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Effective Unit Communications

Effective Unit Communications. Twishansh Mehta mehtat2@asme.org. Tim Ganger gangert2@asme.org. After this session, you will be able to: Understand the fundamentals of effective communications. Apply these fundamentals to communicating within your unit volunteers.

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Effective Unit Communications

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  1. Effective Unit Communications Twishansh Mehta mehtat2@asme.org Tim Ganger gangert2@asme.org

  2. After this session, you will be able to: Understand the fundamentals of effective communications. Apply these fundamentals to communicating within your unit volunteers. Apply these fundamentals to communicating to your unit membership. Understand what communications tools are available from ASME. Session Objectives

  3. Session Outline • Principles of Communications • Communicating with your Unit • Breakout Group Activity • Communicating to your Members • Breakout Group Activity • ASME Communications Resources

  4. Principles of Communications • The Communications Process NOISE

  5. Principles of Communications SMART Principles • Specific – your message • Measureable – your feedback • Attainable – your medium • Realistic – your medium • Time Bound – message delivered at the right time

  6. Principles of Communications • The Basics WHO WHAT DID IT WORK? WHEN and HOW

  7. Communicating with your Unit Who is communicating with whom? Types of Volunteers • Students • Employed • Retired • Academics • Mobile • Disabled

  8. Communicating with your Unit What do you want to communicate? • Unit Planning • Task Assignments (Action Items) • Task Follow-up • Brainstorming Ideas • Asking for Help • Offering and Providing Help • Decisions

  9. Communicating with your Unit When do I communicate my message? • Real time or delayed? • How far in advance? • What day of the week? • What time of day? • Students: when I’m not in class. • Employed: when I’m not at work. • Mobile: when I’m not travelling. • Everyone: when I’m not asleep.

  10. Communicating with your Unit Mediums and Tools

  11. Communicating with your Unit Did it Work? Getting Feedback • Did my message get to the receiver? • Acknowledgement by receiver of receipt. • Was my message decoded correctly? • Action item completed and completed correctly. • Response reflects what was asked. • Comments were recorded down correctly. • Help was offered or declined. • Were questions asked?

  12. Communicating with your Unit Group Activity • On each table is a description of a unit activity. • Create a plan to effectively communicate instructions to your volunteers to execute the activity seamlessly. • Consider who needs to be involved. • What their communication preferences are. • When and how to communicate. • Ensuring successful communication to ensure successful execution.

  13. Communicating with your Members • What is the makeup of your membership? • Student members • Professional members • Retirees • International members

  14. Communicating with your Members • What barriers exist making communication difficult and how do you work around them? • Language barrier • Technology barriers • Time zones

  15. Communicating with your Members • What do you want/need to communicate? • Activities • Meeting dates/times • Member benefits

  16. Communicating with your Members • How do you communicate it? • Social media (Facebook, Twitter, LinkedIn etc.) • ASME Webpages • Non-ASME Webpages • E-mail • Phone calls • Text messages

  17. Communicating with your Members • How do you know if your communication was effective? • Read receipts on e-mails • Webpage visit tracking • Social media activity

  18. Communicating with your Members • Group Activity • Take the activity you designed in the earlier group activity and create a communications plan to market it to your members, and to receive their feedback afterwards.

  19. ASME Communications Resources Online Unit Roster and List-Serve ASME Letterhead ASME PeerLink Newsletter Templates Web Site Best Practices and Server Space Member Recruitment and Retainment Kit

  20. Summary of Key Points • Communication is a process between a sender and receiver • SMART communications strategies apply within your unit and with your members. • There are numerous tools and mediums available from ASME and in the public domain to effectively get your message across to your desired target.

  21. Communications

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