What is the Five W’s of Communication? Definition and examples

 


Five W’s of Communication:

The Five W’s of Communication are five words that begin with the letter W. We focus on them when we want our communication to be effective, i.e., reach their target and influence the recipient. The five words are WHO, says WHAT, in WHICH channel, to WHOM, with WHAT effect?

Harold Lasswell (1902-1978), an American political scientist and communication theorist, developed the Five W’s of Communication. He developed the model in 1948 while he worked at Yale Law School as a professor.

We also call it Laswell’s Model of Communication.

Not all organizations have the same list of five words beginning with W. Some adapt them either to their particular industry or how they interpret what Lasswell said.

WinTheCustomer.com, for example, lists the Five W’s of Communication as follows:

“1. WHO will communicate in customer service? 2. WHAT will be communicated in customer service? 3. WHERE will customer service take place? 4. WHOM will customer service assist? 5. WHY will you implement customer service?”

Five W’s – a model

The Five W’s of Communication is a verbal communication model. It organizes the scientific study of the communication process.

The model focuses on each element of communication:

Who

The first ‘WHO’ is the communicator, i.e., the person who formulates the message.

What

‘WHAT’ is the content of the message?

In Which Channel

‘WHICH’ refers to the channel of communication, i.e., medium of communication? The plural of medium is media. There are two media of communication, physical and mechanical.

Physical media includes channels where the communicator and receiver of the message can physically see each other. Video conferences, face-to-face meetings, and departmental meetings, for example, are physical media.

Mechanical media means written or electronic channels, i.e., personal letters, E-mails, billboards, newsletters, magazines, SMS, or social media.

Whom

‘WHOM’ refers to the audience, i.e., to whom is the message delivered?

This could be one individual or many people scattered over a wide area. It could also mean many people in one area. If you give a presentation in a large auditorium, for example, the audience is in one place.

What

‘With WHAT effect’ refers to the message’s outcome, i.e., how effective it was. Did the message achieve what the communicator wanted?

In public relations, the ‘effect’ may refer to feedback.

 

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