MGMT 386 Exam 1

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Need for Power

(Acquired Needs) the desire to influence, coach, teach, or encourage others to achieve.

A negative diversity climate

Barriers and challenges to managing diversity

Outcomes

Individual Level, Group/Team Level, Organizational Level

Naturalist Intelligence turned into

Practical Intelligence which is to solve every day problems by using knowledge from past experience to shape environments

Job Satisfaction

is an affective or emotional response toward various facets of your job

Cognitive Component

"I believe" an attitude reflects our beliefs or ideas about an object or situation. What do you THINK about people who are disruptive

Affective Component

"I feel" contains our feelings or emotions about a given object or situation. What do you FEEL about people who are disruptive

Behavioral Component

"I intend" refers to the way we intent or expect to act toward someone. How would you INTEND to respond to disruptive behavior

Need for Affiliation

(Acquired Needs) The desire to maintain social relationship, be liked, and join groups.

Need for Achievement

(Acquired Needs) the desire to excel, overcome obstacles, solve problems, and rival and surpass others.

Ajzen's Theory of Planned Behavior

(Attitude toward behavior, Subjective Norm, Perceived behavioral control) -> Intention -> Behavior

Relative Stability of individual differences at work

(Relatively fixed to Relatively Flexible) Intelligence, cognitive abilities, personality, core self evaluations (self-efficacy, self esteem, locus of control, emotional stability), Attitudes, Emotions

Gen 2020 (2002-)

23 m population. Social media, election of Barack Obama, financial crisis of 2008 and high unemployment. Multitasking, online life, cyber literacy, communicate fast and online. Invented Social media and phone apps.

Traditionalists (1925-45)

38.5m population. Great Depression, WWII, Korean Ward, Cold War, rise of suburbs. Patriotic, Loyal, high work ethic. Invented Fax machine.

Gen Xers (1965-1979)

62m population. MTV, AIDS epidemic, fall of Berlin wall, 1987 stock market crash, bill Clinton and Monica Lewinsky scandal. Self Reliant, cynical, technologically savvy, distrustful of authority, search of work life balance. Invented Mobile Phone.

Three Components of Attitudes

Affective, Cognitive, Behavioral

Big 5 personality dimensions

Extroversion, Agreeableness, Conscientiousness (important to all jobs at all times), Emotional Stability, Openness to experience

Step two building stereotypes

Inferences: for ex: women are nurturing, African Americans are good athletes. We say people in a category possess same traits

Emotional Intelligence

Is the ability to monitor your own emotions and those of others, to use this info to guide your actions.

Hard Skills

The technical expertise and knowledge required to do a particular task or job function (accounting etc)

External Locus of Control

Think their life events are determined by outside forces, less motivation, lower salaries, more anxious

Problem Dissolving

To redesign the relevant system or its environment so that the problem is removed. It is better than to solve. Example is building a public trans system so that spare tires or new tires are not needed.

EEO = Equal Employment Opportunity Employer

Used in job advertisements; indicates that the employer does not discriminate against women and other protected class members. It does NOT mean that whites will be discriminated against!!!

Underemployed

Working at a job that a person is over qualified for

self determination theory

assumes that three innate needs influence our behavior and well being, the needs to competence, autonomy, and relatedness

Internal Locus of Control

believe they control the events in their life, possess greater work motivation, strong expectations, exhibit higher performance on tasks, derive more job satisfaction from performance

Remedy for Ill Conceived goals

brainstorm unintended consequences when thinking of goals, consider alternative goals that may be better to reward

Hygiene factors

company policy and administration, technical supervision, salary, interpersonal relationships with supervisors, and working conditions. Goes from no dissatisfaction to dissatisfaction

Job Satisfaction

defined in many different ways. Some believe it is simply how content an individual is with his or her job, in other words, whether or not they like the job or individual aspects or facets of jobs, such as nature of work or supervision

Process theories of motivation

describe how various person factors and situation factors in the org framework affect motivation

valence

describe the positive or negative value people place on outcomes

Motivation

describes the psychological processes that underlie the direction, and persistence of behavior or thought.

I DEAls

employee negotiated work responsibilities, schedules, location flexibility, compensation and career development

Expectancy theory

holds that people are motivate to behave in ways that produce desired combinations of expected outcomes

OCB

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 org

Outcomes of job satisfaction

intrinsic work motivation, job satisfaction, work effectiveness, growth satisfaction

Intrinsic Motivation

occurs when an individual is inspired by the positive internal feelings that are generated by doing well such as praise and joy on peoples faces.

