This MCQ module is based on: Communication, Barriers & Exercises
Communication, Barriers & Exercises
This assessment will be based on: Communication, Barriers & Exercises
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7.13 Communication — Concept & Process
Communication is the fourth and most pervasive element of directing. As NCERT puts it, "How much professional knowledge and intelligence a manager possesses becomes immaterial if he is not able to communicate effectively with his subordinates and create understanding in them. Directing abilities of a manager mainly depend upon his communication skills." An ex-president of the American Management Association once observed that communication is the number-one management problem.
The word communication is derived from the Latin word communis meaning "common", which implies common understanding. Generally, communication? is understood as the process of exchange of ideas, views, facts and feelings between or among people to create common understanding.
"Communication is transfer of information from the sender to the receiver with the information being understood by the receiver." — Harold Koontz & Heinz Weihrich
"Communication is a process by which people create and share information with one another in order to reach common understanding." — Rogers
Elements of the Communication Process
Communication is defined as a process. The process involves eight elements — sender, message, encoding, media/channel, decoding, receiver, feedback and noise.
| # | Element | Description |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Sender | The person who conveys his thoughts or ideas to the receiver — the source of communication. |
| 2 | Message | The content of ideas, feelings, suggestions or orders intended to be communicated. |
| 3 | Encoding | The process of converting the message into communication symbols — words, pictures, gestures. |
| 4 | Media / Channel | The path through which the encoded message is transmitted — written, face-to-face, phone, Internet. |
| 5 | Decoding | The process of converting the encoded symbols back into meaning by the receiver. |
| 6 | Receiver | The person who receives the communication. |
| 7 | Feedback | All those actions of the receiver indicating that he has received and understood the message. |
| 8 | Noise | Any obstruction or hindrance to communication — may be in sender, message or receiver. Examples: ambiguous symbols, poor phone line, inattentive receiver, faulty decoding, prejudices, distorting gestures. |
Importance of Communication — Seven NCERT Benefits
It has been estimated that a manager spends 90 per cent of his time in communicating — reading, writing, listening, guiding, instructing, approving, reprimanding. Effectiveness depends significantly on the ability to communicate with superiors, subordinates and external agencies (bankers, suppliers, unions, government).
- Acts as basis of coordination — Provides coordination among departments, activities and persons by explaining organisational goals, modes of achievement and inter-relationships.
- Helps smooth working of an enterprise — Communication is basic to an organisation's existence — from its birth through its continuing life. "When communication stops, organised activity ceases to exist."
- Acts as basis of decision-making — Provides needed information for decisions; in its absence, no meaningful decision is possible.
- Increases managerial efficiency — Communication is essential for quick and effective performance of all managerial functions — conveying goals, issuing instructions, allocating jobs, looking after performance.
- Promotes cooperation & industrial peace — Two-way communication promotes cooperation and mutual understanding between management and workers, sustaining industrial peace.
- Establishes effective leadership — Effective communication helps to influence subordinates; a leader must possess good communication skills.
- Boosts morale & provides motivation — Good communication enables management to motivate, influence and satisfy subordinates; assists in their adjustment with the physical and social aspects of work; improves human relations.
7.14 Formal & Informal Communication
Communication taking place within an organisation may be classified as formal or informal.
Formal Communication
Formal communication flows through official channels designed in the organisation chart. It may take place between superior and subordinate, subordinate and superior, or among same-cadre employees. Communications may be oral or written but are generally recorded and filed in the office. Formal communication is further classified as vertical (upward / downward) and horizontal (lateral).
Vertical — Upward
Flow of communication from subordinate to superior. Examples: applications for leave, submission of progress reports, requests for grants.
Vertical — Downward
Flow from superior to subordinate. Examples: notice to attend a meeting, ordering subordinates to complete an assignment, passing on top-management guidelines.
