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Chapter 10: The Nature of Work Groups and Teams

Understanding And Managing Organizational Behavior 4th Edition. Chapter 10: The Nature of Work Groups and Teams. JENNIFER GEORGE & GARETH JONES. Chapter Objectives. Describe the different types of work groups and the difference between a group and a team

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Chapter 10: The Nature of Work Groups and Teams

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  1. Understanding And Managing Organizational Behavior 4th Edition Chapter 10:The Nature of Work Groups and Teams JENNIFER GEORGE & GARETH JONES

  2. Chapter Objectives • Describe the different types of work groups and the difference between a group and a team • Appreciate the characteristics of work groups and their effects on the behavior of group members • Describe how groups control their members through roles, rules, and norms

  3. Chapter Objectives • Appreciate the need for conformity and deviance in groups and why and how group goals need to be aligned with organizational goals • Understand the socialization process and how socialization tactics can result in an institutionalized or an individualized role orientation

  4. Opening Case: Hummer’s Winning Team • How can a team achieve fantastic results with very limited resources? • Composition of H2 team • Vast experience • Low in risk avoidance • High commitment levels

  5. When Is A Group A Group? • Interactivity • Mutual Goal

  6. Types of Work Groups • Formal Work Groups • Command groups • Task forces • Teams • Self-managed work teams

  7. Types of Work Groups • Informal Work Groups • Friendship groups • Interest groups

  8. Five-Stage Model of Group Development • Forming • Storming • Norming • Performing • Adjourning

  9. Work Group Characteristics • Group size • Group composition • Group status • Group function • Group efficacy • Social facilitation

  10. Benefits of Small Groups Regular interaction Ease of sharing information Recognition of individual contributions to group Strong identification with group Higher group satisfaction Benefits of Large Groups More resources Division of labor How Large Should A Group Be?

  11. Benefits of Homogeneous groups Collegiality amongst group members Information sharing Low levels of conflict Few coordination problems Benefits of Heterogeneous groups Diversity of views represented High performance Variety of resources Table 10.2 Group Composition

  12. Group Function • Communicates how work behaviors contribute to goal achievement • Provides sense of meaning (task identity)

  13. Factors Contributing to Group Effectiveness • Group Efficacy • Group composition • Ability to work well together • Coordination of efforts • Resources • Shared information • Development of effective strategies

  14. Types of Social Facilitation Effects • Audience Effects • Co-Action Effects

  15. Social Facilitation • Presence of other group members enhances performance of repetitive tasks • Presence of other group members impairs performance of difficult tasks

  16. Group Member Control Mechanisms • Roles • Rules • Norms

  17. Advantages of Rules • Ensure that members perform desired behaviors • Facilitate control of behavior • Facilitate evaluation of individual performance • Provide information for newcomers

  18. Why Do Group Members Conform to Norms? • Compliance • Identification • Internalization

  19. How Can Groups Respond to Deviants? • Attempt to change deviant • Expel deviant • Change norm

  20. Socialization and Role Orientation • Institutionalized • Individualized

  21. Tactics Leading To An Institutionalized Orientation Collective tactics Formal tactics Sequential tactics Fixed tactics Serial tactics Divestiture tactics Tactics Leading To An Individualized Orientation Individual tactics Informal tactics Random tactics Variable tactics Disjunctive tactics Investiture tactics Table 10.3 Socialization Tactics

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