Language codes & communication behavior in evaluating virtual enterprises oriented human resources.
Nica, Gabriela Beatrice ; Aurite, Traian
Abstract: For the human resources acting in virtual enterprises
environment is important to be able to develop specific skills in
communication. Only a good management of language codes and
communication behavior allows SME's teams to imply themselves in
international projects, where they can cover using their skills specific
tasks, modules of the project proposed by the big enterprises who are
leading the field. We present in this paper our proposal to modify the
specific relevant psychological CPI (California Psychological Inventory)
profiles for the mechanical engineers as defined in our previous
researches, in order to also evaluate their ability to communicate in
the Virtual Enterprise (VE) environment.
Key words: language codes, behavior, mechanical engineers,
psychological profiles, virtual environment.
1. INTRODUCTION
The multinational culture has an impact over all the aspects of
economic, social and even political life of many countries. The
organizational culture of multinational enterprises has a declared role
in influencing, the professional traditions and experience, by
cultivating higher and more efficient standards and values. However,
even if developing the social standards of some industrial countries,
multinational organizational cultures may be responsible for inducing
dependence, inadequate practices, and hard to assimilate industrial
values to the host country. The multinational culture provides liaison
between the local know how & resources and the communication
technology. What we learned in both settings, regional and global
networks, is that managerial competence to rapidly change the
cooperative organizational arrangement from within must be backed by the
cooperative culture of the partners (Katzy, 1998)
The concept of multinational enterprise culture is more and more
corroborated in last years with virtual enterprises environment.
A virtual enterprise (VE) architecture represents a temporary
consortium of independent member companies which come together to
quickly exploit fast-changing worldwide product manufacturing
opportunities during a project lifetime (figure 1).
[FIGURE 1 OMITTED]
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Different organizational cultures (ethnocentric, polycentric,
regiocentric, geocentric) were proposed for this kind of enterprise
architecture. At the moment the geocentric organizational culture
(figure 2) seems to be the best choice because of his high degree of
international coordination on production, with an important degree of
independence observable across branch companies, and an important
orientation towards satisfying the demand among local markets. In this
kind of organizational culture the heads of the branch companies enjoy
greater autonomy and decision-taking is more horizontal, tending to be
carried out among branch managers. Local communication management
process is emphasized at the level of each team in every node of the VE
network as well as the increased need for communication management of
the entire VE architecture. One of the main issues in communication
management for such virtual team architecture is located in language
codes and communication behavior. If those problems are neglected the
organizational communication codes between partners may induce very
severe differences between the reality images at the level of the
emitter and receptor.
2. BREAKING THE WAVES
Effective communication is fundamental to all aspects of human
functioning.
We can define the communication as transfer of the information
waves from a sender to a receiver under the requirements that the
message have been perceived with the same signification of the content
by two subjects. Efficiency in communication is conditioned by the
understanding of the message (figure 3).
Social/communications skills predict vocational functioning history
independently of cognitive performance, and social skills Deficits in
social/communications skills have been documented in schizophrenia, but
it is unclear how these deficits relate to cognitive deficits and to
everyday functioning.
Communication is best achieved through simple planning and control
(Blair, 1993).
[FIGURE 3 OMITTED]
To ensure an efficient and effective conversation, there are three
considerations:
* you must make your message understood
* you must receive/understand the intended message sent to you
* you should exert some control over the flow of the communication
It is important to view that words should be rather pragmatic than
philosophical. Thus, words mean not what the dictionary says they do but
rather what the speaker intended.
More usual, however, is that in thinking over several alternatives
you may suffer a momentary confusion and say one of them while meaning
another. There are good scientific reasons (to do with the associative
nature of the brain) why this happens, you have to be aware of the
potential problem and counter for it.
The problem is to choose from the word multiple meanings the one
intended. Especially when the waves of communication are made via
Internet, the real meaning might be obstructed by the poor communication
codes. Basic a luck of trust due to the only virtual contact of the
sender & receiver is breaking the communication waves.