Horizontal / Lateral
Flow between one division and another. Example: a production manager contacts the marketing manager to discuss product delivery schedule, design and quality.
Formal Communication Networks — Five Types
① Single Chain
Exists between a supervisor and his subordinates. Since many levels exist in the organisation structure, communication flows from every superior to his subordinate through a single chain.
② Wheel
All subordinates under one superior communicate through him only — he is the hub. The subordinates are not allowed to talk among themselves directly.
③ Circular
Communication moves in a circle. Each person can communicate with his two adjoining persons. Communication flow is slow.
④ Free Flow
Each person can communicate with others freely. The flow of communication is fast in this network.
⑤ Inverted V
A subordinate is allowed to communicate with his immediate superior as well as his superior's superior. However, in the latter case, only prescribed communication takes place.
Informal Communication / Grapevine
Communication that takes place without following the formal lines of communication is called informal communication. The informal system is generally referred to as the grapevine? because it spreads throughout the organisation, with branches going out in all directions in utter disregard of authority levels. It arises out of employees' need to exchange views which cannot be expressed through formal channels — workers chit-chatting in the canteen about a superior's behaviour, or rumours about transfers.
The grapevine spreads rapidly and sometimes gets distorted. It is very difficult to detect the source. It generates rumours that are not authentic; people's behaviour is affected and work environment may be hampered. However, grapevine channels can be helpful — they carry information rapidly and can be useful to a manager. Intelligent managers use these channels to transmit information and to gauge subordinates' reactions; they use the positive aspects while minimising the negative aspects.
① Single Strand
Each person communicates to the other in sequence — a chain of one-on-one conversations.
② Gossip
One person communicates with all others on a non-selective basis — broadcasts to anyone willing to listen.
③ Probability
The individual communicates randomly with other individuals — no pattern.
④ Cluster
The individual communicates with only those people he trusts. Of the four types, NCERT identifies cluster as the most popular in organisations.
7.15 Barriers to Communication
Managers face several problems due to communication breakdowns or barriers. Barriers may prevent a communication, filter part of it, or distort its meaning. NCERT groups barriers into four broad categories: semantic, psychological, organisational and personal.
A. Semantic Barriers
Semantics? is the branch of linguistics dealing with the meaning of words and sentences. Semantic barriers concern problems in the encoding and decoding of message into words. They result from wrong words, faulty translation, different interpretations.
- Badly expressed message — Inadequate vocabulary, wrong word choice, omission of needed words. The intended meaning may not be conveyed.
- Symbols with different meanings — A word may have several meanings; the receiver must perceive the right one. Example: in "What is the value of this ring?", "I value our friendship", and "What is the value of learning computer skills?" — the word "value" carries three different meanings.
- Faulty translations — When messages drafted in one language (e.g., English) are translated to another (e.g., Hindi). If the translator is not proficient, mistakes change the meaning.
- Unclarified assumptions — Communications with hidden assumptions are subject to varied interpretation. Example: a boss says "Take care of our guest". The boss may mean transport, food and accommodation; the subordinate may interpret it as merely escorting the guest to a hotel.
- Technical jargon — Specialists may use technical jargon while explaining to non-specialists, who may not understand many such words.
- Body language and gesture decoding — Every body movement communicates meaning. If there is no match between what is said and what is expressed in body movement, communication is wrongly perceived.
B. Psychological Barriers
Emotional or psychological factors act as barriers. A worried person cannot communicate properly; an angry receiver cannot understand the real meaning. The state of mind of both sender and receiver shapes effectiveness.
- Premature evaluation — Some people evaluate the meaning of a message before the sender completes it, often due to pre-conceived notions or prejudices.
- Lack of attention — A pre-occupied mind and resultant non-listening creates a major psychological barrier. Example: an employee explains a problem to the boss who is pre-occupied with an important file before him; the boss does not grasp the message and the employee is disappointed.
