CH 10
Potential disadvantages of dysfunctional conflict
- Diverts energies - Hurts group cohesion - Promotes interpersonal hostilities - Creates overall negative environment - Can decrease work productivity and job satisfaction - Can contribute to absenteeism and job turnover
Impact on performance
- Moderate Levels of conflict are constructive (functional conflict) - Too much or too little conflict is destructive (dysfunctional conflict)
Potential benefits of functional conflict
- Surfaces important problems so they can be addressed - Causes careful consideration of decisions - Causes reconsideration of decisions - Increases information available for decision making Provides opportunities for creativity
Ethical aspects of negotiation
- To maintain good working relationships, negotiators should strive for high ethical standards - Negotiators' rationalizations for questionable ethical behavior are offset by long-run negative consequences
Conflict occurs whenever
-disagreements exist in a social situation over issues of substance -emotional antagonisms cause frictions between individuals or groups
Indirect Conflict Management Strategies
1. Appeal to common goals - Focusing the attention of potentially conflicting parties on one mutually desirable conclusion
Types of Negotiation
1. Distributive Negotiation 2. Integrative Negotiation
Common pitfalls of negotiation
1. Fixed Pie Myth 2. Escalating Commitment 3. Over Confidence 4. Too much telling 5. Too little listening
Direct Conflict Management Strategies
1. Lose-Lose Strategies 2. Win-Lose Strategies 3. Win-Win Strategies
Intrapersonal conflicts
Actual or perceived pressures from incompatible goals or expectations -Approach-approach conflict -Avoidance-avoidance conflict -Approach-avoidance conflict
Collaboration and problem solving
involes recognition that something is wrong and needs attention through problem solving
Bargaining zone
range between one party's minimum reservation point and the other party's maximum reservation point - Distributive negotiation
Levels of Conflict
1.Intrapersonal conflicts 2.Interpersonal conflict 3.Intergroup conflicts 4.Interorganizational conflict
Types of conflict
1.Substantive conflict 2.Emotional conflict
Substantive conflict
A fundamental disagreement over ends or goals to be pursued and the means for their accomplishment ex. dispute with boss over a plan of action to be followed, like the marketing strategy for a new product
Mediation
A neutral third party tries to engage disputing parties in a negotiated solution through persuasion and rational argument - common approach in labor-management negotiations
Alternate Dispute Resolution
A neutral third party works with persons involved in a negotiation to help them resolve impasses and settle disputes - Arbitration - Mediation
Arbitration
A third party acts as a "judge" and has the power to issue a decision that is binding on all disputing parties
Interorganizational conflict
Commonly refers to the competition and rivalry that characterize firms operating in the same markets
Compromise
Each party gives up something of value, but neither party's desires are fully satisfied
Avoidance
Everyone simply pretends that the conflict does not really exist and hopes that it will go away
Emotional conflict
Interpersonal difficulties that arise over feelings of anger, mistrust, dislike, fear, resentment, and the like
Acommodation or smoothing
Involves playing down differences among the conflicting parties and highlighting similarities and areas of agreement - often creates frustration and resentment
Intergroup conflict
Occurs among members of different teams or groups ex. conflict between functional groups or departments, such as marketing and manufacturing,
Interpersonal conflict
Occurs between two or more individuals who are in opposition to one another ex.2 people debating each other aggressively on the merits of hiring a specific job applicant
Competition
One party achieves a victory through the use of force, superior skills, or domination
Authoritative command
Use of formal authority to dictate a solution and specify who gains what and who loses what
Win-Win conflict
achieved by a blend of both high cooperativeness and high assertiveness - Collaboration or problem solving
Lose-lose conflict
nobody gets what he or she wants -often result when there is little or no assertiveness - Avoidance - Accommodation - Compromise
Win-Lose conflict
one party achieves its desires at the expense and to the exclusion of the other party's desires - high-assertiveness and low- cooperativeness situation - future conflicts over the same issues are likely to occur - Competition - Authoritative command
Functional (or constructive) conflict
results in positive benefits to individuals, the group, or the organization
Conflict resolution
situation in which the underlying reasons for a given destructive conflict are eliminated
What is Negotiation?
the process of making joint decisions when the parties involved have different preferences
Dysfunctional Conflict
works to the groups or organizations disadvantage