Self Efficacy

one's belief in one's ability to succeed in specific situations or accomplish a task.

4 layer model of diversity

organizational dimension, external dimension, internal dimension, and personality

Procedural justice

perceived fairness of the process and procedures used to make allocation decisions

instrumentality

perceived relationship between performance and outcomes

Spatial Intelligence

potential to recognize patterns

Bodily Kinesthetic Intelligence

potential to use mind and body to coordinate physical movement

Enforcement Component in Diversity management

puts teeth in diversity goals and encourages behavior change

bottom up approach

recent, employee or work teams design jobs

Organizational Commitment

reflects the extent to which an individual identifies with an org and commits to its goals

distributive justice

reflects the perceived fairness of the way resources and rewards are distributed or allocated

Extrinsic motivation

results from potential or actual receipt of external rewards such as money

Goal setting theory

specific difficult goals, goal specificity, certain conditions, performance feedback, goal achievement leads to satisfaction

David McClelland's Acquired Needs Theory

states that three needs, for achievement, affiliation, and power, are the key drivers of employee behavior. People vary in the extent to which they possess these needs, and often one need dominates the other two.

Task identity

the extent to which the job requires an individual to perform a whole or completely identifiable piece of work.

Employee Engagement

the harnessing of org's members' selves to their work roles, in engagement, people employ or express themselves. Urgency, Intensity, Focus, Enthusiasm.

Educational Component in Diversity management

to prepare non traditional mangers for increasingly responsible posts and to help traditional managers overcome their prejudice in thinking about and interacting with different sex and ethnicity

Baby Boomers (1946-64)

78.3m population. Vietnam war, john k assassination, MLK J and women's movement, first man on the moon. Workaholic, idealistic, materialistic. Invented Personal Computer.

Millennials (Gen Y) (1980-2001)

92 m population. 9/11, Google, Enron, wars in Iraq, Hurricane Katrina, 2008 financial crisis. Entitled, close parental involvement, cyber literacy, appreciate diversity, multitasking, tech savvy. Invented Google and Facebook.

Affirmative Action (positive, proactive action)

A policy intended to achieve fair employment by ensuring equal opportunity; employers take positive action to recruit protected classes who, as a class of people, have been historically discriminated against in the past.

subjective norm

A social factor representing the perceived social pressure for or against the behavior

Motivating factors

ACHIEVEMENT, RECOGNICTION, ADVANCEMENT causes no satisfaction to satisfaction

Values

Abstract ideals that guide our thinking and behavior across all situations

Situation Factors

All the elements outside ourselves that influence what we do, the way we do it and the ultimate results of our actions

Affirmative Action Plan (AAP)

An employer developed plan that establishes hiring goals and timetables for underrepresented protected classes based on utilization analyses; employers with 50 or more employees must submit a written affirmative action plan to the EEOC. Executive Order 11246 requires all federal contractors and subcontractors with 15 or more employees and annual contracts of $10,000 to submit a written affirmative action plan.

Disciplines in the Interdisciplinary field of organizational behavior

Anthropology, Economics, ethics, Management, Organizational theory, Political Science, Psychology, Sociology, Statistics, Vocational counseling

Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964

Applies to all employment decisions (hiring, firing, promotions, training, layoffs, etc.) made by employers that operate in the U.S. with 15 or more employees; prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, sex or national origin. All U.S. citizens are protected by BLANK. Section 703(a). It shall be an unlawful employment practice for an employer - (1) to fail or refuse to hire or discharge any individual, or otherwise to discriminate against any individual with respect to compensation, terms, conditions or privileges of employment, because of such individual's race, color, religion, sex, or national origin; or (2) to limit segregate, or classify employees or applicants in any way which would deprive or tend to deprive any individual of employment opportunities or otherwise adversely affect his status as an employee because of such individual's race, color, religion, sex, or national origin.

Ethical Dilemmas

Are situations with two choices, neither of which resolves the situation in an ethically acceptable manner.

Person Factors

Are the infinite characteristics that give individuals their unique identities

Determinants of Intention

Attitude toward the behavior, subjective norm, perceived behavioral control.