- Loss by transmission and poor retention — When communication passes through many levels, successive transmissions cause loss or inaccuracy — more so in oral communication. Poor retention is another problem; people cannot retain information for long if they are inattentive.
- Distrust — When parties do not believe each other, they cannot understand each other's message in its original sense.
C. Organisational Barriers
Factors related to organisation structure, authority relationships, rules and regulations may act as barriers.
- Organisational policy — If policy (explicit or implicit) is not supportive of free flow of communication, effectiveness is hampered. In highly centralised organisations, people may not be encouraged to communicate freely.
- Rules and regulations — Rigid rules and cumbersome procedures may be a hurdle; communication through prescribed channels causes delays.
- Status — Status differences create psychological distance. A status-conscious manager may not allow subordinates to express feelings freely.
- Complexity in organisation structure — Many managerial levels mean communication gets delayed and distorted as the number of filtering points grows.
- Organisational facilities — Facilities like frequent meetings, suggestion boxes, complaint boxes, social and cultural gatherings, and operational transparency encourage free flow. Lack of these creates communication problems.
D. Personal Barriers
The personal factors of both sender and receiver may exert influence on effective communication.
- Fear of challenge to authority — A superior may withhold or suppress communication if he perceives it may adversely affect his authority.
- Lack of confidence in subordinates — Superiors who do not have confidence in subordinates may not seek their advice or opinions.
- Unwillingness to communicate — Subordinates may not be prepared to communicate with superiors if they perceive it may adversely affect their interests.
- Lack of proper incentives — If there is no motivation/incentive for communication, subordinates may not take initiative. Example: if there is no reward or appreciation for a good suggestion, subordinates may not offer useful suggestions.
7.16 Improving Communication Effectiveness
Barriers exist in all organisations to a greater or lesser degree. Organisations keen on developing effective communication should adopt suitable measures.
① Clarify Ideas Before Communication
The problem to be communicated must be clear in all its perspective to the executive himself. The entire problem should be studied in depth, analysed, and stated so that it is clearly conveyed to subordinates.
② Communicate According to the Receiver's Needs
The level of understanding of the receiver should be crystal clear to the communicator. The manager must adjust his communication to the education and understanding levels of subordinates.
③ Consult Others Before Communicating
Before actually communicating, it is better to involve others in developing a plan. Participation and involvement of subordinates help gain ready acceptance and willing cooperation.
④ Be Aware of Languages, Tone & Content
Contents, tone, language and manner are all important. Language must be understandable to the receiver and not offend listeners' sentiments. The message should be stimulating to evoke response.
⑤ Convey Things of Help & Value to Listeners
Know the interests and needs of those you communicate with. If the message relates directly or indirectly to those interests, it certainly evokes a response.
⑥ Ensure Proper Feedback
Ask questions about the message conveyed. Encourage the receiver to respond. Communication is improved by feedback that makes it more responsive.
⑦ Communicate for Present & Future
Communication is needed to meet existing commitments — but to maintain consistency, it should also aim at future goals of the enterprise.
⑧ Follow-Up Communications
There should be regular follow-up and review on the instructions given. Follow-up measures help remove hurdles in implementing instructions.
⑨ Be a Good Listener
The manager must be a good listener. Patient and attentive listening solves half of the problems. Managers should also indicate their interest in listening to subordinates' viewpoints.
7.17 Indicative Visualisation — Communication Breakdown Causes
The chart below is a pedagogical sample showing the relative incidence of the four NCERT barrier categories in typical Indian organisations. Numbers are illustrative — the lesson is that multiple barriers operate simultaneously, and that psychological and organisational barriers together account for the bulk of breakdowns.
A manager sends a long e-mail at midnight to twenty employees asking for "input on the Q3 plan ASAP". By morning, only three responded; two complained the message was unclear; one forwarded it to the wrong person. Identify at least five NCERT barriers in operation here and pair each with a NCERT measure to fix it.
