Chapter 2 (Values and Attitudes)
Perceived Organizational Support
(POS) Reflects the extend to which employees believe their organization values their contributions and genuinely cares about their well-being Can be positive or negative
Values
-Abstract ideals that guide ones thinking and behavior across all situations. -Influenced by religion, parents, experiences, societies. -Relatively stable -Vary across generations (due to different childhood events) -input in integrative framework
Schwartz Value Theory
-Believes values are motivational and they represent broad goals that apply across contexts and time -Divided into two bipolar dimensions (bipolar 1 = Self Enhancement (universalism, benevolence) and Self-transcendence (power, achievement)) (Bipolar 2 = Openness to change (self directions, stimulation) and conservation (security, conformity, tradition)) -values the are close together in model are positively related, where values across from each other conflict one another.
Organizational level factors of job characteristics
-Career opportunities -managing performance -organizational reputation -communication -recognition
Environmental factors of job Characteristics
-Job Characteristics -leadership -stressors (All can contribute to employee engagement)
Outcomes of job performance (behavior)
-Job performance -Organizational Citizenship Behavior (OCB) -Counterproductive Work Behavior (CWB) -Turnover
Committed individuals tend to display two outcomes...
-Likely to stay with organization -More motivation in pursuing organizational goals and decisions
What are the Attitudinal outcomes of Job Satisfaction?
-Motivation -Job involvement -withdrawal Cognitions -Perceived stress
Outcomes of Job performance (Attitudes)
-Motivation -Job involvement -withdrawal cognitions (thinking of quitting) -perceived stress
What are the 5 predominate models of job satisfaction?
-Need fulfillment (meet employee needs) -Met expectations (Met what employees expect) -Value attainment (structure company rewards to match employee values) -Equity (treat people fairly) -Dispositional/genetic components (hire employees that are fit for the job)
What are the four key workplace attitudes that managers track?
-Organizational commitment -Employee engagement -Perceived organizational support -Job satisfaction Represent important outcomes managers want and where they can improve, and what they want to enhance
Personal Factors of job characteristics
-Positive or optimistic personalities -Proactive personality -Conscientiousness (All can contribute to employee engagement)
What are the three components of Attitudes?
Affective Cognitive Behavioral All work together to predict/make our attitudes
Job Satisfaction
An affective or emotional response toward various facets of ones job not a unitary concept Based on cognition and affect
Workplace Attitudes
Attitudes that have resulted from the interaction of various individual, group, and organizational processes Positively related to performance Negatively related to absenteeism and turnover
Attitudes represent...?
Behavior TARGETED towards SPECIFIC objects, persons or situations. Affects behavior via intentions.
Counterproductive work behavior
Behavior that harms other employees, the organization or organizational stakeholders such as customers negative relationship with job satis.
Job satisfaction and performance are MODERATELY related
Both variables indirectly influence the other
Organizational-level factors that contribute to employee engagement are...
Career opportunities managing performance organization reputation communication recognition
3 Ways to reduce cognitive dissonance...
Change your attitude or behavior or both Belittle the importance of the inconsistent behavior (do you need to help overtime someone asks?) Find consonant elements that outweigh dissonant ones (justifying why you can't help them)
Companies such as Starbucks and REI are good examples of...?
Companies where attention to the input of values of person factor could yield measurable positive outcomes such as low turnover, higher retention, increased employee engagement and customer satisfaction
Affective Component of Attitude ("I feel")
Contains the feelings or emotions one has about a given object or situation (How do you feel about someone talking on their cellphone at dinner?)
Needs fulfillment models propose that satisfaction is..
Determined by the extent to which the characteristics of a job allow an individual to fulfill their needs
Values represent....?
GLOBAL beliefs that influence behavior across ALL situations and affects behavior VARIOUSLY.
Employee Engagement
Harnessing of organization members to their work roles. Are they giving it their all. When people express themselves physically, cognitively, and emotionally during job performance
Perceived stress
Has a strong negative relationship to job satisfaction and employee engagement
Behavioral Component of Attitude ("I intend")
How one intends or expects to act toward something or someone (How do you respond or act with someone on the phone at dinner?")
Simplest thing managers use to change employee behavior is...?
Information (Work news announcements, news on key managers, updated human resources, etc..) Ex: If companies want higher employee retention, they should provide information on the importance of staying with your company
Ajzen & Fishbein Theory's 3 components
Intentions is a key link between attitudes and planned behavior -Attitude toward behavior (how you feel about behavior) -Subjective norm (social pressure for or against the behavior) -Perceived behavioral control (the perceived ease or difficulty of performing the behavior)
Attitudes
Our feelings or opinions about people, places, or objects, and range from positive to negative. Important because they impact behavior
What factors can contribute to employee engagement?
Personal factors environmental characteristics
Personal factors such as ...... can contribute to employee engagement
Personality Conscientiousness
Job Satisfaction had a positive association with? Negative one with?
Positive: Job performance and organizational citizenship behavior (OCB) Negative: Counterproductive work behavior (CWB) and turnover
Cognitive Component of Attitude ("I believe")
Reflects the beliefs or ideas one a has about an object or situation (What is you belief about people talking on the phone at dinner? Rude?)
Organizational Commitment
Reflects the extend to which an individual identifies with an organizational and commits to its goals Depends on quality of an employees psychological contract
Withdrawal Cognitions
Represents an individuals overall thoughts and feelings about quitting
Psychological Contract
Represents an individuals perception about the terms and conditions of a reciprocal exchange between himself and another party. Employees beliefs of what he or she is entitles to. (fair working conditions, getting paid)
Met Expectations Model
Represents the difference between what an individual expects to receive from a job and what they actually receive
Cognitive Dissonance
Represents the psychological discomfort a person experiences when simultaneously holding two or more conditions (ideas, beliefs, values, or emotions)
Equity Model
Satisfaction depends on how "fairly" an individual is treated at work
Value Attainment
Satisfaction results from the perception that a job allows for fulfillment of an individuals important values
Hertz berg's Two-Factor Theory
Satisfaction-no satisfaction (intristic "motivatior" factors) Dissatisfaction-no dissatisfaction (Extrinsic "hygiene" factors)
Maslow Hierarchy of Needs
Satisfied internally -Self-actualization (Challenging Job) -Esteem (Job title) -Social (Work friends) Satisfied externally -Safety (Pension Play) -Psychological (Base Salary)
Job involvement
The extent to which an individual is personally involved with their work role
Norms of Reciprocity
The return of a favorable treatment
Schwartz 10 Core Values
Universalism (self-trans) Benevolence (self-trans) Tradition (conservation) Conformity (conservation) Security (conservation) Power (self-enhance) Achievement (self-enhance) Hedonism (self-enha. /open to change) Stimulation (openness to change) Self-direction (openness to change)
4 Feelings of employee engagement
Urgency Being Focused Intensity Enthusiasm
Organizational-level outcomes are....
customer satisfaction more productivity greater profitability
Positive relationship between employees...?
engagement and performance, physical and psychological well-being, customer satisfaction and corporate gain
Organizational Citizenship Behavior (OCB)
individual behavior that is discretionary, not directly or explicitly recognized by formal reward systems, in aggregate, promotes effective functioning or the organization (Positive relationship with job satis.)
Foster POS (perceived organizational support) by...
treating employees fairly avoiding political behavior providing job security giving people more autonomy reducing work stressors eliminate abusive supervision