Major correlates and consequences of job satisfaction

Attitudes, Behavior, Organizational Level

A hostile working environment for diverse employees

Barriers and challenges to managing diversity

A poor performance appraisal and reward system

Barriers and challenges to managing diversity

Difficulty balancing career and family issues especially for women

Barriers and challenges to managing diversity

Diverse employees' lack of political savvy

Barriers and challenges to managing diversity

Ethnocentrism, my culture is better

Barriers and challenges to managing diversity

Fear of reverse discrimination

Barriers and challenges to managing diversity

Inaccurate stereotypes and prejudice

Barriers and challenges to managing diversity

Lack of organizational priority for diversity (diversity drive is overtaking real work)

Barriers and challenges to managing diversity

Poor career planning

Barriers and challenges to managing diversity

Resistance to change

Barriers and challenges to managing diversity

Content Theories of Motivation

Based on the idea that an employee's needs influence his or her motivation. Include McGregor's Theory X and Theory Y, Maslow's Need hierarchy theory, Acquired needs theory, Self-determination theory, and Herzberg's motivator-hygiene theory.

Remedy for Slippery Slope

Be alert for even trivial ethical infractions and address them immediately. Investigate whether a change in behavior has occurred.

Job Crafting

Bottom up, represents employees' attempts to proactively shape their work characteristics

Contingency Approach

Calls for using the OB concepts and tools that best suit the situation, instead of trying to rely on "one best way." Be flexible

Step one building stereotypes

Categorization, we do this to people by groups, race, work, gender

Ways to reduce cognitive dissonance

Change your attitude or behavior or both, belittle the importance of the inconsistent behavior, Find consonant elements that outweigh the dissonant ones.

Distinctiveness

Compares a person's behavior on one task with his or her behavior on other tasks

Consensus

Compares an individual's behavior with that of his peers.

Self-Transcendence

Concern for the welfare and interests of others, (Universalism, benevolence)

Emotional Stability

Core Self Evaluations (CSE)

Generalized Self Efficacy

Core Self Evaluations (CSE)

Locus of Control

Core Self Evaluations (CSE)

Self Esteem

Core Self Evaluations (CSE)

Why ethics matter?

Criminal or not, unethical behavior effects EVERYONE in a company, it can tarnish a career or a whole business.

3-Step Approach Step 1 problem solving

Define Problem

OB, Organizational Behavior

Describes an interdisciplinary field dedicated to understanding and managing people at work

Self-Actualization Need

Desire for self fulfillment, to become the best one is capable of becoming.

Problem

Difference or gap between an actual and a desired state or outcome.

Social Awareness

EI, Empathy, organizational awareness, service

Relationship Management

EI, Inspirational Leadership, Influence, Developing Others, Change catalyst, conflict management, building bonds, teamwork and collaboration

Self Awareness

EI, emotional self awareness, accurate self assessments, self confidence

Self-Management

EI, emotional self control, transparency, adaptability, achievement, initiative, optimism

How does OB enhance job performance and career success?

Effective application of OB is critical to your work life

Benefits of Perceived Organizational support

Employee engagement, organizational commitment, job satisfaction, organizational citizenship behavior, greater trust, innovation, and lower tendency to quit.

Quotas:

Employer adjustments in hiring/promotion policies aimed at hiring or promoting a specific number of people from certain protected classes. BLANK involve establishing a specific, inflexible number (or percentage) of protected class members to hire, promote, train, etc. EMPLOYER DEVELOPED blank ARE ILLEGAL!! • The use of BLANK violate the Civil Rights Act of 1991 BLANK are lawfully imposed by the EEOC or a Federal District Court ONLY when evidence of illegal discrimination has been proven to exist in an organization!! • A consent decree issued by the EEOC or court states specific hiring/promotion BLANK for only those protected classes that were the victims of unlawful discrimination. Consent decrees have specific beginning and ending date. (Note: The average duration of a consent decree is 5 years). Failure to comply with a consent decree could lead to costly fines and make the employer ineligible to receive federal, state and local government contracts.

Ethical Behavior

Ethics guide behavior by identifying right, wrong, and the many shades of gray in between.

Remedy for Overvaluing Outcomes

Examine both "good" and "'bad" decisions for their ethical implications. Reward solid decision processes, not just good outcomes.