3. ADAPTING PSYCHOLOGICAL TESTS
In the heretofore research, we have tried to define the
psychological profile which must be in keeping with the specifically
profile demanded by the virtual construct and we chosen California
Psychological Inventory.
After the successively application on the group (62 students) we
have discovered that the profile anterior defined is not adequate with
the requirements which are implied by the virtual communication
environment. Hereupon, in the evaluation and analysis of the
psychological profile, we made a point of a Myers-Briggs Type Indicator to be introduced.
Psychometric and conceptual analyses of the CPI instrument have
identified three basic dimensions underlying scores on the folk and
special purpose scales. Two of these themes are manifestations of
fundamental orientations--toward people and toward societal values. The
third is an indicator of ego integration or competence as seen by
others, or self-realization as seen by the respondent. (Gough & all,
1996). The first scale assesses a continuum going from a participative,
involved, and extraversive orientation at the low end, to a detached,
internal, and introversive orientation at the high pole. The second
scale) assesses a continuum going from a norm-questioning, rule-doubting
orientation at one extreme, to a norm-accepting, rule-favoring
orientation at the other. Each type or lifestyle has its own specific
modes of self-actualization and its own specific modes of
psychopathology. Level of ego integration or self-realization is
indicated by scores on the third scale.
The MBTI[R] (Myers-Briggs Type Indicator[R]), one of the most well
used personality indicators used in the psychological fields today, is
designed to help to understand the unique personality and the way you
relate to others around you.
[FIGURE 4 OMITTED]
The Myers-Briggs (MBTI) personality test is based on Carl
Jung's theory of Personality Types (Hirsh & all, 2003). This
theory suggests that there are two different ways of gaining energy,
gathering or becoming aware of information, making decisions and dealing
with the outside world. This instrument for measuring a person's
preferences is using four basic scales with opposite poles.
The four scales are: extraversion/introversion, sensate/intuitive,
thinking/feeling, and judging/perceiving. The various combinations of
these preferences result in 16 personality types which own the rights to
the instrument. Types are typically denoted by four letters--for
example, INTJ (Introversion, Intuition with Thinking and Judging)-to
represent one's tendencies on the four scales (figure 4).
MBTI is a tool that can be used to achieve effective communication
with other people. People receive, process, and act upon information
differently. If you understand their preferences and then communicate in
a way that they understand, chances are you will not only get what you
expected, but those with whom you communicate will feel good about how
they received and acted on your communication.
4. CONCLUSION
Virtual teams can be described as teams with virtual communication
links and groupware products (Gould, 1999). We observed that a
person's MBTI preference could be the key to becoming a good
communicator. We have to understand how people receive, perceive, and
understand what someone asks them to do. If we understand what motivates
them, we can communicate the necessity of the task in a manner that they
perceive and receive it as important, and the task will be as important
to them as to the sender.
That is the reason why we adapted our CPI based test used in human
resources evaluation in order to include those new profiles adapted from
MBTI. Using those personalized test one can quantify the communication
skills of human resources working in VE environment.
5. REFERENCES
Blair, G. M., (1993) Starting to Manage: The Essential Skills,
Publisher: Chartwell-Bratt Ltd, ISBN-10: 0862383366
Dunning, J. H. (1993) Multinational Enterprise and the World
Economy, Addison-Wesley Publishing Company.
Gough, H. G. & Bradley, P. (1996). The California Psychological
Inventory[TM] manual--Third edition (2002 Printing). Palo Alto, CA: CPP,
Inc.
Gould, D., "Virtual Teams" (1999), available from:
http://www.seanet.com/[sim]daveg/vrteams.htm. Accessed: 2007-09-17
Hirsh, E., Hirsh, K. W., & Hirsh, S. K. (2003). Introduction to
Type(r) and teams (2nd ed.). Palo Alto, CA: CPP, Inc.
Katzy, B. R., (1998), Virtual Enterprise and Europe's Global
Competitiveness, in: Proceedings of the Competing in the Information
Society, Genoa, CEC.