Organizational Behavior Chapter 1-4
Schwartz model
Openness to change- pursue innovative ways conservative- preserve status quo self enhancement- self interest self transcendence- promote welfare to others
Increasing workforce diversity: Surface level Vs Deep levels
Surface level: race, gender, ethnicity, age Deep level: personality, beliefs, values, attitudes
job satisfaction increases customers loyalty
because affects mood, reduces turnover
Absorptive capacity
firms ability to identify, assimilate, transform and apply valuable external knowledge
distress consequences
physiological- cardiac disease, headaches behavioral- work performance, absenteeism psychological- dissatisfaction, moodiness, depression
MBTI/ Ms. Senior
reason mbti is used: self understanding, leadership, relationship, career planning, communication measures: doesnt measure, sorts prefernce doesnt measure: IQ, normalcy, emotions 4 dimensions: -energy: energized by ppl (E), or thoughts (I) - information: sensing vs intuition - decisions: feeling vs thinking - lifestyle: judging vs perceiving
stress management strategies
remove stressors withdraw from stressor change stress perception social support control stress consequences
3 dimensions that define self evaluation
self esteem- how satisfied we are w self self efficacy- belief in our ability, motivation to complete a task locus of control- belief about personal control over life events
triple bottom line
thrive in market place (economics), while improving society and environment
self fulfilling prophecy
when our perceptions of a person cause that person to act in a way that is consistent with those expectations
Globaliztion
- economic, social and cultural connectivity with people in other parts of the world - increases work intensification, reduce job security and work life balances in developing countries
4 organizational learning processes
Acquisition- learning, experimenting, scanning sharing- communication, training, observation use- awareness, sense making, autonomy storage- memory, documentation, database
FIVE factor model: CANOE
Conscientiousness- organized, dependable, goal focused, disciplined Agreeableness- trusting, helpful, flexible, considerate, tolerant, selfless Neuroticism- anxious, insecure, self consiouss Openness to experience- imaginative, creative Extroversion- talkative, energetic, sociable, assert
EVLN model: reaction to job dissatisfaction
Exit, voice, loyalty, neglect
MARS model
Motivation- direction (where effort is steered) , intensity (effort) , persistence (length) Ability- aptitudes, capability to do job Role perception- what their task/ job is Situational factors- time, people, budget
emotional inelligence
abilities to perceive and express and understand emotion in yourself and others and help them
stress
adaptive response to situations perceived as challenging or threatening to well being.
self verification implicaitons
affects the perceptual process because employees are more likely to remember info that is consistent with self concept
stereotyping
assigning traits to people based on social category membership
selective attention process:
attending to some information recieved by senses and ignoring other information
external attribution
behavior caused by environment
corporate social responsibilty
benefit society and environment beyond firms immediate financial interests, contract with society
stereotyping occurs because:
categorical thinking, enhances our self concept, anticipate others behavior
workplace stressors
causes of stress. harassment, work overload, low task control
forms of intellectual capital
companys stock of knowledge, including human capital, relationship capital and structural capital
self concepts 3 C dimensions:
complexity- multiple selves consistency- established selves, similar traits clarity- clearly defined self concept
emotional dissonance
conflict between true and required emotions - surface acting: pretend to feel expected emotions, stressful - deep acting: visualizing reality differently
rules for attribution
consistency- did this person act this way in past distinctiveness- does this person act this way in other situations consensus- do other people act this way in this situation
values
define right and wrong, good or bad, evaluate beliefs that guide our preference
emotional labor
effort, planning and control needed to express organizationally desired emotions during interpersonal transactions - display rules: when to show emotions and when to hide them
lean management
eliminate any waste of time, effort or money by cutting out steps that dont create value
job burnout process
emotional exhaustion- lack of energy cynicism- indifferent attitude towards work reduced feelings of personal accomplishment: diminished confidence
virtual work
employees use info technology to perform their jobs away from work place
organizational effectiveness
fits with external environment, internal subsystems, emphasis on organizational learning, ability to satisfy stakeholders
Motivation
forces within that affect direction, intensity and persistence of voluntary behavior
perceptual effects
halo effect- one trait effects perception false consensus- overestimate how many others have similar traits like ours primacy effect- opinion based on first impression recency effect- most recent info
workaholism
highly involved in work, feels inner pressure, low enjoyment of work, compulsive
values incongruency impact
how similar a persons values hierarchy is to the values hierarchy of the company
self concept
individuals self beliefs and self evaluation. Who am i?
mental models
internal representations of the external world, helps make sense of situations, fill in pieces
organizational learning perspective
knowledge management, (acquire, share, use and store knowledge)
conditions strengthening values and behavior:
mindful of our values have logical reasons to apply value situation allows/ encourages values enactment
general adaptation syndrome
model of the stress experience alarm reaction- resistance- exhaustion-
confirmation bias
non conscious tendency fro people to screen out information that is contrary to their decisions, beliefs, values
categorical thinking
noncouncious process of organizing people and objects into preconceived categories that are stored in LTM
personality
pattern of thoughts, emotions, behavior that characterize a person along with the psychological processes behind those characteristics - external traits: observed behaviors - internal states: thoughts, values, beliefs
Work life balance
people can minimize conflict between work and nonwork demands
social identity theory
people define themselves by the groups to which they belong. group status is important
attribution
people use information to make inferences about the causes of behavior or events
stakeholder perspective
personalizes the open system perspective, identifies specific people, they are dynamic, can be negotiated, satisfy interests of stakeholders - challenges: have conflicting interests, cant satisfy all
Telecommunicating:
positive: ability to work more hours a week from home, increase productivity challenges: lack of sufficient space, reduce promotion opportunities
perception
process of receiving info about and making sense of the world around us
emotions
psychological, behavioral and physiological episodes that create a state of readiness
4 Selves:
self enhancement- promoting/ protecting positive self view self verification- affirming our existing self concept self evaluation- evaluate self through self esteem, LOC social self- define ourselves in terms of group membership
Organizational behavior
study of what people think, feel and do in an organization
Open systems perspective
views organizations as complex organisms that live within an external environment
individualism
we value independence and personal uniqueness
collectivism
we value our duty to groups to which we belong to and to group harmony
cognitive dissonance
when feelings, behavior, beliefs are congruent
internal attribution
whether an observed behavior is caused by characteristics of the person (motivation, ability)
high performance work practices
workplace practices that leverage the potential of human capital - employee involvement & job autonomy - employee competence (train, selection