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Individual Differences and Emotions

Individual Differences and Emotions. Shift in Focus. Effective leadership usually requires working differently with different people. Error #1. Everyone should think and act just like me. Think of problems on teams. Why is this an error.

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Individual Differences and Emotions

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  1. Individual Differences and Emotions

  2. Shift in Focus • Effective leadership usually requires working differently with different people. • Error #1. Everyone should think and act just like me. • Think of problems on teams. • Why is this an error. • Why is this commonly done (not an easy one to answer).

  3. Solution • Everyone has their talents. How can I best unleash individual talents. Thank God people are different than me. • How effectively can you really work with people are different from you? • Effective leaders need this attribute. • So need to explore the world of how people are different to effectively unleash talents in different ways.

  4. overview

  5. 5-2 Personality Traits Personal Values • Self-Concept • Self-esteem • Self-efficacy • Self-monitoring • Organizational identification Instructional Road Map of Individual Differences in OB The Unique Individual Forms of Self-Expression Attitudes/Behavioral intentions Abilities Emotions Job Satisfaction Self-management © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill

  6. Begin with Self-Concepts • Self-esteem • Self efficacy.

  7. 5-3 Self-Esteem • Self-Esteemone’s overall self-evaluation • General self confidence over many situations. © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill

  8. 5-6 Self Efficacy • Self Efficacyis a person’s belief about his or her chances of successfully accomplishing a specific task © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill

  9. Higher levels of both associated with • Higher levels of motivation • Persistence in spite of negative information. • Success (both task success and career success).

  10. 5-7 Figure 5-2 • Be active—select best opportunities • Manage the situation— avoid or neutralize obstacles • Set goals—establish standards • Plan, prepare, practice • Try hard: persevere • Creatively solve problems • Learn from setbacks • Visualize success • Limit Stress Effects of High Self-Efficacy and Esteem Sources of Beliefs Feedback Behavioral Patterns Results Prior Experience Success High “I know I can do this job” Role models Self-efficacy beliefs Persuasion Emotional state ©. McGraw-Hill

  11. As a Manager you influence Self efficacy of Subordinates. • How: In teams come up with three ways you can shape task specific beliefs. • Two ways you have experienced a supervisor or peer lowering self-efficacy.

  12. How do you deal with inflated self-efficacy/esteem? • Book suggests inflated self-esteem can lead to boastful, aggressive behavior, denigrating ideas and contribution of others (bad team players or overly competitive). • Book offers no conclusions. • Two types—team players and egoists. • Org Culture. Lot of it is selection. • Egoists work best with people who do not have high self esteem (perhaps moderate). • Put into individually competitive situations. • Hardest to unleash their potential.

  13. Issue • Know yourself. • If high esteem efficacy are you competitive? • If yes to both, strong interpersonal skills are critical to avoid the darker side of inflated self-esteem. • Building self image

  14. Getting the most from employees and treating people differently • How do you unleash the potential of High self esteem/efficacy • How do you unleash the potential of low self-esteem/efficacy

  15. 5-12 Table 5-2 Covey’s Seven Habits for Success • Begin with the end in mind • Put first things first • Be proactive • Think win/win • Seek first to understand, then to be understood • Synergize • Sharpen the saw © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill

  16. 5-13 Table 5-3 1) Extraversion Outgoing, talkative, social, assertive 2) Agreeableness Trusting, good natured, cooperative, soft hearted 3) Conscientiousness Dependable, responsible, achievement, oriented, persistent 4) Emotional stability Relaxed, secure, unworried 5) Openness to experience Intellectual, imaginative, curious, broad minded The Big Five Personality Dimensions Personality Dimension Characteristics of a Person Scoring Positively on the Dimension © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill

  17. Take test p. 182. • Report results to team members. Be honest.

  18. Plusses and Minuses of each. • How do you work with an introvert/extrovert? • How do you unleash their potential?

  19. Conscientiousness high with job performance in general • Extroverts have more social capital and likely to get promoted (politics?).

  20. Issues related to leadership • Extroverts view of introverts • Introverts view of extroverts • Openness to experience in a competitive environment that requires change?

  21. 5-15 Locus of Control • External Locus of Controlone’s life outcomes attributed to environmental factors such as luck or fate • Internal Locus of Control belief that one controls key events and consequences in one’s life. © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill

  22. Take Test P. 170

  23. Internals • Respond well to planned incentive systems. • High Achievers. • High Intrinsic motivation.

  24. Research focuses on the positive qualities of internal locus • External locus more flexible, patient. • See justice as not so blind. But accept aberrations. Stuff happens. Work attitudes less subject to variation. • Believe that who you know is important than what you know. Work on relationships more than tasks. • More opportunistic than goal oriented.

  25. Very difficult to uniformly manage • Internals and externals. • Someone is engaging in flattery, external locus. Know that, gently redirect to task. • Opportunism and goal orientation are both great and both frustrating.

  26. Important • Avoid common error. • Accept people have divergent views of appropriate behavior based on personality traits.

  27. Emotions • Complex patterned organismic reactions to how we are doing in our lifelong efforts to survive and flourish and to achieve what we wish for ourselves. • Goal orientation exists. But emotions more than that. • Organismic lack of control. We may hide our feelings or leak our feelings, but automatic responses.

  28. Think back on 9/11 • Emotions?

  29. Big issue is to hide emotions at work • Can most people do this? • Should most people do this? • Why? Why not? • Back to 9/11. Should firms supervisors do anything.

  30. 5-16 Figure 5-4 Anger Happiness /Joy Fright/ anxiety Pride Guilt/ shame Love/affection Sadness Envy/ jealousy Relief Disgust Positive and Negative Emotions Negative Emotions (goal incongruent) Positive Emotions (goal congruent) © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill

  31. As supervisor you will experience employees with emotional feelings. • What do you do. • Big marketing campaign that falls flat? What might be different emotional states of employees? • What do you tell those employees if anything?

  32. 5-17 Emotional Intelligence • Emotional Intelligence ability to manage oneself and interact with others in a constructive way © 2004 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved. McGraw-Hill

  33. Its pretty clear • Emotional intelligence helps to build human capital. Learning to help people manage emotions. • Gender issues.

  34. 5-19 Table 5-5 cont. Developing Social Competence through Emotional Intelligence Social Competence: Social Awareness • Empathy • Organizational awareness • Service Relationship Management • Inspirational leadership • Influence • Developing others • Change catalyst • Conflict management • Building bonds • Teamwork and collaboration McGraw-Hill

  35. Video

  36. Summary • Aged as an example of unleashing the potential. • EQ test. • Hardest job of management is managing people who do not think/act as you would and accepting that their actions may be OK for them.

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