MGT exam 3 (chapter 11-16)
_______________ formally dictates how jobs and tasks are divided and coordinated between individuals and groups within the company.
An organizational structure
________________ involves a meeting of team members where each offers as many ideas as possible about some focal problem or issue.
Brainstorming
The more communication flows through fewer members of the team, the higher the degree of
Centralization
In practice, there are two major ways to change a culture. They are
Changes in leadership and mergers and acquisitions
Which style of conflict management results in the best outcomes and reactions from both parties?
Collaborating
Which of the following is the style of decision-making whereby the leader plays no role in deliberations unless asked?
Delegative
What is the most basic bureaucratic structure?
Functional
The degree to which the leader effectively weighs the recommendations of the members is reflected by
Hierarchical sensitivity
Which of the following characteristics is most closely related to leader effectiveness?
High openness to experience
Management team
Integrate activities of subunits across business functions (long life span, and moderate member involvement)
Motivating and confidence building, conflict management, and affect management are types of _____________
Interpersonal
Which of the following refers to how well people actually do in a leadership role?
Leader effectiveness
Which type of organization is flexible, adaptive, outward-focused and capable of thriving in dynamic environments?
Organic
Which of the following teams focus on providing recommendations and resolving issues?
Parallel team
The optimal combination of leader behaviors in the R3 stage of the life cycle theory of leadership is
Participating
Project team
Produce a one-time output (product, service, plan, design, etc.) (life span and member involvement varies)
Parallel team
Provide recommendations and resolve issues (life span varies, low member involvement)
______________ is the degree to which people have alternatives in accessing resources
Substitutability
______________ helps to determine the likelihood that the team can work together effectively into the future.
Team viability
_______________ leadership involves inspiring followers to commit to a shared vision.
Transformational
Which of the following scenarios exemplifies span of control?
Vienna is responsible for managing 16 employees
The degree to which tasks in an organization are divided into separate jobs is known as
Work specialization
Monitoring progress
_______________ toward goals involve recording accomplishments on a progress chart or something similar
What does a team need in order to assure a high level of goal interdependence?
a formalized mission statement
Consensus
a general agreement among members in regards to a solution (for example, a jury)
Member roles
a role is the pattern of behavior a person is expected to display in a given context
member personality
agreeable, conscientious, and extraverted
Wheel network
all communication flows through a central figure (lower member satisfaction)
All-channel network
all members can communicate directly with each other (higher member satisfaction)
member ability
cognitive and physical abilities needed in a team depend on the nature of the team's task
Storming
conflict occurs because members remain committed to the ideas they bring with them to the team
Team
consists of two or more people who work interdependently over some time period to accomplish common goals related to some task-oriented purpose
factors that affect team decision making
decision informity, staff validity, and hierarchical sensitivity
Goal interdependence
exists when team members have a shared vision of the team's goal and align their individual goals with that vision as a result (mission statement helps clarify actions needed by team)
Transition processes
focus on preparation for future work (mission analysis, strategy formulation, and goal specification)
Which of the following represents the predictable sequence of stages in team development?
forming, storming, norming, performing, and adjourning
Creative behavior
generating novel and useful ideas and solutions (brainstorming is a process used to generate creative ideas)
Process loss
getting less from the team than you would expect based on the capabilities of its individual members
Process gain (or synergy)
getting more from the team than you would expect according to the capabilities of its individual members
Team size
having a greater number of members is beneficial for management and project teams but not for teams engaged in production tasks (team members tend to be most satisfied with their team when the number of members is 4 or 5)
Action processes
important as taskwork is being accomplished (monitoring progress, systems monitoring, helping behavior, and coordination)
Noise
interferes with the message being transmitted (distance, obstructions, and physical noise)
Teamwork processes
interpersonal activities that facilitate the accomplishment of the team's work but do not directly involve task accomplishment
Task coordinator activities
involve communications that are intended to coordinate task-related issues with people or groups in other functional areas
Affect management
involves activities that foster a sense of emotional balance and unity
Conflict management
involves activities that the team uses to manage conflicts that arise in the course of its work (relationship conflict-disagreements about interpersonal relationships, task conflict-disagreements about the team's task)
Mission analysis
involves an analysis of the team's task, the challenges that face the team, and the resources available for completing the team's work
Systems monitoring
involves keeping track of things that the team needs to accomplish its work
Helping behavior
involves members going out of their way to help or back up other team members
Goal specification
involves the development and prioritization of goals related to the team's mission and strategy
five aspects of team composition
member roles, member ability, member personality, team diversity, and team size
Performing
members are comfortable in their roles, and the team makes progress toward goals
Adjourning
members experience anxiety and other emotions as they disengage and separate from the team
Forming
members orient themselves to team boundaries
Norming
members realize they need to work together and begin to cooperate
What are the three major components to any organizational culture?
