MGMT 310 Final

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Leader Behaviors

(Blank Behaviors) Path-goal clarifying, achievement oriented, work facilitation, supportive, group oriented decision making

Ways to reduce cognitive dissonance

1. Change your attitude or behavior or both; 2. Belittle the importance of the inconsistent behavior; 3. Find consonant elements that outweigh dissonant ones

The Three Dimensions of Situational Control

1. Leader-member relations, 2. Task Structure, 3. Position Power

The 4 Functions of Organizational Culture

1. Organizational Identity, 2. Collective Commitment, 3. Social System Stability, 4. Sense-Making Device

Negotiation

A give and take decision making process involving two or more parties with different preferences

Equity Theory

A model of motivation that explains how people strive for fairness and justice in social exchanges of give and take relationships (based on cognitive dissonance theory)

Locus of Control

A relatively stable personality characteristic that describes how much personal responsibility you take for your behavior and its consequences

Performance Management

A set of processes and managerial behaviors that involve defining, monitoring, measuring, evaluating, and providing consequences for performance expectations

Performance Appraisal

A tool for judging good vs. poor performance

Job Satisfaction

An affective or emotional response toward various facets of one's job. reflects the extent to which an individual likes their job

Integrative Negotiation

An agreement can be found that is better for both parties. Involves a progressive win-win strategy

Stereotype

An individuals set of beliefs about the characteristics or attributes of a group

Contingency Theory

Because it is based on the premise that a leader's effectiveness is contingent on the extent to which a leader's style fits or matches characteristics of the situation at hand

Stage 2: Generate alternative solutions

Brainstorming, is a common technique used by both individuals and groups to generate potential solutions (stage 2 RDM model)

The Matrix Structure

Combines a vertical structure with an equally strong horizontal overlay; Organizations use this when they need cooperation in order to meet their goals; bad reputation for being to complex, frequently fail

Referent Power

Comes into play when one's personal characteristics and social relationships become the reason for compliance. (Ex: In asian culture gender, age social class)

Compromising Style

Conflict mgmt. style, a give and take approach w/ moderate concern for self and others. Appropriate when parties have opposite goals or possess equal power

Integrating Style

Conflict mgmt. style, where interested parties confront the issues and cooperatively identify the problem, generate and weigh alternatives, and select a solution

Dominating Style

Conflict mgmt. style, where one has a high concern for themselves and a low concern for others (I win, you lose). Often called a forcing style because it relies on formal authority to force compliance

Obliging (smoothing) style

Conflict mgmt. style, where one tends to show low concern for themselves and great concern for others. These people tend to minimize differences and highlight similarities

Avoiding Style

Conflict mgmt. style, where passive withdrawal from the problem and active suppression of the issue are common

Satisficing

Consists of choosing a solution that meets some minimum qualifications, one that is good enough. Resolves problems by producing solutions that are satisfactory, as opposed to optimal (Radio Station in car)

Organizational Citizenship Behavior

Defined as the individual behavior that is discretionary, not directly or explicitly recognized by the formal reward system, and that in the aggregate promotes the effective functioning of the organization

Internal Locus in the Workplace

Display greater work motivation. Have stronger expectations that efforts leads to performance. Exhibit higher performance on tasks involving learning or problem solving, when performance leads to valued rewards

Withdrawal Cognitions

Encapsulate this thought process by representing an individual's overall thoughts and feelings about quitting

Rational Decision-Making Model

Explains how managers should make decisions. Four stages

Motivating Factors

Factors include achievement, recognition, characteristics of the work, responsibility, and advancement; Job satisfaction is more associated w/ factors in the work content of the task being performed

Hygiene-Factors (What makes employees dissatisfied?)

Factors including company policy and administration, technical supervision, salary, interpersonal relations with one's supervisor, and working conditions--factors cause a person to move from a state of no dissatisfaction to dissatisfaction

Transactional Leadership

Focuses on clarifying employee's role and task requirements and providing followers w/ positive and negative rewards contingent on performance.

Hackman & Oldham's Job Characteristic's Model

Goal is to promote high intrinsic motivation by designing jobs that possess the five core job characteristics

Perceived Stress

Has a strong, negative relationship to job satisfaction

Instrumentality (Vroom's Theory)

How an individual perceives the movement from performance to outcome. Ex: passing an exam is part of graduating college

Comparison (equity theory)

How does my ratio of outputs/inputs compare to relevant others? feelings of inequity revolve around evaluation of whether you are receiving adequate rewards to compensate for your collective inputs

Intellectual Stimulation

Involves behaviors that encourage employees to question the status quo and to seek innovative and creative solutions to organizational problems

Dispositional/Genetic components

Job satisfaction remains partly a function of both personal traits and genetic factors. Dispositions had a stronger relationship w/ intrinsic aspects of a job (having autonomy) than w/ extrinsic rewards

Relationship Oriented Leaders

Leaders that are more interested in developing positive relationships with followers, effective in situations of moderate control

Task Oriented Leaders

Leaders that focus on accomplishing goals, should be most effective in either high control or low control situations

Employee Characteristics

Locus of Control (internal or external), task ability, need for achievement, experience, and need for clarity

Need Fulfillment

Needs are physiological or psychological deficiencies that arouse behavior. Propose that satisfaction is determined by the extent to which the characteristics of a job allow an individual to fulfill her own needs

Intrinsic Motivation

Occurs when an individual is turned on to one's work because of the positive internal feelings that are generated by doing well. They create their own (blank) motivation by giving themselves rewards such as positive emotions, satisfaction, and self-praise

