BMAL 500 - Quiz 1 - Ch.1&2
OVERVALUING OUTCOMES
- We give a pass to unethical behavior if the outcome is desirable
OPENNESS TO CHANGE
-Independence of thought, action, and feelings of readiness for change (stimulation, self-direction)
CONTRIBUTORS TO EMPLOYEE ENGAGEMENT:
. Person Factors .Situation Factors
WHAT CAN I DO ABOUT UNETHICAL PRACTICES
. Recognize that it's business and treated that way. Unethical issues are business . Accept that confronting ethical concerns as part of your job, my job . Challenge the rationale of the unethical issue . Use your lack of authority or lower status as an asset : Consider explaining the long-term consequences to the person who conducted behavior . Suggest solutions; not complains
EMPLOYEE ENGAGEMENT Identified as for feelings:
. Urgency . Focus . Intensity . Enthusiasm
Common COMMON SENCE three weaknesses:
1) Overreliance on hindsight 2) Lack of rigor 3) Lack of Objectivity
To change behavior, we should look at intentions and ways we might modify them by working orn the three general motives.
1. Attitude toward the behavior: Degree to which a person has a favorable or unfavorable evaluation of the behavior in question. 2. Subjective norm: Social factor representing the perceived social pressure for or against the behavior. 3. Perceived behavioral control: Perceived issues or difficulty of performing the behavior, assume to reflect past experience in anticipated obstacles.
WE CAN REDUCE COGNITIVE DISSONANCE IN THREE WAYS
1. Change attitude or behavior or both. 2. Belittle the importance of the inconsistent behavior. 3. Find consonant elements that way dissident ones.
3-STEP PROBLEM SOLVING
1. Define the problem 2. Identify potential causes using OB concept/theories 3. Make recommendations and take action
TRACK FOUR KEY WORKPLACE ATTITUDES:
1. Organizational commitment 2. Employee engagement 3. Perceived organizational support 4. Job satisfaction
COMMITMENT
A force that binds an individual to a course of action of relevance to one or more targets
Equity Theory
A motivation theory that proposes that perceptions of fairness directly affect worker motivation.
ACCOUNTING/FINANCIAL PERFORMANCE
A positive outcome from high job satisfaction
CUSTOMER SERVICE/SATISFACTION
A positive outcome from job satisfaction spillover effect is the credit. Spill over occurs when attitude in one part of our lives influence to another
THREE COMPONENTS OF ATTITUDE
AFFECTIVE COMPONENT COGNITIVE COMPONENT BEHAVIORAL COMPONENT
VALUES
Abstract ideas that guide with our thinking and behavior across all situations
How does organizational level affect job satisfaction
Accounting/financial performance Customer service/satisfaction
INTERPERSONAL SKILLS
Active listening Positive attitudes Effective communications
JOB SATISFACTION
Affective or emotional response toward various facets of your job.
AFFECTIVE COMPONENT
An attitude contains our feelings or emotions about a given object or situation. " FEEL"
COGNITIVE COMPONENT
An attitude reflects our beliefs or ideas about an object or situation. "I BELIEVE"
Job satisfaction has three correlate groupings
Attitudes Behavior Organizational Level
PERSONAL ATTRIBUTES
Attitudes Personality Teamwork Leadership
SCHWARTZ VALUE THEORY
Broad values motivate our behavior across any context. Two opposing bipolar dimensions: the first being self transcendence vs. self-enhancement; the seconded being openness to change vs. conformity
SELF-TRANSCENDENCE
Concern for the welfare of others (universalism, benevolence)
Motivations
Feelings or ideas that cause us to act toward a goal - conscious and unconscious A psychological process that arouses are interested in doing something, and it directs and guides our behavior.
CONCEIVED GOALS-
GOALS- We set goals and incentives to promote a desired behavior but they encourage a negative one
ETHICS
Guide to your behavior by identifying right wrong and the many shades of gray in between
Counterproductive work behavior:
Harms other employees, the organization as a whole and or organizational stakeholders such as customers and shareholders.
