving stage, which involves hearing and attending.
- Paired with hearing, attending is the other half of the receiving stage in the listening process.
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The Evaluating Stage
- The evaluating stage is the listening stage during which the listener critically assesses the information she's received from the speaker.
- This stage of the listening process is the one during which the listener assesses the information she's received, both qualitatively and quantitatively.
- During the evaluating stage, the listener determines whether or not the information she's heard and understood from the speaker is well constructed or disorganized, biased or unbiased, true or false, significant or insignificant.
- The evaluating stage occurs most effectively once the listener fully understands what the speaker is trying to say.
- This stage of critical analysis is important for a listener in terms of how what she's heard will affect her own ideas, decisions, actions, and/or beliefs.
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The Importance of Listening
- The listening process involves five stages: receiving, understanding, evaluating, remembering, and responding.
- These stages will be discussed in more detail in later sections.
- Basically, an effective listener must hear and identify the speech sounds directed toward them, understand the message of those sounds, critically evaluate or assess that message, remember what's been said, and respond (either verbally or nonverbally) to information they've received.
- Effectively engaging with all five stages of the listening process lets us best gather the information we need from the world around us.
- Define active listening and list the five stages of the listening process
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Stages in the Product Life Cycle
- There are four stages in the product life cycle: introduction, growth, maturity, and decline.
- At this stage of the life cycle, the company usually loses money on the product.
- In the maturity stage of the product life cycle, sales will reach their peak.
- There is no set schedule for the stages of a product life cycle.
- Differences will occur depending on the type of product, how well it is received by the market, the promotional mix of the company, and the aggressiveness of the competition.
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The Understanding Stage
- The understanding stage is the stage during which the listener determines the context and meanings of the words that are heard.
- The second stage in the listening process is the understanding stage.
- This is the stage during which the listener determines the context and meanings of the words he or she hears.
- After receiving information via listening, the next step is understanding what we've heard.
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Implantation
- Implantation is the very early stage of pregnancy at which the embryo adheres to the wall of the uterus and begins to form the placenta.
- Implantation is the very early stage of pregnancy during which the embryo embeds into the wall of the uterus.
- At this stage of prenatal development, the embryo is a blastocyst.
- It is by this adhesion that the fetus receives oxygen and nutrients from the mother to be able to grow.
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The Responding Stage
- The responding stage is when the listener provides verbal and/or nonverbal reactions to what she hears.
- The responding stage is the stage of the listening process wherein the listener provides verbal and/or nonverbal reactions based on short- or long-term memory.
- Following the remembering stage, a listener can respond to what she hears either verbally or non-verbally.
- Responding verbally might involve asking a question, requesting additional information, redirecting or changing the focus of a conversation, cutting off a speaker, or repeating what a speaker has said back to her in order to verify that the received message matches the intended message.
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The Remembering Stage
- The remembering stage occurs as the listener categorizes and retains the information she's gathering from the speaker.
- In the listening process, the remembering stage occurs as the listener categorizes and retains the information she's gathered from the speaker for future access.
- Using information immediately after receiving it enhances information retention and lessens the forgetting curve, or the rate at which we no longer retain information in our memory.
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Stages of Cognitive Development
- Review the four major stages of cognitive development: Piaget's Stages (http://epltt.coe.uga.edu/index.php?
- title=Piaget%27s_Stages)
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Causes of the bullwhip effect and counteracting the bullwhip effect
- Each member updates its own demand forecast based on orders received from its "downstream" customer.
- Order batching occurs when each member takes order quantities it receives from its downstream customer and rounds up or down to suit production constraints such as equipment setup times or truckload quantities.
- Rationing and gaming create distortions in the ordering information that is being received by the supply chain.
- Stabilize prices by replacing sales and discounts with consistent "every-day low prices" at the consumer stage and uniform wholesale pricing at upstream stages.