Updated October, 2009
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Don Hofstrand

Improving Business Communications

Don Hofstrand, extension value-added agriculture specialist, co-director Ag Marketing Resource Center, 641-423-0844, dhof@iastate.edu



Good relationships among family members are important for successful two-generation farming arrangements. Poor communications starve a relationship while good communications nourish it. So improving communication skills is important for success. But this doesn’t just happen. Both the receiver and the sender must work at developing verbal and listening skills.

Family Discussions

Do not allow ridicule, punishment, or lecturing in family discussions. Encourage listening, understanding, finding alternatives, commitment to action, and support for one another. Listen not only to what the other person is saying, but also to what he/she is feeling. Being respectful to all family members is important at all times.

For example, let’s examine a typical harvest discussion. It is the middle of harvest, and the combine has broken down. Jack scrambles to find out what has gone wrong. After he identifies what has broken, he calls his wife, Carol, to go to the dealership and buy the needed parts. Carol drops what she is doing and heads for the car to make a fast trip to town. Within the hour she is in the field, parked next to the combine. She hands him the boxes with the parts in them. Upon opening the boxes he stops for a moment, looks at the parts, and snaps, “You got the wrong parts. How could you have done something so stupid?”

Carol feels hurt by Jack’s response. Her natural reaction is to respond to his anger with her own anger. She responds, “These are the parts that you told me to get. You must have told me the wrong thing.” From here on, the conversation focuses on who was to blame, rather than how to solve the situation.

Attack, counterattack, withdraw
The discussion above follows the traditional pattern when something goes wrong. Jack is angry because these are the wrong parts. He feels a need to vent his anger, so he attacks Carol. He accuses her of making a mistake (although it could have been his mistake or the dealership’s mistake). She feels hurt by his comments, so she counterattacks. This series of counterattacks continues until one of the parties withdraws from the conversation. The next time he calls on her to do an errand, a very tense situation may arise.

Holding our feelings
Instead of counterattacking, Carol could have held her feelings in when Jack attacked her. In this case, the situation would not have escalated. But Carol would harbor these feelings until they were vented later.

Sharing our feelings
Making judgments tends to isolate us. Jack made a judgment that Carol had gotten the wrong parts, and Carol felt attacked and isolated. But sharing our feelings helps to connect us. If Jack would have responded, “these are the wrong parts. I am upset because we are wasting a good harvesting day. Could you go back to town?” Knowing how Jack felt, Carol would probably have rushed back to town.

Making judgments vs. sharing emotions

Judgments and emotions are different. Judgmental statements are “I am right, you are wrong.” Statements of emotions are “I am angry, I am afraid, and I am worried.” Judgments are often the result of how we feel. It is often an expression of our feelings.

Judgments are much more likely to be heard as criticisms than are feelings. If I say, “You are wrong,” you are likely to feel criticized and attacked. As soon as we feel critized, it is hard to hear anything else that is said. Our mind is consumed by the criticism.

However, if I say, “I am angry,” you are less likely to feel attacked. This is because expressions of emotion (how we feel) are true statements. If I say that “you are wrong,” you will probably disagree. But if I say that “I am angry,” no one can argue.

Although expressing our feelings seems to make us vulnerable, they really make us safer. If we make a judgment and attack the other person, we are isolating them and inviting them to counterattack. However, if we share how we feel, we are exposing ourselves to the other person. This makes it easier for the other person to respond in kind. Both people feel safer.

Ideas versus feelings
Communicating ideas brings our minds together. But communicating emotions brings our hearts together.

In farm families, it is often assumed that we should share ideas but keep our feelings to ourselves. But emotions are very powerful and cannot be ignored. Feelings are more important than ideas at influencing us.

Keys to effective communication

Below are keys to effective communications. But just reading these points will not improve your communication skills. You must practice them. Practice them until they become habits.