- Badly expressed message (semantic — "ASAP" is vague) → Clarify ideas before communicating.
- Unclarified assumptions (what does "input" mean?) → Communicate according to receiver's needs.
- Lack of attention / Loss by transmission (midnight email) → Be aware of tone and channel.
- Organisational facilities (no team meeting, only email) → Hold a follow-up meeting.
- Lack of feedback / Be a good listener (one-way email) → Ensure proper feedback.
- Lack of incentives (no reason to respond fast) → Convey value to listener (explain why their input matters).
NCERT calls cluster the most popular grapevine network. Should an intelligent manager actively use it, or seek to suppress it? Argue both sides using the NCERT-listed positive and negative aspects.
- Use it (NCERT positives): ① carries information rapidly; ② lets manager gauge subordinate reactions; ③ surfaces sentiment that formal channels miss; ④ NCERT explicitly says the manager "should make use of positive aspects of informal channels."
- Suppress it (NCERT negatives): ① rapidly distorted; ② source untraceable; ③ generates rumours; ④ may hamper work environment.
- Resolution (NCERT recommendation): Neither suppress nor surrender — "make use of positive aspects… and minimise negative aspects." Treat the grapevine as a sensor and a delivery channel, but feed it accurate information so that rumours do not fill the vacuum.
7.18 Conclusion — Tying the Four Elements Together
The chapter began with Ford's "warrior-entrepreneur" leadership challenge and ends with the recognition that all four elements of directing — supervision, motivation, leadership and communication — are inseparable in practice. A supervisor without communication skills cannot guide; a motivator without leadership cannot inspire; a leader who cannot communicate cannot lead. Together, they form the execution engine of management — converting plans into action through people.
📋 Chapter Summary (NCERT)
Directing is a complex managerial function that consists of all activities designed to encourage subordinates to work effectively. It includes supervision, motivation, communication and leading. Principles guiding effective directing relate to the purpose of directing (e.g., maximum individual contribution, harmony of objectives) and the process (unity of command, appropriate technique, follow-through).
Supervision is an element of direction. It can be understood as a process as well as a function performed by the supervisor at the operative level. It is closely linked to overseeing work, guiding employees and ensuring targets are met.
Motivation is the process of stimulating people to action to accomplish desired goals. It is internal, leads to goal-directed behaviour and is mainly based on individuals' needs. Maslow's hierarchy of needs — physiological, safety, affiliation, esteem and self-actualisation — explains motivational diagnosis. Managers offer both financial incentives (salary, bonus, profit sharing, pension, stock options) and non-financial incentives (status, promotion, responsibility, job enrichment, recognition, security, participation, empowerment).
Leadership is the process of influencing people to strive willingly for group objectives. Qualities of a good leader include courage, will-power, judgement, knowledge, integrity, physical energy, faith, fairness, vitality, decisiveness and social skills — though no individual possesses all. Three classic styles: autocratic, democratic, laissez-faire.
Communication refers to the process of exchange of ideas to create understanding. The process involves source, encoding, channel, receiver, decoding and feedback. Both formal communication (orders, memos, circulars, agenda) and informal/grapevine communication (rumours, whispers — unofficial, spontaneous, fast, often distorted) take place. Several barriers — semantic, organisational, language, transmission, psychological, personal — may exist; managers must take measures to overcome them and promote effective communication.
🔑 Key Terms (NCERT)
📝 NCERT Exercises — Full Model Answers
A. Very Short Answer Type
Q1. What is informal communication?
Q2. Which style of leadership does not believe in use of power unless it is absolutely essential?
Q3. Which element in the communication process involves converting the message into words, symbols, gestures etc.?
Q4. The workers always try to show their inability when any new work is given to them. They are always unwilling to take up any kind of work. Due to sudden rise in demand a firm wants to meet excess orders. The supervisor is finding it difficult to cope up with the situation. State the element of directing that can help the supervisor in handling the problem.
