1 / 31

Individual Differences: What Makes Employees Unique

3. Organizational Behavior core concepts. McGraw-Hill/Irwin Organizational Behavior, Core Concepts. Copyright © 2008 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Individual Differences: What Makes Employees Unique. Learning Objectives.

ike
Download Presentation

Individual Differences: What Makes Employees Unique

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 3 Organizational Behavior core concepts McGraw-Hill/Irwin Organizational Behavior, Core Concepts Copyright © 2008 by the McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. Individual Differences: What Makes Employees Unique

  2. Learning Objectives • Explain how a person’s self-esteem, self-efficacy, and self-monitoring affect the person’s self-concept and behavior • Describe how people change their behavior through self-management • Identify important personality dimensions and their relationship to job performance • Define the individual differences of locus of control, attitudes, and intelligence • Summarize the role of emotions and emotional intelligence in the workplace

  3. From Self-Concept to Self-Management • Self • core of one’s conscious existence • Self-concept • a person’s self-perception as a physical, social, spiritual being • Cognitions • a person’s knowledge, opinions, or beliefs

  4. An OB Model for Studying Individual Differences Figure 3-1

  5. From Self-Concept to Self-Management • Self-esteem • one’s overall self-evaluation.

  6. Can General Self-Esteem Be Improved? • Low self-esteem can be raised more by having a person think of desirable characteristics possessed rather of undesirable characteristics from which he is free

  7. Question? What is a person’s belief about his chances of successfully accomplishing a specific task? • Self-monitoring • Self-reliance • Self-efficacy • Learned Helplessness

  8. Self-Efficacy • Self-efficacy • a person’s belief about his chances of successfully accomplishing a specific task • Learned Helplessness • debilitating lack of faith in one’s ability to control the situation

  9. See an article on self-efficacy by Judge and Bono Self-Efficacy

  10. Self-Efficacy Beliefs Pave the Way for Success or Failure Figure 3-2 Figure 3-2

  11. Managerial Implications • On-the-job research evidence encourages managers to nurture self-efficacy, both in themselves and in others • Significant positive correlation between self-efficacy and job performance

  12. Recruiting/ selection/job assignments Job design Self-management Training and development Creativity Coaching Leadership Rewards Goal setting and quality improvement Managerial Implications

  13. Self-Monitoring • Self-monitoring • extent to which a person observes their own self-expressive behavior and adapts it to the demands of the situation • Positive relationship between high self-monitoring and career success

  14. Self-Management: A Social Learning Model • Social Learning Theory • an individual acquires new behavior through the interplay of cognitive processes with environmental cues and consequences

  15. A Social Learning Model of Self-Management Figure 3-3 Figure 3-3

  16. An Agenda for Self-Improvement 1. Be proactive. Choose goals, and take responsibility for achieving them. 2. Begin with the end in mind; be goal-oriented. 3. Put first things first. Set priorities including work and personal goals, present and future. 4. Think win/win. Look for mutually beneficial solutions.

  17. An Agenda for Self-Improvement 5.Seek first to understand, then to be understood. Listen carefully. 6. Synergize. Generate teamwork, and value people’s differences. 7. Sharpen the saw. Renew yourself mentally, spiritually, socially/emotionally, and physically. 8. Find your voice by seeking fulfillment, acting passionately, and making a significant contribution—then help others do the same.

  18. Managing Situational Cues • Reminders and attention focusers • Self-observation data • Avoiding negative cues while seeking positive cues • Challenging personal goals • Self-contract

  19. Arranging Cognitive Supports • Symbolic coding • human brain stores information in visual and verbal codes • Rehearsal • mental rehearsal of challenging tasks can increase one’s chance of success • Self-talk • set of evaluating thoughts that you give yourself about facts and events that happen to you

  20. Administering Consequences • Individual must have control over desired reinforcers • Individual must reward himself only for meeting the conditions of success • Individual needs performance standards that establish the quantity and quality of target behavior required for receiving the reward

  21. Personality stable and mental characteristics responsible for a person’s identity Personality Dynamics

  22. The Big Five Personality Dimensions • Extraversion • Agreeableness • Conscientiousness • Emotional stability • Openness to experience

  23. Question? Which personality trait has the strongest positive correlation with job and training performance? • Extraversion • Conscientiousness • Openness-to-experience • Agreeableness

  24. Personality and Job Performance • Conscientiousness has the strongest positive correlation with job and training performance • Extraversion is associated with success for managers and salespeople

  25. Proactive Personality • Proactive Personality • an action-oriented person who shows initiative and perseveres to change things

  26. Locus of Control • Internal locus of control • attributing outcomes to one’s own actions • External locus of control • attributing outcomes to circumstances beyond one’s control

  27. Attitudes • Attitude • learned predisposition to respond in a consistently favorable or unfavorable manner with respect to a given object

  28. Intelligence • Intelligence • capacity for constructive thinking, reasoning, and problem solving

  29. Positive and Negative Emotions • Emotions • complex human reactions to personal achievements and setbacks that may be felt and displayed

  30. Emotional Intelligence • Emotional Intelligence • ability to manage oneself and interact with others in mature and constructive ways

More Related