Positive emotions

Example, graduate college with honors, joy, gratitude, pride, satisfaction, relief

Step three building stereotypes

Expectations: we form these as we interpret their behavior according to our stereotypes

Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC)

Federal Agency created to enforce Title VII. The BLANK is responsible for enforcing and providing interpretation of equal employment opportunity laws. The BLANK reviews employers' recruiting, hiring and promotional records to ensure compliance with BLANK laws.

Kelley's Model of Attribution

Following Heider's work on external factors and internal factors. Kelley attempted to pinpoint specific antecedents of these: Consensus, Distinctiveness, and Consistency

What it takes to get hired?

For most jobs, you are hired for your technical skills, what it takes to get hired.

Critical thinking, Problem solving, judgement and decision making, active listening

Four skills most desired by employers

Trends in workforce diversity

Gender, race, LGBTQ, physical and mental disabilities, generational differences mismatches between education levels and org needs

Solving a Problem

Gets rid of the problem with the highest performance and optimizes. Better than resolving.

Protected class

Groups of people who qualify for judicial protection under the law based on a history of past discrimination; groups identified by Congress are: African Americans, Latinos/Hispanics, Asian Americans, Pacific Islanders, Native Americans (i.e., Indians, Eskimos), women, veterans, and people with disabilities

Individual work setting

Has the job itself become boring and less meaningful or rewarding to the employees who quit

Organizational Level work setting

Has the organization changed ownership, or rewritten company policies, or restricted such that the most desirable positions are now at the headquarters in another state?

group/team work setting

Have there been any changes to the work group, including the manger that might make work less satisfying? How does turnover in your department compare to that in other departments in the organization?

Hiring Goals

Hiring goals are created as a part of affirmative action planning. Data obtained from an examination of relevant labor markets) and the demographic composition of employers' internal workforce are used to develop flexible hiring goals. Goals are not quotas.

3 Step Approach Step 2 problem solving

Identify potential causes using OB concepts and theories

Openness to Change

Independence of thought, action and feelings and readiness for change, (Stimulation, Self direction) Hedonism

Processes

Individual Level, Group/Team Level, Organizational Level

Proactive Personality

Is an attribute of someone relatively unconstrained by situational forces and who effects environmental change, proactive people identify opportunities and act on them, show initiative, take action, and persevere until meaningful change occurs

Self Esteem

Is your general belief about your own self worth

Behavioral Outcomes of job satisfaction

Job performance, organizational citizenship behavior (OCB), Counterproductive work behavior (CWB), Turnover

Consistency

Judges whether the individual's performance on a given task is consistent over time

Gardener's 8 Intelligences

Linguistic Intelligence, Logical/Math Intelligence, Musical Intelligence, Bodily/Kinesthetic Intelligence, Spatial Intelligence, Interpersonal Intelligence, Intrapersonal Intelligence, Naturalist Intelligence

Benefits of EI

Linked to better social relationships, well being, and satisfaction across all ages and contexts, including work

Step four building stereotypes

Maintenance: we maintain our stereotypes by 1. overestimating the frequency of stereotypical behaviors 2. incorrectly explaining expected and unexpected behaviors 3. differentiating minority individuals from ourselves

3 step approach step 3 problem solving

Make recommendations

An employee's attributions for his or her own performance have dramatic effects on motivation, performance, and personal attitudes such as self-esteem

Managerial Applications and Implications

Other attributional biases may lead managers to take inappropriate actions

Managerial Applications and Implications

WE tend to disproportionately attribute behavior to internal causes

Managerial Applications and Implications

Practical application of Ajzen's model for managers

Managers should look at the intentions of behavior and modify them to suit needs

Mixed Emotions

Meeting or failing to meet our goals but other consequences happen. Example: getting a higher paying job requires more work

Portable Skills

More or less relevant in every job, at every level, throughout your career

Physiological Need

Most basic need, entails having enough food, air, and water to survive.

Attitudinal Outcomes of jobs satisfaction

Motivation, Job involvement, Withdrawal Cognitions (capture this thought process by representing an individual's overall thoughts and feelings about quitting), Perceived Stress

Causes of Job Satisfaction

Need Fulfillment, Met expectations, Value attainment, Equity(fairness at work), Dispositional/Genetic Components

Esteem Needs

Need for reputation, prestige, strength and self confidence.

