OB/HR 3200
Motivation
"Psychological processes that underlie the direction, intensity, and persistence of behavior or thought." Direction: where efforts are channeled or what the individual is doing Intensity: how hard a person tries or the amount of effort invested in the activity Persistence: how long the effort is maintained
Big 5 Model to perosonality
(OCEAN) Openness to experience- Intellectual, imaginative, curious, broad-minded Conscientiousness (stongest success predictor of the big 5)-- Dependable, responsible, persistent achievement-oriented Extraversion-- outgoing, talkative, sociable, assertive Agreeableness-- trusting, good natured, cooperative, "softhearted" Neuroticism (emotional stability)-- anxiety, self-consciousness, vulnerability
Douglas McGregor's Theory X and Theory Y
-Based on two basic assumptions about people: (1) Theory X, which views employees negatively and sees the need for structured organizations with strict hierarchal lines and close supervision, and (2) Theory Y, which takes a more humanistic view towards employees, believing they are capable of being motivated and productive. -The basic assumptions involved are not collectively made by management, nor do these assumptions apply across the board to all employees. Rather, they are assumptions made by individual supervisors about individual employees. The supervisor then treats each employee in accordance with the assumption he has made about that employee. In turn, the behavior of the employee involved is in response to the way he is treated by the supervisor.
The three components of Attitudes
1. Affective-- Feelings 2. Cognitive-- Beliefs 3. Behavioral-- Intentions
For each of the following actions, indicate which part of the expectancy model, specifically, would be improved for an unmotivated employee? A. Effort to Performance (Expectancy) B. Performance to Outcome (Instrumentality) C. Value of rewards (Valence) 1.Show direct link between performance and raises. 2.Set clear goals, establish positive expectations 3.Base rewards on what the employee values. 4.Establish a pay for performance plan. 5.Provide adequate resources and training.
1. B 2. A 3. C 4. B 5. A
4 steps of stereotyping
1. Categorization: we categorize people into groups according to criteria (e.g., gender, age, race, or occupation) 2. Inferences: we infer that all people within a category possess the same traits or characteristics 3. Expectations: we form expectations of others and interpret their behavior according to our stereotypes 4. Maintenance: We maintain stereotypes by overestimating the frequency of stereotypic behaviors exhibited by others, incorrectly understanding and explaining the behaviors of others, and differentiating ourselves from others based on categorizations.
People seek to reduce cognitive dissonance by
1. Challenging the attitude or behavior of both 2. Belittling the importance of the inconsistent behavior 3. Finding things that outweigh the dissonant things
How many people think they have a bad boss?
75% of people think their boss is a failure. 50% of managers see their subordinates as failures
Core self-evaluations (CSE):
A broad personality trait comprised of four narrow and positive individual traits. It is about individuals' fundamental evaluations of themselves. 4 Components: Self-efficacy, self-esteem, locus of control, emotional stability
Self esteem
A general belief about your self-worth.
Sam, a driver, is about to pass through an intersection. His light turns green, and he begins to accelerate when another car drives through the red light and crosses in front of her. Sam ignores any potential environmental factors that could be contributing to the other driver running the light and blames the other driver for being a reckless driver. This is an example of which of the following: A. Fundamental Attribution Bias B. Contrast Effects C. Halo Error D. Self-Serving Bias E. Projection
A. Fundamental Attribution Bias
Megan was hurt at work. Megan's manager concluded that Megan was careless and clumsy. Megan's manager may have committed an error called ________ error. A. fundamental attribution B. leniency C. stereotyping D. self-serving bias E. halo
A. Fundamental attribution
Values represent beliefs that influence behaviors _____________; attitudes relate to behavior __________. A. across all situations; toward specific targets B. toward specific targets; across all situations C. across all situations; toward people D. toward specific objects; toward specific people E. toward specific people; toward specific objects
A. across all situations; toward specific targets
Sandy has a goal to work hard and eventually apply for a promotion at the Bora Bora Company. Sandy is most likely to exhibit positive emotions if A. the emotions are congruent with her goal. B. she has emotional intelligence. C. the emotions are incongruent with her goal. D. she feels inadequate. E. she had a bad experience being promoted at her former company.
A. the emotions are congruent with her goal
Bob has a goal to work hard and eventually apply for a promotion at the Great Grain Company. Bob is most likely to exhibit positive emotions if A. the emotions are congruent with his goal. B. he has emotional intelligence. C. the emotions are incongruent with his goal. D. he feels inadequate. E. he had a bad experience being promoted at his former company.
