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Dynamics of Behavior in Organizations

Dynamics of Behavior in Organizations. Chapter 14. Dynamics of Behavior in Organizations. Managers need to understand the way individuals & groups act. Employees and managers bring their individual differences to work each day

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Dynamics of Behavior in Organizations

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  1. Dynamics of Behavior in Organizations Chapter 14

  2. Dynamics of Behavior in Organizations Managers need to understand the way individuals & groups act • Employees and managers bring their individual differences to work each day • Differences in attitudes, values, personality, and behavior influence • how people interpret an assignment, • whether they like to be told what to do • how they handle challenges • how they interact with others Manager’s Challenge: Quick Eagle Networks

  3. Dynamics of Behavior in Organizations Topics Chapter 14 • Attitudes • Personality • Perception • Learning • Stress management

  4. Organizational Behavior Commonly called OB • Interdisciplinary field dedicated to the study of • attitudes • behavior • performance

  5. Vocational Counseling Cultural Anthropology Economics Sociology Psychology Industrial Engineering Interdisciplinary Influences on Organizational Behavior Management Ethics Organizational Behavior

  6. Organizational Citizenship • Work behavior that goes beyond job requirements and contributes as needed to the organization’s success • Being helpful to coworkers and customers • Doing extra work when necessary • Looking for ways to improve products & procedures

  7. Attitudes • Cognitive and affective evaluation that predisposes a person to act in a certain way • Attitudes determine how people • Perceive the work environment • Interact with others • Behaveon the job or

  8. Components of an Attitude

  9. Components of Attitudes Particularly important when attempting to change attitudes • Cognitive component includes the beliefs, opinions, and information the person has about the object of the attitude • Affective component is the person’s emotions or feelings about the object of the attitude • Behavioral component of an attitude is the person’s intention to behave toward the object of the attitude in a certain way

  10. High-Performance Work Attitudes • Two attitudes that might relate to high performance • Job Satisfaction • Organizational Commitment Managers of today’s knowledge workers often rely on job satisfaction to keep motivation and enthusiasm for the organization high

  11. High-Performance Work Attitudes • Job Satisfaction = positive attitude toward one’s job • Organizational Commitment = loyalty to and heavy involvement in one’s organization

  12. Conflicts Among Attitudes • Cognitive Dissonance = condition in which two attitudes or a behavior and an attitude conflict • Leon Festinger – 1950s • People want to behave in accordance with their attitudes • Usually will take corrective action

  13. Perception • Cognitive process people use to make sense out of the environment by • Selecting • Organizing • Interpreting information

  14. Perception • Perceptual Selectivity:process by which individuals screen and select various stimuli that vie for their attention • Primacy (toward beginning) • Recency (toward end of event) • Perception Process:Cognitive process used to make sense out of the environment (3 steps) • Observe information via senses • Screeninformation & select what to process • Organize selected data into patterns • Perceptual Distortions:errors in perceptual judgment arising from inaccuracies in any part of the perceptual process • Common Errors: • Stereotyping • Halo effect • Projection

  15. Common Perceptual Distortions Stereotyping • Tendency to assign an individual to a group or broad category and then attribute generalizations about the group to the individual

  16. Common Perceptual Distortions Halo Effect • Overall impression of a person or situation based on one characteristic, either favorable or unfavorable

  17. Common Perceptual Distortions Projection • Tendency to see one’s own personal traits in other people

  18. Common Perceptual Distortions Perceptual Defense • Tendency of perceivers to protect themselves by disregarding ideas objects, or people that are threatening to them

  19. Attributions • Judgments about what caused a person’s behavior—either characteristics of the person or of the situation • As people organize what they perceive, they often draw conclusions

  20. External or Internal Attributions

  21. Attribution Biases Fundamental Attribution Error = tendency to underestimate the influence of external factors on another’s behavior and to overestimate the influence of internal factors Self-serving Bias = tendency to overestimate the contribution of internal factors to one’s sucesses and the contribution of external factors to one’s failures

  22. Personality • Set of characteristics that underlie a relatively stable pattern of behavior in response to ideas, objects, or people in the environment • Big Five Personality Factors • Extroversion • Agreeableness • Conscientiousness • Emotional Stability • Openness to Experience

  23. Big Five Personality Factors

  24. Emotional Intelligence (EQ)Basic Components • Self-awareness: basis for all other components, being aware of what you are feeling • Self-management: control disruptive or harmful emotions and balance one’s moods so they do not cloud thinking • Social awareness: understand others and practice empathy • Relationship awareness: connect to others, build positive relationships, respond to emotions of others, and influence others

  25. Locus of Control • Tendency to place primary responsibility for one’s success or failure either within oneself (internally) or on outside forces (externally) • Internal locus of control- your actions influence what happens to you • External locus of control- represents pawns of fate

  26. Behaviors Influenced by Personality • Authoritarianism = belief that power and status differences should exist within the organization Stick to conventional values Obey recognized authority above them Critically judge others Oppose the use of subjective feelings • Concerned with power and toughness

  27. Behaviors Influenced by Personality • Machiavellianism = tendency to direct much of one’s behavior toward the acquisition of power and the manipulation of other people for personal gain

  28. Problem Solving Styles Based on work of Carl Jung • Individuals differin the way they solve problems and make decisions • Gathering and evaluating information are separate activities • Gather information • Sensation • Intuition • Evaluate information • Thinking • Feeling

  29. Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) • Personality test that measures a person’s preference for • introversion vs. extroversion • sensation vs. intuition • thinking vs. feeling • judging vs. perceiving Experiential Exercise: Personality Assessment (MBTI)

  30. Learning and Learning Styles • Learning = change in behavior or performance that occurs as the result of experience • Learning Styles • Diverger • Assimilator • Converger • Accommodator

  31. Stress and Stress Management • Stress = physiological and emotional response to stimuli that place physical or psychological demands on an individual • Type A Behavior = pattern characterized by extreme competitiveness, impatience, aggressiveness, and devotion to work • Type B Behavior = pattern that lacks Type A and includes a more balanced, relaxed lifestyle Ethical Dilemma: Should I Fudge the Numbers?

  32. The Stress Response (GAS)

  33. Work Stress Work stress is skyrocketing Four Categories • Job Tasks Demands • Physical Demands • Role Demand (Sets of expected behaviors) • Interpersonal Demands

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