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How to Communicate
with Your Hispanic Employees
©1998
Trula M. LaCalle, Ph.D.
Organizational Consultant, Facilitator, and Trainer
Bella
International, Inc.
mailto:lacalle@Bellaii.com
(888) LACALLE (888)522-2553
Most interpersonal conflicts in the workplace develop as a result of poor communication.
Understanding and being understood can be difficult--even among people with the same language
and culture. When employers in agriculture or industry must communicate across cultural lines
with their immigrant Hispanic employees, communication difficulties are easily compounded.
Employers may not worry about whether they're communicating effectively with immigrant
Hispanics when work seems to be moving along smoothly, but the fact that work is getting done does not mean that
communication has occurred. Measuring the success of communication in this simplistic way ignores the true potential of
productivity, safety, and employee satisfaction. Needless to say, when conflicts arise, the issue of faulty communication quickly
comes to the forefront.
Communicating with Hispanic employees involves much more than speaking in a common language, although the language barrier
is often the first barrier to overcome. English speaking employers too frequently assume that an employee who speaks broken or
heavily accented English means that the Hispanic is not capable of understanding what is needed on the job. As a result, the
employer does not take the time to carefully explain and to be sure that the message has been completely understood.
Non-Hispanic supervisors must guard against this subtle bias.
If a Spanish-speaking person is needed to translate, a common error is too assume that an employee with an Hispanic surname
speaks Spanish or that he or she speaks Spanish well enough to communicate effectively in that language. In a similar error, an
employer may assume that a Spanish-speaking employee who speaks English, can read English well enough to clearly understand
what is contained in written instructions.
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Culture--Like Another Language
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Recognizing the Uniqueness of the Individual
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Non-Verbal Communication
- Differences in Communication Style
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Communicating About Time
- The Benefits of Cross-Cultural Awareness
Note: The entire text of this article, including information regarding
the above headings, is available free to the clients of Trula LaCalle.
Clients may call and request which articles are of interest to them.
e-mail: lacalle@Bellaii.com
phone: (888) LACALLE (888) 522-2553
fax: (707) 874-2136
Sacramento and Sonoma Counties,
California, USA
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