A. the emotions are congruent with his goal
self-efficacy
An individual's belief that he or she is capable of performing a task, or ones own ability
Stereotype
An individual's set of beliefs about the characteristics or attributes of a group.
Which of the following statements is NOT accurate? A. Stereotypes can lead to poor decisions. B. All stereotypes are negative. C. Stereotypes are used during the encoding process of perception. D. Quality interpersonal contact among mixed groups may reduce the use of stereotypes. E. Some people have negative stereotypes about older individuals.
B. All stereotypes are negative
Which of the following statement is correct regarding diversity? A. Diversity is defined as the extent to which the differences of organization members is brought together in a meaningful way to increase success B. Diversity is beneficial for organizational effectiveness but could be a source of conflict. C. Examples of deep level diversity include attitude, values, and age diversity. D. Criteria of diversity only include race and gender. E. Diversity increases creativity and awareness of broad customer base, but also increases the likelihood of legal problem.
B. Diversity is beneficial for organizational effectiveness but could be a source of conflict.
_________refer(s) to internal representations of desired end-states, with these desired states being shaped by person and situation factors. A. Human capital B. Goals C. Vision D. Mission E. Strategic asset
B. Goals
Kyle is considering volunteering to help his company with its annual food drive. Which of the following is NOT an indicator of whether he will do so? A. Kyle thinks the food bank is a great way to help his community. B. Kyle is already volunteering at the animal shelter. C. Kyle's boss expects him to volunteer. D. Kyle's company gives employees a day off to volunteer. E. The food bank is located close to Kyle's home.
B. Kyle is already volunteering at the animal shelter
Matt, an accountant with Brighter Future Corporation, is experiencing job dissatisfaction due to comparing how hard he works and how much he gets paid versus his perception of a coworker's effort and reward. Matt's dissatisfaction can be explained by ______ model. A. disposition/genetic components B. equity C. need fulfillment D. value attainment E. met expectations
B. equity
Test Your Knowledge George does not score particularly well on standard IQ tests yet he has a unique ability to deal with complex interpersonal situations. What would explain this phenomenon? A. practical intelligence B. multiple intelligences C. reasoning ability D. emotions and attitude E. gender
B. multiple intelligences
Inez was content with her job at Pieces Packaging until the company added two levels of supervision, lowered bonuses, and decreased breaks. Her current dissatisfaction reflects ______ factors. A. Relatedness B. Motivating C. Hygiene D. Achievement E. Affiliation
C. Hygiene
Jorge would like to increase intrinsic motivation by giving his employees independence and discretion in certain aspects of their job. According to the job characteristics model, which core job dimension is he using? A. task identity B. task significance C. autonomy D. feedback E. skill variety
C. autonomy
Juan is trying to learn how to use advanced spreadsheet features. He is not getting the correct answers but he keeps trying. What is Juan exhibiting? A. direction B. extrinsic motivation C. persistence D. attention to detail E. emotional Intelligence
C. persistence
Hawthorn Studies
Carried out by the Western Electric Company. The experiment showed how human psychological factors affected productivitiy. These factors were: Social/Group Acceptance, Participating in planning, Special atmosphere tied to additional pay
Kelley model of Attribution
Consensus(relates to comparisons with other people) Is one's behavior in this situation similar to that of his/her peers? Distinctiveness (relates to comparisons in other situations/tasks) Is one's behavior in this situation different from his/her behavior in different situations? Consistency (relates to comparisons across time) Is one's behavior in this same situation similar to over time?
Bill has a history of turning in his monthly reports on time and with 100% accuracy. This month Bill's reports were accurate but a week late. WHY? a. Bill doesn't know how to do monthly reports. b. Bill is lazy. c. The information he needed was not available to meet the deadline.
Could be B or C. B is an internal factor, and C is an external factor
Which approach calls for using management concepts and techniques in a situationally appropriate manner? A. One best way approach B. Human relations approach C. Theory X management approach D. Contingency approach E. Theory Y management approach
D. Contingency approach
__________represents "those psychological processes that cause the __________, direction and persistence of voluntary actions that are goal directed." A. Attitude; significance B. Attitude; intensity C. Motivation; significance D. Motivation; intensity E. Emotion; significance
D. Motivation; intensity
Joe was terminated from his job and believed the reason was his boss did not like him and his hard work was not appreciated. Joe likely has A. high emotional stability. B. an internal locus of control. C. low self-efficacy. D. an external locus of control. E. low self-esteem.