Dimensions of Schwartz Values Theory SECOND Dimension

Openness to Change, Conservation

Conservation

Order, Self restriction, preservation of the past and resistance to change, (Conformity, Tradition, Security)

Key Workplace Attitudes

Organizational Commitment, Employee engagement, Perceived organizational support. Job Satisfaction

Common Sense gives

Over-reliance on hindsight, lack of rigor, and lack of objectivity

Contributions to Employee Engagement

PERSON FACTORS - Personality, Positive Psych Capital, Human and social Capital. SITUATION FACTORS- Job Characteristics, Leadership, Organizational Climate, Stressors.

Perceived Organizational Support

POS, reflects the extent to which employees believe their org values their contributions and genuinely cares about their well-being

Inputs

Personal Factors and Situation Factors

Drivers of Org Commitment

Personality, Meaningfulness of the work being performed, organizational climate, leader behavior, org culture. Person-culture Fit.

Institutional Power

Positive side of the power need identified by McClelland. These people want to organize people in the pursuit of organizational goals and helping people

Intrapersonal Intelligence

Potential to understand and regulate yourself

Interpersonal Intelligence

Potential to understand, connect with, and effectively work with others

Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA)

Prohibits discrimination against people who are 40 or older.

Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA)

Prohibits employment discrimination against people with disabilities who are able to perform the essential functions of the job with or without reasonable accommodations. Any person who has a medically documented history of a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits a major life activity (i.e., walking, standing, lifting, bending, talking, seeing, hearing, breathing, speaking, learning, reading or concentrating) or is regarded as having an impairment (e.g., an individual with a physical disfigurement) qualifies for protection under the BLANK.

Maslow's Need Hierarchy Theory

Published in 1943, Abraham said that motivation is a function of five basic needs (bottom to top): Physiological, Safety, Love, Esteem, Self-Actualization. Have unmet needs so employees can be motivated.

Self-Enhancement

Pursuit of ones own interests and relative success and dominance over others, (Power, Achievement) Hedonism

Fundamental Attribution Bias

Reflects our tendency to attribute another person's behavior to his or her personal characteristics rather than to situation factors

Soft Skills

Relate to human interactions and include both interpersonal skills and personal attributes

Value Stability Across time and situations

Relatively Stable

Attitudes

Represent our feelings or opinions about people, places, and objects and range from positive to negative

Self Serving Bias

Represents our tendency to take more personal responsibility for success than failure. success to internal factors and failures to external factors

Cognitive dissonance

Represents the psychological discomfort a person experiences when simultaneously holding two or more conflicting ideas or beliefs

Attributional tendencies

Researchers have uncovered BLANK that distort our interpretation of observed behavior: fundamental attribution bias and Self Serving Bias

Remedy for Motivated Blindness

Root out conflicts of interest simply being aware of them doesn't necessarily reduce their negative effect on decision making

Dimensions of Schwartz Values Theory FIRST Dimension

Self-Transcendence, Self-Enhancement

What it takes to get promoted?

Soft skills become more important in terms of higher level jobs

Interactional Perspective

States that behavior is a function of interdependent person and situation factors

1. Membership in a protected class. (protected class can be based on race, religion, gender (sex) at birth, ethnicity, color, national origin, age, pregnancy, U.S. military veteran status, or qualified physical or mental disability).

Steps in filing a discrimination lawsuit: The burden of proof is, first, on the plaintiff (i.e., employee) to show:

2. That s/he is qualified for the job for which the employer was seeking applicants.

Steps in filing a discrimination lawsuit: The burden of proof is, first, on the plaintiff (i.e., employee) to show:

3. That although qualified, s/he was rejected (not hired) for the job.

Steps in filing a discrimination lawsuit: The burden of proof is, first, on the plaintiff (i.e., employee) to show:

4. After being rejected, the job remained open and the employer continued to seek applicants with skills the plaintiff possesses. Following this step The burden of proof then shifts to the employer to show a legitimate, non-discriminatory reason for rejecting (not hiring or promoting) the applicant/employee.

Steps in filing a discrimination lawsuit: The burden of proof is, first, on the plaintiff (i.e., employee) to show:

Problem Solving

Systematic process for closing gaps between an actual and a desired state or outcome

Value Stability Across generations

Tend to Vary. For example, parents who lived through the great depression value security and money conservation

Generational Differences

The US population and workforce are getting older and includes more generations than ever before. Four generations working together soon to be joined by a fifth.

