History
Redding was born on April 13, 1914, inWork
W. Charles Redding has been accredited for being one of the first people in the 1950s to develop organizational communication into aPostulates
In what can be considered the first reputable textbook in the field of Organizational Communication, ''Communication Within an Organization: The Interpretive Review of Theory and Research'', Redding discusses Ten Postulates of Organizational Communication. # Meanings are not transferred: This postulate refers more to the receptiveness of the receivers. If a message was not received correctly Redding refers to that as content fallacy. With the concept of content fallacy the sender believes that they are getting through to the receiver just because they, the sender, understand the message that is being sent. # Anything is a potential message: This postulate includes both verbal and non verbal cues and messages being received as a message. # Input (specifically listening): In his novel, Redding discusses how to be a good listener. He utilizes the example of a participative manager listening to his subordinates in an empathetic manner. # The message that is received is the one that will bring action: The message that is sent and received is the one that will be acted up on. Redding states that the receiver will reference their personal experiences as a point of reference to act up on the message received. # Feedback (Responsiveness and Receptiveness): This postulate deals with feedback within an organization from both managers and subordinates. Feedback receptiveness refers to how much feedback managers welcome from subordinates. Responsiveness refers to how much feedback managers give. Redding also notes that there is a difference between being open, responding, and being receptive to feedback are three separate things. # Cost Factor: Communication requires energy. Redding discusses the formula: efficiency = effectiveness/cost. Ultimately, more communication does not equal more effectiveness. # Redundancy: This postulates deals with the repetition of messages and how effective and comprehensive the messages are. # Communication Overload: This postulate deals with an individual's limit of processing messages. Messages may not be properly received if too many messages or noise is interfering with reception of messages. # Serial Transmission Effect: This postulate refers to change of meaning within a message. This can occur when information is traveling through various people within a network. Messages are liable to get distorted. # Organization's Climate: Redding believed that an organization's climate was far more important than its skills or techniques. He even theorized an " Ideal Managerial Climate" which consisted of 5 parts. #: a. Supportiveness #: b. Participative decision making #: c. Trust, confidence, and credibility #: d. Openness and candor #: e. Emphasis on high performance goals. In this same book, Redding supports these postulates with research from various studies. He was an avid believer in investigating messages and message related practices.The Redding Tradition
The Redding Tradition of scholarship shows the progression of organizational communication from its earliest beginnings as industrial communication and presentational skills to the contemporary framing of organizations as empirical instantiations of interpretive processes.Buzzanell, P. M. (1999).The Redding Tradition of Organizational Communication Scholarship. Communication Studies, 50(4), 324-337. For years, Redding gathered this information through quantitative investigations constructed to improve organizational practice. The Redding Tradition essentially began because Redding believed that communication could positively change workplace practices. It is believed that Redding saw the conceptual and pragmatic benefits of a field that could speak to different audiences' concerns, understand fundamental communication processes through a variety of data sources and methods, and be committed to helping shape a rapidly changing organizational lifeworld.Themes
Four themes are characteristic of the Redding Tradition of scholarship. They represent belief in: (1) Human progress through empirical investigations; (2) The power of critique; (3) Message exchange as the core of organizational communication; and (4) The need to understand the socio-historical and diverse theoretical underpinnings of organizational communication. # Human progress through empirical investigations: This stands as a keystone of the Redding Tradition. Redding believed, most simply, that humans could make much headway through the study of organizational communication merely by looking deeper into it. He believed that such progress could be made through a number of values. They are: change and progress, effort and optimism, efficiency, practicality and pragmatism, and science and secular rationality. Redding believed that a solid amount of positivity in all of these values could lead to an inevitable growth in everyone's knowledge of organizational communication. # The power of critique: Redding found value in the critical analysis of the fundamentals of communication. In fact, his requirement for organizational and managerial communication scholars was that they should question everything. Redding even criticized communication editors in 1985 for not challenging the assumptions of organizational life. He was thoroughly against contentment in promoting organizational values without sufficient critique. In short, he felt that active questioning was a focal point in usefully progressing the study of organizational communication. # Message exchange as the core of organizational communication: According to Redding, communication meant "those behaviors of human beings, or those artifacts created by human beings, which result in messages being received by one or more persons. Redding felt there was no doubting the power of message exchange in organizational communication, implying that there would be no organization if not for the communication. # Need to understand the Socio-Historical and Diverse Theoretical Underpinnings of Our Discipline: Redding preached that, in a field where many felt the future was unpredictable, the only effective way to prepare for the future was to look at the past and utilize similar techniques.Scholarships and awards
Even before his death in 1994, there have been many awards and scholarships created honoring Redding's work in the fields of Organizational Communication and Education, and encouraging others to follow in his footsteps.Redding Dissertation Award
This award, presented by Division 4 of the International Communication Association, is an annual competition for the best dissertation in the United States, relating to the field of Organizational Communications. The best dissertation receives a cash prize as well as certificates for the winning student, and their professor. The criteria for the winning dissertation, according to the International Communication Association must be "theoretically driven, methodologically rigorous, and make a significant contribution to hefield. In the spirit of Redding, the dissertation should present ideas that advance our understanding of organizing and communicating, and that make a difference in the lives of organizational members."References
Sources
*Tompkins, Phillip K. "W. Charles Redding." Spectra Sep. 1994: 2+. Communication &