Q5. State the four elements of directing as identified by NCERT.
B. Short Answer Type
Q1. What are semantic barriers of communication?
Q2. Explain the process of motivation with the help of a diagram.
Q3. State the different networks of grapevine communications.
Q4. Explain any three principles of Directing.
Q5. In an organisation, one of the departmental managers is inflexible and once he takes a decision, he does not like to be contradicted. As a result, employees always feel they are under stress and they take least initiative and fear to express their opinions and problems before the manager. What is the problem in the way authority is being used by the manager?
Q6. A reputed hostel, GyanPradan provides medical aid and free education to children of its employees. Which incentive is being highlighted here? State its category and name any two more incentives of the same category.
C. Long Answer Type
Q1. Discuss Maslow's Need Hierarchy theory of motivation.
- Basic Physiological Needs — most basic; correspond to primary needs. Examples: hunger, thirst, shelter, sleep, sex. In organisations, basic salary helps satisfy these.
- Safety / Security Needs — provide security and protection from physical and emotional harm. Examples: job security, stability of income, pension plans.
- Affiliation / Belonging Needs — refer to affection, sense of belongingness, acceptance and friendship.
- Esteem Needs — include self-respect, autonomy, status, recognition and attention.
- Self-Actualisation Needs — highest level. Refers to the drive to become what one is capable of becoming — growth, self-fulfilment and achievement of goals.
Q2. What are the common barriers to effective communication? Suggest measures to overcome them.
- Semantic Barriers — badly expressed message, symbols with different meanings, faulty translation, unclarified assumptions, technical jargon, body-language mismatch.
- Psychological Barriers — premature evaluation, lack of attention, loss by transmission and poor retention, distrust between communicator and communicate.
- Organisational Barriers — restrictive organisational policy, rigid rules and regulations, status differences, complexity in structure (many filtering levels), lack of organisational facilities (meetings, suggestion boxes, social gatherings).
- Personal Barriers — fear of challenge to authority, lack of confidence in subordinates, unwillingness to communicate, lack of proper incentives.
- Clarify ideas before communication.
- Communicate according to the receiver's needs.
- Consult others before communicating.
- Be aware of languages, tone and content of message.
- Convey things of help and value to listeners.
- Ensure proper feedback.
- Communicate for present as well as future.
- Follow up communications.
- Be a good listener — patient and attentive listening solves half the problems.
Q3. Explain different financial and non-financial incentives used to motivate employees of a company.
- Pay and Allowances — basic pay + dearness allowance + other allowances; regular increments; some firms link pay hike to performance.
- Productivity-Linked Wage Incentives — wage incentive plans tied to productivity at individual or group level.
- Bonus — incentive offered over and above wages/salary.
- Profit Sharing — sharing profits with employees to motivate higher contribution.
- Co-partnership / Stock Option — employees offered shares at below-market price; creates a sense of ownership. Infosys uses stock options as part of managerial compensation.
- Retirement Benefits — provident fund, pension, gratuity provide financial security after retirement.
- Perquisites — car allowance, housing, medical aid, children's education and other fringe benefits over and above salary.
- Status — ranking of positions; satisfies psychological, social and esteem needs.
- Organisational Climate — characteristics that influence individual behaviour: autonomy, reward orientation, consideration, risk-taking.
- Career Advancement Opportunity — skill development + sound promotion policy; promotion works as a tonic.
- Job Enrichment — designing jobs with greater variety, autonomy and personal growth — making the job itself a motivator.
- Employee Recognition Programmes — congratulations, notice-board displays, awards, mementos, rewards for valuable suggestions.
- Job Security — stability of future income and work; particularly important in India.
- Employee Participation — joint management committees, work committees, canteen committees.
- Employee Empowerment — giving subordinates more autonomy and powers, making them feel their job is important.
