MGMT Chapter 7
Employee Assistance Programs (EAPs)
are often offered to workers as an adjunct to a company-provided health care plan
amygdala
area of the limbic system that controls fear type responses
Cognitive dissonance
a mismatch among emotions, attitudes, beliefs, and behavior, for example, believing that you should always be polite to a customer regardless of personal feelings, yet having just been rude to one.
affect-driven behavior
emotions trigger you to respond in a particular way
resistance phase
the body begins to release cortisol and draws on reserves of fats and sugars to find a way to adjust to the demands of stress. This reaction works well for short periods of time, but it is only a temporary fix.
exhaustion phase
the body has depleted its stores of sugars and fats, and the prolonged release of cortisol has caused the stressor to significantly weaken the individual. Disease results from the body's weakened state, leading to death in the most extreme cases.
Stress
the body's reaction to a change that requires a physical, mental, or emotional adjustment or response. Stress is an inevitable feature of life. It is the force that gets us out of bed in the morning, motivates us at the gym, and inspires us to work.
Emotional labor
the regulation of feelings and expressions for organizational purposes. Three major levels of emotional labor have been identified.
Negative emotions
such as anger, fear, and sadness can result from undesired events
Work Outcomes
Stress is related to worse job attitudes, higher turnover, and decreases in job performance in terms of both in-role performance and organizational citizenship behaviors
persona
a professional role that involves acting out feelings that may not be real as part of their job
flow
a state of consciousness in which a person is totally absorbed in an activity
Type A personalities
display high levels of speed/impatience, job involvement, and hard-driving competitiveness
Stressors
events or contexts that cause a stress reaction by elevating levels of adrenaline and forcing a physical or mental response
emotion
is defined as a short, intense feeling resulting from some event
emotional intelligence
looks at how people can understand each other more completely by developing an increased awareness of their own and others' emotions
Physiological (stress)
manifests itself internally as nervousness, tension, headaches, anger, irritability, and fatigue
alarm phase
outside stressor jolts the individual, insisting that something must be done. It may help to think of this as the fight-or-flight moment in the individual's experience. If the response is sufficient, the body will return to its resting state after having successfully dealt with the source of stress.
Role conflict
refers to facing contradictory demands at work. For example, your manager may want you to increase customer satisfaction and cut costs, while you feel that satisfying customers inevitably increases costs
Role ambiguity
refers to vagueness in relation to what our responsibilities are. If you have started a new job and felt unclear about what you were expected to do, you have experienced role ambiguity. Having high role ambiguity is related to higher emotional exhaustion, more thoughts of leaving an organization, and lowered job attitudes and performance
Telecommuting
refers to working remotely. For example, some employees work from home, a remote satellite office, or from a coffee shop for some portion of the workweek
Surface acting
requires an individual to exhibit physical signs, such as smiling, that reflect emotions customers want to experience. A children's hairdresser cutting the hair of a crying toddler may smile and act sympathetic without actually feeling so. In this case, the person is engaged in surface acting. (Most emotional labor)
Deep acting
takes surface acting one step further. This time, instead of faking an emotion that a customer may want to see, an employee will actively try to experience the emotion they are displaying. This genuine attempt at empathy helps align the emotions one is experiencing with the emotions one is displaying.
Affective Events Theory (AET)
theory that explores how events on the job cause different kinds of people to feel different emotions
Psychological (stress)
Depression and anxiety are two psychological outcomes of unchecked stress, which are as dangerous to our mental health and welfare as heart disease, high blood pressure, and strokes.
Type B personalities
by contrast, are calmer by nature. They think through situations as opposed to reacting emotionally. Their fight-or-flight and stress levels are lower as a result.
Role overload
having insufficient time and resources to complete a job. When an organization downsizes, the remaining employees will have to complete the tasks that were previously performed by the laid-off workers, which often leads to role overload.
General Adaptation Syndrome (GAS)
hypothesis that states the stress plays a general role in disease by exhausting the body's immune system
Genuine acting
occurs when individuals are asked to display emotions that are aligned with their own. If a job requires genuine acting, less emotional labor is required because the actions are consistent with true feelings (requires least amount of Emotional Labor)
Sabbaticals
paid time off from the normal routine at work
Positive emotions
such as joy, love, and surprise result from our reaction to desired events