observable artifacts, espoused values, and basic underlying assumptions
Major types of power can be grouped along two dimensions,
organizational and personal
conscientious
people tend to be dependable and work hard to achieve goals
agreeable
people tend to be more cooperative and trusting, tendencies that promote positive attitudes about the team
extraverted
people tend to perform more effectively interpersonal contexts and are more positive and optimistic in general
Action team
perform complex tasks that vary in duration and take place in highly visible or challenging circumstances (life span and member involvement varies)
Motivational loss
process loss due to the team members' tendency to put forth less effort on team tasks than they could
coordination loss
process loss due to the time it takes to coordinate work activities with other team members
Work team
produce goods or provide services (long life span, and high member involvement)
Ambassador activities
refer to communications that are intended to protect the team, persuade others to support the team, or obtain important resources for the team
Team States
refer to specific types of feelings and thoughts that coalesce in the minds of team members as a consequence of their experience working together (cohesion, potency, mental models, transactive memory)
Scout activities
refer to things team members do to obtain information about technology, competitors, or the broader marketplace
Coordination
refers to synchronizing team members' activities in a way that makes them mesh effectively and seamlessly
Staff validity
refers to the degree to which members make good recommendations to the leader
Task interdependence
refers to the degree to which team members interact with and rely on other members for the information, materials, and resources needed to accomplish work for the team (pooled interdependence, sequential interdependence, reciprocal interdependence, and comprehensive interdependence)
Strategy formulation
refers to the development of courses of action and contingency plans, and then adapting those plans in light of changes that occur in the team's environment
Team processes
refers to the different types of activities and interactions that occur within a team as it works toward its goals
Team viability
refers to the likelihood that the team can work together effectively into the future
Communicator competence
refers to the skills involved in encoding, transmitting, and receiving messages
Motivating and confidence building
refers to things team members do or say that affect the degree to which members are motivated to work hard on the task
Hierarchical sensitivity
reflects the degree to which the leader effectively weighs the recommendations of the members
Decision informity
reflects whether members possess adequate information about their own task responsibilities
Boundary spanning
relates to taskwork processes that involve individuals and groups who are not considered part of the team
Information richness
relates to the amount and depth of the information being conveyed (high information richness- face-to-face, moderate- personal written note, low- computer generated reports)
Social loafing
results from members feeling less accountable for team outcomes compared with their independent work outside the team
Production blocking
results from team members waiting on each other before completing their own team tasks
Which type of power exists when someone has control over the resources another person wants?
reward
Three main types of interdependence that govern team members' interactions
task interdependence, goal interdependence, and outcome interdependence
What characteristics can be used to describe teams?
task, unit, and member qualities can be used to describe teams
additive tasks
tasks depend on the combined efforts of all members
disjunctive tasks
tasks depend on the member with the highest ability
conjunctive tasks
tasks depend on the member with the lowest ability
Nominal group technique
team members individually write ideas and then take turns sharing them with the group
What is power?
the ability to influence the behavior of others
Taskwork processes
the activities of team members that relate directly to the accomplishment of team tasks (creative behavior, decision making, and boundary spanning)
Centralization
the degree to which communication in a network flows through some members rather than others
Team diversity
the degree to which members are different from one another
Potency
the degree to which members believe that the team can be effective across a variety of situations and tasks (high potency: members are confident, focused, low potency: members are unfocused, lack confidence)
Outcome interdependence
the degree to which team members share equally in the feedback and rewards that result from the team achieving its goals (high degree exists when team members share in the rewards that the team earns)
Network structure
the pattern of communication that occurs regularly among each member of a team
Communication
the process by which information and meaning get transferred from a sender to a receiver
five behaviors of a cohesive team
trust, conflict, commitment, accountability, and results
five categories of team
work teams, management teams, parallel teams, project teams, and action teams