informal
(adjective)
Not formal or ceremonious; casual.
Examples of informal in the following topics:
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Informal Communication
- Informal communication occurs outside an organization's established channels for conveying messages and transmitting information.
- Formal communication usually involves documentation, while informal communication usually leaves no recorded trace for others to find or share.
- While informal communication is important to an organization, it also may have disadvantages.
- Casual conversations are often spontaneous, and participants may make incorrect statements or promulgate inaccurate information.
- Less accountability is expected from informal communications, which can cause people to be careless in their choice of words, indiscreet, or disclosing sensitive information.
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Mintzberg's Management Roles
- Mintzberg defined ten management roles within three categories: interpersonal, informational, and decisional.
- Liaison: maintains a self-developed network of outside contacts and informers who provide favors and information.
- Mentor: seeks and receives a wide variety of special information (much of it current) to develop a thorough understanding of the organization and environment; emerges as the nerve center of internal and external information for the organization.
- Disseminator: transmits information received from outsiders or from other subordinates to members of the organization.
- Disseminating what is of value, and how, is a critical informational role.
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Interactive Leadership
- The interactive style of leadership makes it a priority to inform followers about important matters related to their goals and tasks and to clarify understanding.
- Interactive leaders are proactive in seeking information and opinions from followers.
- While interactive leaders may make use of technology to share information, they also seek the richer exchanges that face-to-face communication allows.
- When making group decisions they may solicit information, perceptions, and even recommendations from team members.
- An interactive leader shares information and answers questions to clarify goals and tasks.
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Setting Transparency Norms
- Information disclosure includes choices about what types of information is shared and with whom, the content of what is communicated, and the timing of the release of information.
- Some information is private, such as personnel matters, or commercially sensitive, like strategic business plans.
- Clarity refers to how easily comprehended the information or communication is.
- Accuracy means that available information has integrity, is truthful, and faithfully represents organizational decisions, policies, and practices.
- Following these guidelines would increase transparency: the public would have access to compensation information now kept from public view.
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Decision-Making Styles
- Autocratic: The group leader solves the problem using the information he possesses.
- He does not consult with anyone else or seek information in any form.
- The leader then evaluates the information and makes the decision.
- Negotiation: The leader explains the situation to the group or individual and provides the relevant information.
- The leader provides all the relevant information that he possesses.
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The Nature of Efficient Communication
- A key element of effective communication is having a clear process for developing and disseminating information.
- A communication strategy speaks to each of these elements and guides how messages and information are developed and shared.
- Does the audience have the background information it needs to understand the message?
- Are they supposed to inform, persuade, or ask the audience to do something?
- The purpose informs choices of style and tone such as whether or not to use technical language or industry jargon.
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The Nature of Effective Communication
- Effective communication takes place when information is shared accurately between two or more people or groups of people and provokes the desired response.
- The goal of communication is usually to generate action, inform, create understanding, or communicate a certain idea or point of view.
- Physical barriers like distance, inferior technology, or staff shortages that reduce information processing capacity.
- One person may want information compressed to bullet points, another may demand granular detail.
- The format and delivery of information is important.
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Upward Communication
- Upward communication is the transmission of information from lower levels of an organization to higher ones; the most common form is employees communicating with managers.
- The content of such communication can include judgments, estimations, propositions, complaints, grievances, appeals, reports, and any other information directed from subordinates to superiors.
- The communication channel, or mode of sharing information, strongly influences the upward communication process.
- For instance, sending a written report to someone who prefers to receive information in the form of a concise email is less likely to bring about the desired effect.
- For management, upward communication is an important source of information that can inform business decisions.
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Internal and External Control
- Control uses information from the past and present and projections for the future to create effective control processes.
- Feedback is a process in which information about the past or the present is used to influence the present or future.
- Picture an analyst statistically measuring the quality and quantity of a given output based on information gathering.
- This image shows how data, information, and feedback flow throughout a management strategy.
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Team Communication
- Team members send and exchange information to convey ideas, generate discussion, prompt action, create understanding, and coordinate activities.
- Communication patterns describe the flow of information within the group and can be described as centralized or decentralized.
- Centralized communication results in consistent, standardized information being conveyed, but often restricts its flow to one direction.
- In contrast, decentralized communication means team members share and exchange information directly with each other and with the group.
- This allows information to flow more freely, but often with less consistency in format or distribution.