Managing People Ch.2
Self-efficacy
"I can do that" persons belief about his or her chances of successfully accomplishing a specific task
positive emotions
If your goal is to do well at school and you graduate on time and with honors, you are likely to experience common positive emotions, such as joy, gratitude, pride, satisfaction, contentment, and relief. The emotions are positive because they are congruent (or consistent) with your goal.
mixed emotions
Meeting or failing to meet our goals can also generate mixed emotions. Say you receive a well-earned promotion, which includes positives like more responsibility and pay—but only if you relocate to another state, which you don't want to do
negative emotions
Negative emotions are triggered by frustration and failure when pursuing one's goals. They are said to be goal incongruent. Common negative emotions are: anger, fright, anxiety, guilt, shame, sadness, envy, jealousy, and disgust. Typically, the more important the goal, the more intense the emotion.
personal competence emotional intelligence
Self awareness • Emotional self awareness • Accurate self-assessment • Self-confidence Self-management • Emotional self-control • Transparency • Adaptability, Achievement, Initiative, Optimism
social competence emotional intelligence
Social awareness • Empathy • Organizational awareness • Service Relationship management • Inspirational leadership • Influence • Developing others • Change catalyst - initiating, managing, and leading in a new direction • Conflict management, Building bonds, Teamwork and collaboration
Emotional intelligence
ability to monitor your own emotions and those of others, to discriminate among them, 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
External locus of control
believe their performance is the product of circumstances beyond their immediate control o Why does everything happen to me? o Why bother? o There is nothing I can do about my future
individual differences
broad category used to collectively describe the vast number of attributes that describe you as a person
Job design self-efficacy
complex, challenging, and autonomous jobs tend to enhance perceived self-efficacy.
emotions
complex, relatively brief responses aimed at a particular target, such as a person, information, experience, event, or nonevent; they also change psychological and/or physiological states
personality
defined as the combination of stable physical, behavioral, and mental characteristics that give individuals their unique identities
deliberate practice
demanding, repetitive, and assisted program to improve ones performance
conscientiousness
dependable, responsible, achievement oriented, persistent
training and development self-efficacy
employees self-efficacy expectations for key tasks can be improved through guided experiences, mentoring, and role modeling
goal setting and quality improvement self-efficacy
goal difficulty needs to match the individuals perceived self-efficacy, as self-efficacy and performance improve, goals and quality standards can be made more challenging
openness to experience
intellectual, imaginative, curious, broad-minded
leadership self-effiacy
leadership talent surfaces when top management gives high self-efficacy managers a chance to prove themselves under pressure
extraversion
outgoing, talkative, sociable, assertive
Internal locus of control
people who believe they control the events and consequences that affect their lives o I make things happen o Look what I can do o I can determine my future
Locus of control
relatively stable personality characteristic that describes how much personal responsibility you take for your behavior and its consequences
emotional stability
relaxed, secure, unworried
Core self-evaluations CSE
represent a broad personality trait comprised of four narrower and positive individual traits o Generalized o Self-esteem o Locus of control o Emotional stability
intelligence
represents an individuals capacity for constructive thinking, reasoning, and problem solving
emotion display norms
rules that dictate which types of emotions are expected and appropriate for their members to show
Proactive personality
someone who is relatively unconstrained by situational forces and who affects environmental change: act on opportunities, show initiative, take action, and persevere until meaningful change occurs
creativity self-efficacy
supportive managerial actions can enhance the strong linkage between self-efficacy beliefs and workplace creativity
self-management self-efficacy
systematic self-management training involves enhancement of self-efficacy expectations
coaching self-efficacy
those with low self-efficacy and employees victimized by learned helplessness need lots of constructive pointers and positive feedback
agreeableness
trusting, good-natured, cooperative, softhearted
self-esteem
your general belief about your own self-worth