Culture map 1. Communicating, 2. Evaluating & 3. Persuading

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Slide 1: Tekstslide
INT1MBOStudiejaar 3

In deze les zitten 54 slides, met interactieve quizzen, tekstslides en 3 videos.

Onderdelen in deze les

Slide 1 - Tekstslide

Slide 2 - Tekstslide

Slide 3 - Tekstslide

The Culture Map
      Exploring cultural differences 




Q: how can we measure 'cultural differences'? 

Slide 4 - Tekstslide

The Culture Map

We will be exploring ('measuring') cultural differences, 
looking at 8  dimensions. 

These dimensions will be worked out on a 'map'.  
 
 

Slide 5 - Tekstslide

Slide 6 - Tekstslide

Slide 7 - Tekstslide

What is the biggest cultural
difference between Holland
and Spain?

Slide 8 - Woordweb

Slide 9 - Tekstslide

1. Communicating 

Slide 10 - Tekstslide

Slide 11 - Tekstslide

Business case

  • Purchase drill machine
  • Soilmec SR60 from India
  • Date of invoice: Dec. 13th
  • Purchase condition: new     paint, delivered port   within  6 weeks.  
 
 

Slide 12 - Tekstslide

Business case
So the machine MUST be shipped by January 25th to Mexico for a job at the airport of Mexico City.
 
Important and vital question (made in person by buyer at closing the deal): "Can you make it in time?"
Answer Indian supplier: "I think we are ok, we do our best"

 
 

Slide 13 - Tekstslide

"I think we are ok, we do
our best"
Is this answer a 'low-context'
one or a 'high-context' one?
A
Low context
B
High context

Slide 14 - Quizvraag

FYI : Mumbai port, February 26th 

Slide 15 - Tekstslide

Business case
Answer: "I think we are ok, we do our best"
Indian meant: 'difficult, almost impossible' 
German understood: 'ok', so all fine.  
 
 

Slide 16 - Tekstslide

Low context communication 
  •  Precise, detailed and specific
  •  Use of written confirmations ('so we meet for dinner at 20.15 hrs' 
  •  'No means no, yes means yes​' 
  •   'What you see is what you get'
  • ​   Use of contract​s
  •    Mainly in ‘open’ societies, countries with ​a relative short history                      ​(E.g. U.S.A. and  Australia).   
 
 

Slide 17 - Tekstslide

High context communication 
  •  Not specific, reading & listening between the lines
  •  Assumptions ( 'dinner will be around 20.00 or so, as usual, I reckon' )
  •  'Yes' means ' yes', and sometimes it means ' no' as well'
  •   A handshake to close a deal; 'a man a man, a word a word
  •   Mainly in ‘closes’ societies, countries with ​a relative long history ​                      (E.g. Japan and Iran).   
 
 

Slide 18 - Tekstslide

The image shows
closing a deal in a:
A
Low context country
B
High context country

Slide 19 - Quizvraag

Slide 20 - Video

In which way is Sandra Bullock communicating:
A
In a low context way
B
In a high context way

Slide 21 - Quizvraag


Mr. Díaz is a Spanish manager working in a plant in China. 
It is Friday and he received a call from an important client who likes to visit the plant on Sunday to see the production of a product in which he is interested to buy. 
Mr. Díaz is going to ask Mr. Chen if he can attend to this visit. 
 
 

Slide 22 - Tekstslide

Slide 23 - Tekstslide

Will Mr. Chen be working/receiving the client for a moment on Sunday?
A
Yes, of course
B
No way!

Slide 24 - Quizvraag

Work in progress
Please confirm  your group’s choice of a 3rd (Non-EU) country  to compare with ‘our own countries’. ​E.g.: U.S.A / China / Russia / Saudi Arabia / Brazil / Mexico/ Australia. ​

Twinspace:  visit Assignment 2-1 Communicating- ‘Low Context ​
vs High context’  for more background information as well as for  ​
a default ‘8 scales’ Excel sheet you can use as a tool. ​




Slide 25 - Tekstslide

Slide 26 - Tekstslide

2. Evaluating 

Slide 27 - Tekstslide

How can we describe 'feedback'?
What is 'feedback'?

Slide 28 - Woordweb

'Feedback'
'Information about reactions to a product, 
a person's performance of a task, etc. 
which is used as a basis
for improvement.'

Source: Oxford dictionary  
 

Slide 29 - Tekstslide

'Feedback'
Now an example of feedback to 'a person's performance 
which is used as a basis for improvement.'

Question to you: is this direct feedback or indirect feedback?  
 