Internal Locus of Control

People who believe they control the events and consequences that affect their lives. (ex: such a person tends to attribute positive outcomes to their own abilities. Tends to blame negatives on personal shortcomings. Those willing to take a high-stakes jobs in the face of adversity

Onboarding

Programs help employees to integrate, assimilate, and transition to new jobs by making them familiar w/ expectations and responsibilities

Motivator-Hygiene Theory

Proposes that job satisfaction and dissatisfaction arise from two different sets of factors--satisfaction comes from motivating factors and dissatisfaction from hygiene

Three Benefits of The RDM Model

Quality, Transparency (makes the reasoning behind a decision transparent), Responsibility

Situational Control

Refers to the amount of control and influence the leader has in their immediate work environment

Valence (Vroom's Theory)

Refers to the positive or negative value people place on outcomes. Ex: being laid off or being ridiculed for making a suggestion would be negatively (blank) for most employees

Met Expectations

Represent the difference between what an individual expects to receive from a job, such as good pay and promotional opportunities, and what they actually receive

Espoused Values

Represent the explicitly stated values and norms that are preferred in an organization

Enacted Values

Represent the values and norms that are actually exhibited or converted into employee behavior

Sustainability

Represents a company's ability to make a profit without sacrificing the resources of its people, the community, and the planet

Counterproductive Work Behavior

Represents behavior that harms other employees, the organization as a whole, or organizational stakeholders such as customers and shareholders

Job Involvement

Represents the extent to which an individual is personally involved w/ his or her work role

Cognitive Dissonance

Represents the psychological discomfort a person experiences when simultaneously holding two or more conflicting cognitions (ideas, beliefs, values, or emotions) (ex: samantha's boss needs her to work on a project but her coworkers need her help on their job the feeling is:)

Extrinsic Motivation

Results from the potential or actual receipt of rewards. Rewards like recognition, money, or a promotion represents a payoff received from others performing a particular class.

Equity

Satisfaction results from one's reception that work outcomes, relative to inputs, compare favorably w/ a significant other's outcomes/inputs

5 Job Characteristics

Skill Variety, Task Identity, Task Significance, Autonomy, Feedback

Tuckmans Model of Group Development

Stage 1: Forming, Stage 2: Storming, Stage 3: Norming, Stage 4: Performing, Stage 5: Adjourning

Stage 3: Evaluate Alternatives and Select a Solution

Stage 3 RDM model. not only are costs and quality important, but you should consider (if its ethical, if its feasible, will it remove the causes and solve the problem)

Stage 4: Implement and Evaluate the Solution Chosen

Stage 4 RDM model.

Environmental Factors

Task structure (low when employees are not clear about their expectations; high when employees work on routine and simple tasks) Work group dynamics

Autonomy

The extent to which the job enables an individual to experience freedom, independence, and discretion in both scheduling and determining the procedures used in completing the job

Motivation

The psychological process that underlie the direction, intensity, and persistence of behavior or thought

Organizational Culture

The set of shared, taken for granted implicit assumptions that a group holds and that determines how it perceives, thinks about, and reacts to its various environments

Social Loafing

The tendency for individual effort to decline as group size increases. Free riders produce low quality work, are harder to compensate, and often distract coworkers

Group Cohesiveness

The we feeling that binds members of a group together, product of stage 3: norming

House's Path-Goal Theory

Theory that holds that leader behaviors are effective when employees view them as a source of satisfaction or as paving the way to future satisfaction (situational theory)

Expectancy Theory

Theory that holds that people are motivated to behave in ways that produce desired combinations of expected outcomes. Can be used to predict behavior in any situation in which a choice between two or more alternatives must be made

External Locus of Control

Those who believe their performance is the product of circumstances beyond their immediate control. Tend to attribute outcomes to environmental causes, such as luck or fate. (Ex: person would attribute a passing grade on an exam to something like an easy test)

Transformational Leaders

Transform followers to pursue organizational goals over self-interest

Lewin's Change Model

Unfreezing, Changing, Refreezing

Distributive Negotiation

Usually involves a single issue in which one person gains at the expense of another. Win-lose approach is most common

Outputs

What do I perceive I'm getting out of my job? Things like pay/bonuses, medical benefits, challenging assignments, job security, promotion etc...

Inputs

What do I perceive that I'm putting into my job? Things like education/training, skills, creativity, seniority, age, personality traits, experience etc...

Artifacts

consist of the physical manifestation of an organizations culture (ex: acronyms, manner of dress, awards, decorations etc...)

Basic underlying Assumptions

constitute organizational values that have become so taken for granted over time that they become assumptions that guide organizational behavior

External Locus in the Workplace

demonstrate less motivation for performance when offered valued rewards. Earn lower salaries and smaller salary increases. Tend to be more anxious

Stage 1: Identify the Problem or opportunity

represents a situation in which there are possibilities to do things that lead to results that exceed goals and expectations first stage of the rational decision making model

Expectancy (Element of Vroom's Theory)

represents an individual's belief that a particular degree of effort will be followed by a particular level of performance

Idealized Influence

the focus is to instill pride, respect, and trust within your employees, managers do this by sacrificing for the good of the group, being a role model, and displaying high ethical standards

Value Attainment

the idea that satisfaction results from the perception that a job allows for fulfillment of an individual's important values

Inspirational Motivation

transformational leader behavior, which includes the use of charisma, involves establishing an attractive vision of the future, the use of emotional arguments, and exhibition of optimism and enthusiasm


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