INCREASE EMPLOYEE COMMITMENT: three general best practices:
Hire people who is personal values aligned with the organization Make sure that management does not break psychological contracts Treat employees fairly and foster trust between manager and employee
.Situation Factors
Job characteristics Leadership Organizational climate Stressors
The four behaviors that affect job satisfaction are
Job performance Organizational citizenship behavior (CB) Counterproductive work behavior (CWB) Turnover
Turn over:
Job satisfaction has a mild Lee strong negative relationship with turnover. The more satisfied the employers with this job in theory reduces the amount of turnover
DISPOSITION/GENETIC Components
Job satisfaction is a function of both personal traits and genetic factors Has stronger relationships with intrinsic aspects of a job versus extrinsic aspects
WORKPLACE APPLICATION OF SCHWARTZ
Managers can better supervise workers by using Schwartz's model to understand their values and motivation
Job performance:
Moderately related to satisfaction Indirectly influence each other
The four attitudes that affect job satisfaction are
Motivation Job involvement Withdrawal cognition Perceived stress
Models of job satisfaction:
Need fulfillment, met expectations, values attainment, equity, disposition /genetic components
ADDITION CAUSES of unethical behavior
Personal motivation to perform Pressure from supervisor to achieve unrealistic goals/outcomes Reward system that honor unethical behavior Employees perception of little consequence for crossing line
Needs:
Physiological or psychological deficiencies that arouse behavior Managers need to learn about employees needs if they want to increase the employees job satisfaction
DYNAMICS OF VALUES
Positive employee attitudes and motivation our greatest when the work environment is consistent with employee values.
Need fulfillment
Propose that satisfaction is determined by the extent to which the characteristics of a job allow an individual to fill his needs.
Value attainment:
Satisfaction results from the perception that a job allows for for filament of an individual's important values
PROBLEM SOLVING
Systematic process for closing these gaps
Met expectations:
The difference between when an individual expects to receive from a job versus what he actually receives
Job involvement:
The extent to which an individual is personally engaged in his duties
EMPLOYEE ENGAGEMENT
The harnessing of organization members' selves to their duties; in engagement, people employ and express themselves physically, cognitively, and emotionally during role performance.
Withdrawal cognition:
The individual's overall thoughts and feelings about quitting
Perceived stressors:
The level of stress the individual employee feels he is under
BEHAVIORAL COMPONENT
The way we intend or expect to act toward someone or something. "I INTEND"
SLIPPERY SLOPE
We are less able to see others unethical behavior when it develops gradually overtime
INDIRECT BLINDNESS
We hold others less accountable for unethical behavior when it's carried out through third parties
MOTIVATED BLINDNESS
We overlook the unethical behavior of another when it is in our interest to remain ignorant
WORKPLACE ATTITUDE
and outcome of various OB related processes, including leadership. Reserved for attitudes have resulted from the interaction of various individual, group,
CAUSES OF UNETHICAL BEHAVIOR
conceive goals Motivated blindness . Indirect blindness Slippery slope Overvaluing outcomes
ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR
describes an interdisciplinary field dedicated to understanding and managing people at work
PROBLEM
difference or gap between an actual in a desert and a desired state or outcome
Organizational citizenship behavior
employee behaviors that exceed work-role requirements Individual behavior that is discretionary, not directly explicitly recognized by the formal reward system, and that in the aggregate promotes the effective functioning of the organization.
SOFT SKILLS
human interactions and include interpersonal skills and personal attributes not job specific Portable skill
PSYCHOLOGICAL CONTRACTS
individuals perception about the reciprocal exchange between him and another party
Common sence
is a liability and is used because of laziness.
Drivers of commitment:
o Personality o Meaningfulness of work being done o Organizational climate o Organizational culture
. Person Factors
o Personality o Positive psychological capital o Human and social capital
ATTITUDES
or feelings or opinions about people, places, and objects in range from positive to negative.
CONSERVATION
order, so for striction, preservation of the past, resistance to change (conformity, tradition, security)
FLEXTIME
policy of giving employees flexible work hours so they can come and go at different times as long as they work a set number of hours.
ORGANIZATIONAL COMMITMENT
reflects the extent to which an individual identifies with an organization and commits to its goals. Display two outcomes:
PERCEIVED ORGANIZATIONAL SUPPORT (POS)
reflects the extent to which employees believe their organization values their contributions and genuinely cares about their well-being. . People are willing to work hard and commit to the organizations when they believe the company truly cares about their best interest. Motivated by the norm of reciprocity: return the favor when treated well
PORTABLE SKILLS
relevant in every job and level and throughout your career, personal attributes and interpersonal skill sets
COGNITIVE DISSONANCE
represents the psychological discomfort a person experiences when simultaneously holding two or more conflicting cognitions (ideas, beliefs, values, or emotions).
ETHICAL DILEMMAS
situations with two choices neither of which resolve the situation ethically acceptable manner
HARD SKILLs-
technical expertise and knowledge required to perform task
SCHWARTZ stresses
that is the relative importance we give to these two dimensions of opposing values that drives our behavior.
SELF-ENHANCEMENT
the pursuit of one's own interests And relative success and dominance over others (power, achievement)
DETERMINATION OF INTENTION:
three key general motives predict or at least inference intention and behavior.
CONTINGENCY APPROACH
using the OB concepts and tools that best suit the situation, instead of trying to rely on "one best way" or "common sense"