Attitude toward the behavior

The degree to which a person has a favorable or unfavorable evaluation of the behavior in question

Locus of control

The extent to which people believe they have power over events in their lives. A person with an internal locus of control believes that he or she can influence events and their outcomes, while someone with an external locus of control blames outside forces for everything.

Equal Pay Act of 1963

The law requires the same pay for men and women who do the same job in the same organization. The comparable worth doctrine calls for comparable pay for jobs that require comparable skills, effort, and responsibility, even if the specific content of the jobs are different

Problem Resolving

The most common actions managers take. A means that does well enough, that satisfies that problem. Is not first choice though. Example is using the spare tire.

Personal Power

The negative face of power; these people want to control other people. Identified by McClelland.

perceived behavioral control

The perceived ease or difficulty of performing the behavior, assumed to reflect past experience and anticipated obstacles

The Slippery Slope

We are less able to see others' unethical behavior when it develops gradually. EX: Auditors may be more likely to accept a client firm's questionable financial statements if infractions have accrued over time.

Overvaluing Outcomes

We give a pass to unethical behavior if the outcome is good. EX: A researcher whose fraudulent clinical trial saves lives is considered more ethical than one whose fraudulent trial leads to deaths.

Indirect Blindness

We hold others less accountable for unethical behavior when its carried out through third parties. EX: a drug company deflects attention from a price increase by selling rights to another company which imposes the increases

Motivated Blindness

We overlook the unethical behavior of another when its in our interest to remain ignorant. EX: baseball officials turned their heads when they realized they had created conditions that encouraged steroid use.

Ill-Conceived Goals

We set goals and incentives to promote a desired behavior but they encourage a negative one. EX: The pressure to maximize billable hours in accounting etc leads to unconscious padding

Turnover

When a low performing person is fired or quits and can be replaced by a better person

Remedy for Indirect Blindness

When handing off or outsourcing work, ask whether the assignment might invite unethical behavior and take ownership of the implications

Affirmative Action

an intervention aimed at giving management a chance to correct an imbalance injustice or mistake or outright discrimination that occurred in the past

job design

any set of activities that alter jobs to improve the quality of employee experience and level productivity

Emotions

are complex, relatively brief responses aimed at a particular target, such as a person, information, experience or event. Change psych states

Surface Level characteristics

are those that are quickly apparent to interactants such as race, gender and age

Deep level characteristics

are those that take their time to emerge in interactions such as attitude and opinions

interactional justice

describes the quality of the interpersonal treatment people receive

Idiosyncratic deals (I DEALS)

employee and management design job, emerging

Exposure Component in Diversity management

exposing people to other with different backgrounds and characteristics. getting managers to know and respect others who are different.

Diversity Management

focuses on changing an orgs culture so that people work to the highest productivity possible. Education component, enforcement, exposure

Ethical lapses

is a mistake or error in judgement that produces a harmful outcome

McGregor's Theory Y

is a modern and positive set of assumptions about people at work: they are self engaged, committed, responsible, and creative.

McGregor's Theory X

is a pessimistic view of employees: they dislike work, must be monitored, and can be motivated with only rewards and punishments (carrots and sticks)

Stereotype

is an individual's beliefs about the characteristics or attributes of a group

Individual Level work outcomes

job performance, job satisfaction, turnover, org citizenship behaviors, counterproductive work behaviors

Top down

management designs jobs, historical.

Equity theory

model of motivation that explains how people strive for fairness and justice in social exchanges and give and take relationships

Job Characteristics model

to promote high intrinsic motivation by designing jobs that possess the five core job characteristics, skill variety, task identity, task significance, autonomy, feedback

Scientific management

top down, business is conducted by standards established by facts from experiments

job rotation

top down, calls for moving employees from one specialized job to another

job enrichment

top down, modifies a job such that an employee has the opportunity to experience achievement

Job enlargement

top down, puts more variety into a workers job by combing specialized tasks of comparable difficulty

Negative Emotions

triggered by frustration and failure to meet goals, anger, fright, guilt, sadness, jealousy

Moderators

variable that changes the relationship between two other variables

Herzberg's Motivator Hygiene Theory

which proposes that job satisfaction and dissatisfaction arise from two different sets of factors motivating and hygiene

Relationship between personality and Job performance

you are more likely to show your true colors when the situation lacks constraints


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