Q4. In an organisation all the employees take things easy and are free to approach anyone for minor queries and problems. This has resulted in everyone taking to each other and thus resulting in inefficiency in the office. It has also resulted in loss of secrecy and confidential information being leaked out. What system do you think the manager should adopt to improve communication?
Specific actions:
- Implement vertical formal communication — define upward (subordinate-to-superior reports) and downward (superior-to-subordinate orders) channels.
- Implement horizontal/lateral formal communication — define cross-departmental protocols (e.g., production manager contacts marketing manager only on scheduled review meetings).
- Choose appropriate communication networks: a Wheel network for supervisor-led teams (supervisor as hub); a Single-Chain network for hierarchical communication; or an Inverted-V network when occasional cross-level access is essential.
- Record and file written communications for audit and confidentiality.
- Restrict access to confidential information through formal authorisation rules.
- Do not eliminate the grapevine entirely — NCERT advises managers to "make use of positive aspects of informal channels and minimise negative aspects." Use the grapevine to sense employee mood, but make all important business decisions through formal channels.
Q5. Explain the importance of directing and the principles guiding effective directing.
- Initiates action — every action in the organisation is started through directing; planning, organising and staffing only set the stage.
- Integrates employees' efforts — every individual effort contributes to organisational performance.
- Helps realise potential — guides employees to fully use their capabilities through motivation and effective leadership.
- Facilitates change — reduces resistance through motivation, communication and leadership.
- Brings stability and balance — fosters cooperation and commitment among groups, activities and departments.
- Reconciles individual and organisational goals — aligns personal aspirations with strategic objectives.
- Maximum Individual Contribution — bring out untapped energies through suitable rewards.
- Harmony of Objectives — reconcile employee and organisational goals.
- Unity of Command — instructions from one superior only.
- Appropriateness of Direction Technique — match style to subordinate's needs and the situation.
- Managerial Communication — clear, two-way, with feedback.
- Use of Informal Organisation — leverage grapevine for effective directing.
- Leadership — exercise good leadership to influence positively.
- Follow Through — review continuously and modify if needed.
Q6. Explain the qualities of a good leader. Do they alone guarantee leadership success?
Do these alone guarantee success? No. NCERT explicitly states that "all good leaders may not necessarily possess all the qualities of a good leader. In fact, it is not possible for any individual to have all the qualities. But an understanding about these qualities helps the managers to acquire them through training and conscious efforts." Equally important is the leader–follower relationship: "followers make a person a good leader by acceptance of leadership." Followers' skills, commitment and willingness to cooperate are decisive. Hence leadership success depends on three things together — leader qualities + follower acceptance + situational fit (autocratic/democratic/laissez-faire matched to context).
Q7. Explain the elements of communication process and the importance of communication in management.
- Sender — source of communication; conveys thoughts/ideas.
- Message — content of ideas, suggestions, orders, etc.
- Encoding — converting message into symbols (words, pictures, gestures).
- Media / Channel — path of transmission (written, face-to-face, phone, Internet).
- Decoding — converting encoded symbols back into meaning.
- Receiver — person who receives the communication.
- Feedback — receiver's response indicating receipt and understanding.
- Noise — obstruction or hindrance (ambiguous symbols, poor phone, inattentive receiver, prejudices, distorting gestures).
- Acts as basis of coordination across departments and persons.
- Helps smooth working — when communication stops, organised activity ceases.
- Acts as basis of decision making — provides needed information.
- Increases managerial efficiency — for issuing instructions, allocating jobs, supervising performance.
- Promotes cooperation and industrial peace — through two-way understanding.
- Establishes effective leadership.
- Boosts morale and provides motivation; improves human relations.
D. Case Study Questions (NCERT-style application)
Case 1: Ford's "Warrior-Entrepreneur" Initiative — Ford Motor Company has launched a sweeping cultural overhaul to mass-manufacture leaders. CEO Jim Hackett wants to make Ford "the world's most trusted mobility company". (a) Identify the element of directing being emphasised. (b) Suggest two principles of directing Ford should follow. (c) Recommend one leadership style most suitable for grassroot leaders.