D. an external locus of control
Mary is a manager for Greens and Grits. Mary would like to improve job satisfaction for her employees. She can accomplish this by implementing different policies dealing with A. personality. B. intelligence. C. cognitive ability. D. emotions and attitudes. E. all of the above.
D. emotions and attitudes
As discussed in class, the performance equation tells us that performance is a function of ________. A. enthusiasm, progress, and achievement. B. interest, activity, and reward. C. awareness, effort, and outcome. D. motivation, ability, and opportunity. E. knowledge, resources, and goals.
D. motivation, Ability, and opportunity
The organizing framework for understanding and applying OB is based upon A. a systems approach. B. using person and environmental factors as inputs. C. processes including individual level, group/team level, and organizational level. D. outcomes organized into individual level, group/team level, and organizational level. E. The framework is based on all of these
E. the frame work is based on all of these
T or F Monetary incentives for goals always improves goal-setting outcomes.
False
T or F Participative goals, assigned goals, and self-set goals are equally effective.
False
T or F "Do your best" goals maximize performance?
False
True or False The more difficult the goal, the higher the performance?
False
Total Quality Management (TQM)
Focuses on quality and customer satisfaction.
Locus of Control
How much personal responsibility you take for your behavior and consequences. Internal-belief that you have control over future outcomes External- belief that outside factors control outcomes
surface-level diversity
Internal characteristics apparent to others (unchangeable)
McClelland's Acquired Needs Theory
Motivation is a function of three different needs that vary between people, and are acquired/learned over time: Need for Achievement The desire to excel, overcome obstacles, solve problems, and rival and surpass others. Need for Affiliation The desire to maintain social relationships, be liked, and join groups. Need for Power The desire to influence, coach, teach, or encourage others to achieve.
intrinsic motivation
Motivation to do something for intrinsic rewards that come from doing the thing itself (e.g., enjoying the task itself)
extrinsic motivation
Motivation to do something in order to receive extrinsic rewards (e.g., money, recognition, status, promotion, etc.)
Self determination theory: Three innate needs drive intrinsic motivation:
Need for Competence o The desire to feel qualified, knowledgeable, and capable to complete a task or goal • Need for Autonomy o The desire to have freedom and discretion in determining what you want to do and how you want to do it • Need for Relatedness o The desire to feel part of a group, to belong, and to be connected with others. People are intrinsically motivated to satisfy these needs.
Fundamental attribution virus
One's tendency to attribute another person's behavior to his or her personal characteristics (internal factors), as opposed to situational factors
Self-serving bias
One's tendency to take more personal responsibility for success than for failure
Self transcendance
Part of 1st bipolar dimension. Concern for the welfare and interests of others
Conservation
Part of 2nd Bipolar dimension. Order, self-restriction, preservation of the past, and resistance to change.
Equity Theory
Perceived equity in the organization impacts employee motivation Components of Equity Theory • Outputs: What one gets from the job (e.g., compensation, promotions) • Inputs: What one puts into the job (e.g., time, effort, knowledge, skills) • Compare Outputs/Inputs Ratio with those of relevant others (can be equitable or inequitable) • Perceived equity → increased motivation and satisfaction • Perceived negative inequity → decreased motivation and satisfaction
Smart Goals
Specific Measurable Attainable Relevant Time-bound
Causal attributions
Suspected or inferred causes of behavior; ascribing motives, intentions, or reasons to explain why things happened or why someone did what they did.
personality
The combination of stable, physical, behavioral, and mental characteristics that give individuals their unique identity
emotional labor
The effort required to display emotions that one is not really feeling (i.e., call center reps try to be happy on the phone despite getting angry calls all day)
Justice Theory
The extent to which people perceive they are treated fairly at work influences their behaviors and attitudes Distributive Justice: The perceivedfairness of how resources and rewards are distributed (decision/outcome itself). Procedural Justice: The perceivedfairness of the processes and procedures used to makeallocation decisions. Interactional Justice:Quality of the interpersonal treatment people receive when procedures are implemented. • All three types of justice impact employees' satisfaction, commitment, turnover, stress, and performance.
Diversity
The multitude of individual differences and similarities that exist within a team or organization
T or F Feedback enhances the effect of specific, challenging goals.
