Communication
What is the communication cycle exactly? It basically involves the conveying and receiving of messages between two individuals or entities in an easy-to-understand format. Talking and even listening are all methods of communication.
Our ability to assign values to sounds, signs, and symbols makes
us different from all other animals on earth. Author and professor Yuval Noah
Harari in his book, Sapiens: A Brief History of Humankind, laid emphasis on the
importance of language in making humans "the smartest animals" on
this planet. Thanks to communication, we are now able to do many things that
were unimaginable to our cave-dwelling ancestors.
The language was developed as a means of surviving and thriving and that is true even in present times. You may be an acclaimed artist, programmer, engineer, or business person and excel in your field, but if you can’t communicate effectively, you won’t be able to thrive.
What is the communication process?
The communication process starts with the formation of ideas by
the sender, who then transmits the message through a channel or medium to the
receiver. The receiver gives the feedback in the form of a message or
appropriate signal in the given time frame to continue the communication cycle.
![]() |
| Communication Cycle |
There are seven important elements of the communication process. Here are the details:
The process of communication starts with the sender. This is the entity that will use the means of communication to share her thoughts. The sender starts the communication cycle by deciding to convey her thoughts and chooses the format to use.
The sender manages her thoughts, seeks clarity, and decides what
exactly she wants to put forth. The sender needs to gather the required
information and relevant ideas in order to communicate. For example, a writer
begins with an idea and transforms it into a book.
Encoding is the step in the process of communication where the sender decides how she wants to convey her thoughts. Selecting the right words, associated symbols in verbal communication or gestures, tones and sounds in non-verbal communication are ways of encoding a thought.
To make encoding easier, it is imperative to know who is the receiver. For example, Ruskin Bond writes clean and short sentences that invoke visuals to instill wonder among his readers, children.
3. Message
A message is formed after the sender decides what she wants to put forth and how she wants to convey it. It’s also known as encoding. The nature of the message can change depending on the medium you use and the audience for which it is meant. Always remember that for a communication to be successful, it is important that the listener or reader understands the message.
4. Channel or medium
In order to better explain the process of communication, one has to pay close attention to one crucial wheel of this cycle, which is the medium. This screen that you’re reading this article on, the newspaper that slides in every morning through your door, the television you watch your favorite movies on are all mediums. It’s imperative to consider the medium used for information transmission while encoding the message or it fails to reach the audience effectively.
5. Receiver
The process of communication is incomplete without a receiver to ‘lend an ear’. Whenever a sender writes, or says or sings or expresses anything, it’s meant to be read, or experienced. The receiver is a crucial part of this process.
The receiver gathers the information presented or broadcasted by the sender and begins to understand it. We take turns between being a sender and being a receiver. You are a receiver when you watch a movie, and a sender when you tell your friends how the movie was.
6. Decoding
No matter how well the message is crafted (or encoded), it will fail to make an impact if the receiver does not possess the tools to decode the message. For instance, a nine-year-old may not understand the point of Harari’s book.
While growing up, we also build the ability to decode various messages. Even if the word ‘beautiful’ has one meaning in all the dictionaries, globally, it would undoubtedly mean something different to different people. We decode any message by our own mechanisms, thoughts, memories, and create our own meaning.
7. Feedback
The process of communication is a long one. Communication does not
stop afterthought or idea is expressed or a sentence or a word is uttered.
It creates ripples through time, like a stone slung in a peaceful lake.
Feedback is one of the last stages of communication.

Very well written 👌😊❤️😘
ReplyDeletethanks ashish !!
DeleteGood efforts ✌️✌️✌️
ReplyDeletethanks gaur !!
DeleteGreat
ReplyDeletethanks bro !!
DeleteNice written
ReplyDeleteThanks Murthy !!
Delete