Case 2: Tata Steel's Motivation System — Tata Steel uses talent reviews, job rotation, performance-linked compensation, formal rewards, leadership opportunities in quality circles, and an "MD Online" multi-path communication system. (a) Identify two financial and two non-financial incentives in this case. (b) Map the system to Maslow's five levels.
(b) Maslow Mapping:
- Physiological: base salary covered through performance-linked compensation.
- Safety: stability via formal rewards system + job rotation that maintains employability.
- Affiliation: meetings, conferences, seminars build belonging.
- Esteem: formal recognition systems, awards, leadership in quality circles confer status.
- Self-Actualisation: "freedom to work, freedom to innovate, even the freedom to fail" lets employees grow to their full potential — which is why NCERT cites Tata Steel as a "World Class" steelmaker.
Case 3: Rashmi's Demotivation — Rashmi Joshi was a strong district sales manager passed over for promotion. She became despondent and her work deteriorated. The new marketing manager's first task was to re-motivate her. (a) Which Maslow needs were unmet? (b) Suggest two financial and two non-financial incentives the new manager could use.
Case 4: Communication Crisis — A multinational has hundreds of employees across India. Important policy emails sent in English are misunderstood; rumours spread through canteen chats faster than official notices; and a new CEO complains he never gets honest feedback from junior staff. Identify the barriers and recommend four measures.
- Semantic — faulty translation: English emails not understood by Hindi/regional staff.
- Organisational — complexity in structure: multiple managerial levels distort messages; rumours fill the gap.
- Personal — unwillingness to communicate + fear of challenge to authority: junior staff withhold honest feedback from the CEO.
- Psychological — distrust: when official channels are slow, grapevine fills the vacuum and is believed more.
- Communicate according to receiver's needs — translate critical emails into Hindi and regional languages; use simple language.
- Be aware of language, tone and content — pre-test important communications; avoid jargon.
- Ensure proper feedback — institute "MD Online" style direct-line town-halls (Tata Steel example) so juniors can speak to the CEO without filtering.
- Be a good listener / Follow up — train all managers in patient listening; the CEO follows up on each promise made in town-halls; confidential suggestion boxes for sensitive issues. Manager should also use the grapevine constructively — feeding accurate information into informal channels reduces rumour-driven distortion.
Case 5: A factory supervisor must shift workers from a manual assembly process to a robotic line. Workers fear job loss and resist change. Use NCERT directing principles, motivation theory and leadership styles to design an integrated response.
① Communication first — clarify ideas, communicate per receiver's needs (in workers' language), consult workers before change. Address Maslow's safety/security needs head-on with a transparent "no retrenchment, only re-skilling" promise.
② Motivation — Financial: productivity-linked wage incentives on the new line + skill-acquisition bonus. Non-financial: career-advancement opportunity through robotics certification; employee participation in designing the new workflow; employee recognition for early adopters.
③ Leadership — start democratic (consult, listen) to overcome resistance; flex to autocratic only on safety rules around the robots; allow laissez-faire for skilled operators once trained.
④ Supervision — supervisor provides on-the-job training, sorts internal differences, gives feedback continuously, acts as the link between management and workers — exactly the seven NCERT roles.
Principles applied: Maximum individual contribution (everyone re-skilled), Harmony of objectives (workers see automation rewards them, not just the firm), Appropriate technique (different workers, different motivators), Managerial communication (two-way), Use of informal organisation (canteen ambassadors of change), Follow through (continuous review). The directing function thereby converts a resistance crisis into a productivity uplift.
📝 Competency-Based Questions — Communication & Integrative
Options: (A) Both A & R true, R correctly explains A · (B) Both true, R does not explain A · (C) A true, R false · (D) A false, R true.