BEM 211 Chapter 1
Intensity
Amount of effort people put in towards achieving a goal
Stakeholders
Anyone affected by or who affect an organizations objectives and actions
Corporate social responsibility
Benefit environment/society beyond immediate operations
Situational factors
Constrain/facilitate behavior; give cues to guide/motivate
Proficient task performance
Efficient and accurate
Proactive task performance
Employee ability take initiative to anticipate and introduce new work patterns to benefit the organization
Adaptive task performance
Employee ability to respond to changes in work processes or settings
Role perceptions
How clearly employees understand expectations...role clarity vs. role ambiguity
1. Integrated roles 2. Flexible work scheduling 3. Role compatibility 4. Boundary management
How do you improve work-life integration?
1. Fit with external environment 2. Internal subsystems configured for high performance 3. Emphasis on organizational learning 4. Satisfy key stakeholders
How is organizational effectiveness measured?
- Improve employee skills/knowledge - Adapt to changing environments - Investing and rewarding the workforce
How to develop human capital?
Practical orientation anchor
How well OB theories find way into organizational life/become valuable assets to improve organizational effectiveness
Open system
Inputs > Organization (subsystems) > Outputs > feedback - External environment
Multidisciplinary anchor
OB should welcome information from outside fields
Surface level diversity
Observable demographic differences
Triple bottom line philosophy
Organizations are profitable, improve society, and improve environment
Values
Relatively stable, evaluative beliefs that guide preferences for outcomes or courses of actions
Contingency anchor
The effect of one action on another may depend on the situation
Persistence
The length of time people exert effort
Multiple levels anchor
The multiple levels of analysis in OB should be applied to each topic
Role clarity
Understanding duties/consequences, priority/performance expectations, and preferred behaviors/procedures
1. Takes longer to perform effectively together A. Communication problems B. "faultlines" C. Dysfunctional conflict which reduces information sharing and coworker satisfaction
What are the consequences of diversity?
Weak social networks and less information sharing
What happens when combining direct and indirect employment?
Technology and globalization
What has allowed employees to be "on call" 24/7?
Direction
Where people steer their effort
Organization
- Groups of people who work interdependently towards a common purpose - Collective entities; organized relationship with communication, coordination, collaboration - Collective sense of purpose; direction/unifying force
Ability
- Learned capabilities: skills/knowledge acquired - Aptitude: natural talents
Human capital
- The knowledge, skills, abilities, creativity employees bring to an organization - Most important in turning inputs to outputs - Gives organizations a competitive advantage
Organizational behavior
- The study of what people think, feel, and do in organizations - Looks at employee behaviors, decisions, perceptions, emotional responses - How individuals/teams in organizations relate to one another/counterparts - How interact with external environment
Inclusive workplace
A workplace that values people of all identities and allows them to be fully themselves while contributing to the organization
Maintaining work attendance
Caused by situation factors, stressful workplace conditions, generous sick leave payments, personal values/personality, strong absence norms
Joining/staying with an organization
Commitment to organization; harmful because human capital is an organization's main competitive advantage
Organizational citizenship
Cooperation/helpfulness to others that support organization's social/psychological context; behaviors associated with work context - towards individuals...helping coworker with task - towards organization...helping public image
Deep level diversity
Differences in psychological characteristics such as personality and values
Distributed organizations
Employees work all around the world through remote work
Motivation
Forces within that affect direction, intensity, persistence for voluntary behavior
Direct employment
Full-time permanent jobs - Higher work quality - Lower turnover - Higher commitment
Self-employed
Independent organization provides services to client organization
Task performance
Individual's voluntary goal directed behaviors that contribute to organization's objectives; behaviors engaged in work context
Levels of analysis
Individual, team, organization
Evidence based management
Making decisions and taking action based on research evidence
MARS model
Motivation, ability, role perceptions, and situational factors produce voluntary individual behaviors and performance
Systematic research anchor
Organizations should be studied using systematic research
Indirect employment
Position in an agency...is assigned/leased to client firms - Job ambiguity - Lower job satisfaction
Presenteeism
Showing up to work even when you shouldn't
Work-life integration
The degree that people are engaged in work and non-work roles; must have a low degree of role conflict
Organizational effectiveness
The ultimate dependent variable
Counterproductive work behaviors
Voluntary behaviors that harm an organization and its stakeholders
Personal theories
We develop these to make sense of our environments; used to understand, predict, influence organizational events
- High self-motivation - High self-organization - Autonomy - IT skills - Job requires few resources at workplace and coworker reliance; measurable tasks vs. present
Who works well remotely?