True
Perception
a cognitive process that enables us to interpret and understand our surroundings
What is OB/HR based off of?
a contingency perspective
Strategy
a set of integrated activities to create a sustainable competitive advantage
Emotional Intelligence (EI or EQ)
ability to monitor your and others' feelings and to use this information to guide your thinking and actions
Practical intelligence
ability to solve everyday problems by utilizing knowledge gained from experience in order to purposefully adapt to, shape, and select environments
Values
abstract ideals that guide one's thinking and behavior across all situations. Want to find a match between individuals values and their environment and behavior
Telecommuting
allows employees to work from home
job satisfaction
an affective or emotional response toward various facets of one's job
intelligence
an individual's capacity for constructive thinking, reasoning, and problem solving
Martha would like to hire employees who will be strong performers in her organization. Which of the Big Five personality dimensions should she try to make sure the new employees score high on? A. extraversion B. agreeableness C. conscientiousness D. emotional stability E. openness to experience
c. conscientiousness
flexible differences
change over time from situation to situation; can be altered more easily
negative inequity
comparison in which another person receives greater outcomes for similar inputs
Human relations objectives
creating/distributing satisfaction (labor turnover, tenure, sickness, attitude)
Myth of rationality
emotions, and expressing emotions doesn't necessarily make you/ your decisions irrational
discrimination
employment decisions about an individual are based on reasons not associated with performance or related to the job
Perceived organizational support
extent to which employees believe that the organization values their contributions and genuinely cares about their well-being
What is employee engagement?
extent wo which employees give their all to work roles
Deep-level diversity
external influences Organizational dimensions
Competitive advantage
feature that creates more economic value for a firm
Attitude
feelings or opinions about specific people, places or objects; range from positive to negative. Attitudes are directed to specific "targets" and influence specific behaviors relevant to the target
process theories
focus on explaining the process by which internal factors and situational factors influence employee motivation
content theories
focus on identifying internal factors, such as need fulfillment, that influence employee motivation
McGregor's Theory X and Theory Y
managers view employees in 2 different ways: Theory X Pessimistic view of employees: they dislike work, must be monitored, and can be motivated only with rewards and punishment • Theory Y Positive assumptions about employees: they are self-engaged, committed, responsible, and creative
5 Models of Job Satisfaction
need fulfillment, met expectations, value attainment, equity, dispositional/genetic components
Self enhancemnet
part of 1st bipolar dimension, pursuit of one's own interests and relative success and dominance over others
Openness to change
part of 2nd Bipolar condition. Independence of thought, action, and feelings and readiness for change
Why are people issues challenging?
people are complex and soft skills are confusing
Economic objectives
produce products (cost, profit, efficiency)
Emotions
relatively brief responses aimed at a specific target, such as a person, information, experience, or event. Emotions can change our psychological and physiological states.
Organizational citizenship behavior (OCB)
represents discretionary individual behaviors that are typically not directly or explicitly recognized by the formal reward system and can promote effective functioning of the organization.
Strategic planning
road map of where your gonna go and how you will get there
proactive personality
someone who is relatively unconstrained by situational forces and who affects environmental change
Fixed individual differences
stable over time and across situations; difficult to change
Emotional Stability (Neuroticism)
the ability to remain calm and confident, especially in times of crisis
Theory of planned behavior
the idea that people's intentions are the best predictors of their deliberate behaviors, which are determined by their attitudes toward specific behaviors, subjective norms, and perceived behavioral control
Emotional contagion
the influence of one person's affect on the moods of others
Cognitive Dissonance
the psychological discomfort experienced when simultaneously holding two or more conflicting cognitions
Contingency approach
there is no best may to manage people, best option depends upon the interplay of multiple personal and situational factors
Goal Setting Theory
• Goal: Something an individual is trying to accomplish • Goals that are specific and difficult lead to higher performance than vague or easy goals • As long as... • Individual is committed to goal • Goal is attainable (not impossible) • Feedback is available during goal pursuit
Justice Theory - Examples
• High distributive justice but low procedural justice: • Robin Hood steals from the rich and gives to the poor • High procedural justice but low distributive justice: • You get fired. You think this outcome is unfair; but your company followed the established policies in making the decision
Performance equation: P = M x A x O
• P = Performance • M = Motivation: Do you want to? • A = Ability: Are you able to? • O = Opportunity: Does the situation allow you to?
Herzberg's 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 factors • Hygiene factors → Job dissatisfaction - Factors in the work context (company policies, salary, working conditions, etc.) - Good hygiene factors → neutral. Poor hygiene factors > dissatisfaction • Motivating factors →Job satisfaction - Factors associated with work content of the tasks being performed (achievement, recognition, characteristics of the tasks, responsibility, advancement, etc.) - Motivators → satisfaction. No motivators → neutral