As business becomes more internationalized and remotely distributed, many companies have a new goal to improve team communication skills through language learning. Of course, there are challenges to achieving these goals—how do team leads know their solutions will work? And how will they affect organizational communication as a whole? Keep on reading for our helpful guide on how to improve your organizational communication strategy.
What Is Organizational Communication?
Organizational communication refers to the process of creating, exchanging, interpreting, and sharing information within and among different levels, functions, and units of an organization.
It involves the flow of information, messages, and feedback among various individuals, groups, and departments within the organization, and can take various forms such as verbal, written, electronic, or nonverbal communication.
Effective business communication is crucial for the smooth functioning of an organization, as it
- enables employees to understand their roles and responsibilities
- facilitates coordination and collaboration
- builds relationships and trust
- promotes organizational goals and values
Examples of Organizational Communication
- Internal communication: This includes communication within an organization, such as between employees, departments, or teams. Examples include team meetings, memos, emails, newsletters, and intranet messages.
- External communication: This refers to communication between an organization and its stakeholders, including customers, clients, suppliers, and the general public. Examples include advertising, public relations, press releases, social media, and website content.
- Formal communication: This is communication that follows a specific chain of command or structure within an organization, such as instructions from management to employees or company policies and procedures.
- Informal communication: This is communication that occurs outside of formal channels and can be informal, such as conversations between colleagues, social gatherings, and water-cooler talk.
- Interpersonal communication: This refers to communication between individuals in an organization, such as between a manager and an employee or between co-workers.
- Nonverbal communication: This includes communication through body language, facial expressions, and tone of voice, which can convey messages without the use of words.
- Crisis communication: This refers to communication strategies used in response to a crisis or emergency situation, such as natural disasters, product recalls, or cyber-attacks.
How to Improve Your Organizational Communication Strategy with Language Learning
1. Use language learning processes as a model for business communication
When it comes to language training for professionals, consistency is key and can help create further learning opportunities for organizational communication across the company.
For example, managers who want to promote high engagement might send weekly emails to their teams, reminding them to take time to practice language skills. These routines can often be the difference between success and failure. The same practice can apply to similar structures in other parts of business communication.
Every company has core values and standard procedures that don’t always get reinforced. Through language learning, teams can practice putting the best intentions into action in the day-to-day, assessing small-scale roadblocks, finding solutions, and seeing results in a more contained way before applying these tactics more broadly.
2. Empower your employees to improve both team and organizational communication
To ensure language learning becomes beneficial to business communication as a whole, it’s crucial to nurture employee motivation. Rather than target one area of your company, encourage your employees to use the language skills for broader professional purposes as well.
This idea could take the form of organizing networking events or more informal “blind coffee” breaks between teammates from different parts of the organization – or better yet, from different parts of the world. Tandem exchanges are also exciting possibilities between coworkers who fluently speak and are learning the opposite languages. These short chats could be a fun and meaningful way to get to know other teammates and practice skills learned in self-study or a class.
One of the signs of having mastered something is being able to teach it to others. As your employees improve team communication, support them in communicating the steps they took to the rest of the company as well. Doing this can create connections you might not have seen otherwise, streamlining organizational communication in the process.
3. Find the joy in language learning
Better language skills can help individual and organizational communication across the board, provided that the people implementing them remain active and engaged.
Remind your learners why they are learning a new language to help maintain morale. The reasons might be specific to your company or more tailored to the individual — whether to experience a new culture, build self-confidence, or improve an area of the business.
Giving teams access to learning materials and helping them focus is essential. However, the light-hearted aspects of learning languages can contribute to team building too. Activities like foreign language film screenings after work can help cultivate motivation to improve language skills and make the importance of organizational communication feel more immediate by fostering more connection.
4. Get competitive
Besides tracking milestones and improvements, nothing is more motivating to improve team communication than some healthy competition. To keep things interesting, team events like a tournament to inspire learners to hone their language skills could be a great way to bring everyone together. Different departments could compete over who can complete the most lessons or win at trivia in the target language each month.
As you find creative solutions to keep your teams motivated, opportunities for teamwork and incentives for other parts of the business will arise organically. Language learning relies on openness and proactive engagement — and in time, the same benefits are likely to transfer to organizational communication processes as a whole.
5. Encourage management to get involved
We teamed up with Sodexo, a Fortune 500 food service company and one of the largest multinational organizations in the world with more than 420,000 employees from over 120 countries. Together, we worked with researchers at the University of Massachusetts (UMass) to conduct a ten-week study that would give us insight into what keeps language learners at Sodexo motivated.
A key finding was that when managers also learned a language, the rest of the team felt significantly more motivated. The researchers working with us from UMass wrote, “Strong support from site managers may positively impact employee use and view of Babbel. One manager even acted as a role model by using the mobile app to learn a foreign language, clocking in over 60 minutes a week with the app.”
In the study, the support and participation of managers likewise contributed to better organizational communication since everyone could share in the experience regardless of their position on an org chart.
The Takeaway
The strategic integration of language learning within your company’s communication strategy offers a multifaceted approach to enhancing both individual and organizational effectiveness. As the world becomes increasingly interconnected, the ability to communicate across cultural and linguistic divides becomes more than a beneficial skill—it becomes an essential component of business success.
By adopting the methods outlined—modeling communication strategies after language learning, empowering employees, injecting joy and competition into the learning process, and involving management—your organization can expect not only improved communication but also a stronger, more collaborative corporate culture. Embrace these strategies to ensure that your team is not only equipped to meet global challenges but is also motivated and connected in every interaction.
To learn more about incorporating a language learning strategy for better organizational communication, visit our website.