Slide 30 - Tekstslide

Slide 31 - Video

How does the given
feedback by Simon
feel to you?
A
Direct feedback
B
Indirect feedback

Slide 32 - Quizvraag

Direct feedback  
  •  Can be direct to a member in a group/class/public
  •  Very clear: 'in order to improve results' 
  •  Feedback on a task  ≠ feedback of a person !! (someone can really like           the person but totally burn a task (report, job done) down to earth.                 Words used:  "It's nothing personal"
  •   Use of upgraders: 'very, extremely, totally etc
  • ​  'Bad is bad' => so no words as  'could be worse/better'
  •    E.g. Russia, Israel and The Netherlands   
 
 

Slide 33 - Tekstslide

Who has been totally, the very best, the even greatest 'upgrader' in the whole wide world in the last decade? 

Slide 34 - Tekstslide

Slide 35 - Video

Indirect feedback  
  •  One-on-one, personally (not in a group/public)
  •  Soft words, diplomatic, subtile  
  •  Avoiding 'losing of face/dignity'
  •   Use of downgraders: 'perhaps, it might be, a bit, in a way,                                      to some extend etc.' 
  • ​  E.g.  Japan, Saudi Arabia, Thailand    
 
 

Slide 36 - Tekstslide

Slide 37 - Tekstslide

'In the middle group'  
                     Feedback:   3 x positive, 1 negative
                     (last one is the 'real and decisive' one).
                   
                    Danger: missing the vital/real critics

Slide 38 - Tekstslide

Feedback towards a French manager working in the USA:
 "You work hard (1), you are doing well with co-workers (2), you understand the business (3), however your sales results  are not as expected"

French manager: "Thank you very much, this is the best work review I have ever received".
A month later: fired due to low sales results....

Slide 39 - Tekstslide

'In the middle group'  
                     Feedback:  full of 'undergraders'.
                                      
    
Danger: missing the 
true meaning of feedback 

Slide 40 - Tekstslide

Slide 41 - Tekstslide

What do British mean when saying:
"There is a small problem with our flight booking"
A
I have forgotten to book our flights
B
There is a minor and easy to repair problem with our tickets

Slide 42 - Quizvraag

What do British mean when saying:
"Lovely weather we are having"
A
Apparently, rain is considered good weather
B
This weather is awful

Slide 43 - Quizvraag

What do British mean when saying:
"I have felt better"
A
I feel a little bit worse than usual
B
I feel horrible. Why did I drink all that Guiness

Slide 44 - Quizvraag

3. Persuading/convincing 

Slide 45 - Tekstslide

How do you 'sell' your idea/ proposal/product?  
Same idea/proposal/ product, same arguments but....
Please find the difference!

Slide 46 - Tekstslide

Option A: International excursion   
Read the text carefully... try to think wether this is a 'why (because) first' or a 'how (result) first' way of 'selling' the international excursion to students. 

"The Mercedes Benz plant, a Bremerhaven tour and ending with a tour and beer tasting at Beck's brewery in Bremen. See here the first possibible destination which will be organised in the last week of March. As it is important during the 2nd grade to live and see from nearby theory in practice. Please let your tutor know a.s.a.p. whether you will join".​

Slide 47 - Tekstslide

Option B: International excursion   
Read the text carefully... try to think wether this is a 'why (because) first' or a 'how (result) first' way of 'selling' the international excursion to students. 

" During the 2nd grade it is important to live and see from nearby theory in     practice. Therefore, an international excursion will be organised in the last week of March. The first possible destination is Bremen: logistics (Bremerhaven), production (Mercedes Benz) and marketing (Beck’s brewery).​ 
Please let your tutor know a.s.a.p. whether you will join."​

Slide 48 - Tekstslide

Why first (principles first)​
- starting to explain theory, reason, concept, idea ​( 'the because') 
- ending with a fact, an opinion, conclusion, result​

How first (applications first)​
- first starting with a fact, opinion, conclusion or result​ ('the result')
- secondly explaining why/how one has com  to this fact, opinion,        
   conclusion, result​

Slide 49 - Tekstslide

How are daily news items build up in your country? 

We are going to read two texts with the same words.. though they seem different. 

Can you tell wether it 'why first' or  'how first'?

Slide 50 - Tekstslide

'This morning there has been the weekly meeting of the Government's COVID-19 team. In the meeting ministers and experts are joined. Today's advice is to enjoy life more, but maintaining the 1,5 meters. This means terraces can open again for the summer'​
This way of telling the news is in a:

A
Why first way
B
How first way

Slide 51 - Quizvraag

Can you see the difference?
'​The terraces can open again for the summer. Today's advice is to enjoy life more, but maintaining at 1,5 meters. This is the outcome of this morning's weekly meeting of the Government's COVID-19 team. In the meeting ministers and experts are joined.'​
This way of telling the news is in a:

A
Why first way
B
How first way

Slide 52 - Quizvraag

Today's job 
Please work out in your group the Evaluating and Persuading dimensions 
for your 3 countries.  ​




Slide 53 - Tekstslide

Slide 54 - Tekstslide