Leadership Exam 1
Employees who perceive inequity will make one of six choices
1. change inputs 2. change outputs 3. distort perceptions of self 4. distort perception of others 5. choose a different referent 6. leave the field
Three-step approach to closing the gap
1. define the problem 2. identify OB concepts to solve the problem 3. make recommendations and take action
Stages of Social Perception
1. selective attention/comprehension 2. encoding and simplification 3. storage and retention 4. retrieval and response
Four step process for goal implementation
1. set goals 2. promote goal attainment 3. provide support, feedback 4. create action plans
Any job can be desired in terms of what 5 core dimension?
1. skill variety 2. task variety 3. task significant 4. autonomy 5. feedback
intrinsic motivation
A desire to perform a behavior for its own sake
inter-rater reliability
A measure of how similarly two different test scorers would score a test.
Pay Policy Line
Allows a company to adjust compensation for all jobs to lead, meet, or lag based on strategic considerations
Instrumentality
An individual's beliefs regarding the likelihood of being rewarded in accord with his or her own level of performance
Machiavellianism
Believe the ends justify the means, often maintain emotional distance, and are manipulative
psychopathy
Can be aggressive and lack/have a lack of concern for others, guilt, or remorse when their actions do others harm
event memory
Categories with information about both specific events and general events
When defining a problem, what should you do immediately after you determine your desired outcome or state?
Compare the desired state or outcome to your current situation
consistency
Does this person always do this when performing this task?
Attitude toward the behavior
Favorable or unfavorable evaluation or appraisal of the behavior in question.
Common Perceptual Errors
Halo effect Leniency Central Tendency Recency Effects Contrast Effects
narcissism
Have a grandiose sense of self-importance Require or demand attention Sense of entitlement Lack of empathy
Positive justice outcomes
Increased... - job satisfaction - organizational commitment - motivation - innovation and creativity - task / team performance
Openness to change
Independence of thought, action, and feelings and readiness for change
external benchmarking
Looking outside the firm to determine what excellent performers are doing
Performance management is used to...
Make Employee-Related Decisions Guide Employee Development Send Strong Signals to Employees
results method
Managers and employees define goals, employees evaluated on goal attainment
Contingent Assessment Methods
Medical and drug tests, and background checks
person-situation distinction
OB concepts and theories can be classified into two broad categories: person factors and situation factors.
central tendency error
Occurs when a rater gives all employees a score within a narrow range in the middle of the scale.
Schwartz's Value Theory
Schwartz believes that values are motivational in that they "represent broad goals that apply across contexts and time
Using the Organizing Framework for Problem Solving
Select the most effective solution considering: Selection criteria Consequences Choice process Necessary resources
SMART goals
Specific, Measurable, Attainable, Realistic, Timely
What criteria determines which applicant is hired?
Technical skills and the ability to get the job done
Halo effect error
Tendency to see one quality of a person and applying it to a person's total personality
knowledge tests
Tests that measure a person's information or knowledge.
Perception is influenced by three key components
The characteristics of the perceiver, Of the target, and of the situation
organizational commitment
The extent to which an individual identifies with an organization and commits to its goals
Relatedness
The need to be connected and involved with the social world
self-determination theory
Theory assumes that people are driven and influenced by three innate needs: competence, autonomy, and relatedness
high distinctiveness
This person does not usually behave this way in different situations.
low distinctiveness
When individual has similar behavior/results on other tasks.
perception
a cognitive process that enables us to interpret and understand our surroundings
categorization
a cognitive process used to organize information by placing it into larger groupings of information
Dark Triad
a constellation of negative personality traits consisting of Machiavellianism, narcissism, and psychopathy
extrinsic motivation
a desire to perform a behavior due to promised rewards or threats of punishment
weighted application blank
a form used to assign a numerical value to items on candidates application
Job Characteristics Model
a job design model that relates the motivational properties of jobs to specific personal and organizational consequences of those properties
behavioral interview
a structured interview in which the interviewer asks the candidate to describe how he or she handled a type of situation in the past
situational interview
a structured interview in which the interviewer describes a situation likely to arise on the job, then asks the candidate what he or she would do in that situation
diversity climate
a subcomponent of an organization's overall climate and is defined as the employees' aggregate perceptions about the organization's diversity-related formal structure characteristics and informal values
equity theory
a theory stating that individuals compare their job inputs and outcomes with those of others and then respond to eliminate any inequities
McClelland's Theory of Needs
a theory that states achievement, power, and affiliation are three important needs that help explain motivation
What criteria determines which employee is promoted?
ability to manage people, strong team skills, and the ability to build and manage relationships
moderators of goal setting theory
ability, resources, goal commitment, feedback
personal values
abstract ideals that guide one's thinking and behavior across all situations
values
abstract ideals that guide one's thinking and behavior across all situations
Recognition that the organization's markets and constituencies are culturally diverse is called a ______ perspective on diversity.
access and legitimacy
option 6 of the framework to manage diversity: tolerate
acknowledging differences but not valuing or accepting them
Problems can be views as a gap between ______ and _____.
actual, desired outcome
Step 4 Performance Management Process
administer valued rewards and appropriate punishment
What are some common types of diversity?
age, education, political views, seniority, gender, race
option 8 of the framework to manage diversity: foster mutual adaption
allows people to change their views for the sake of creating a positive relationships with others
low consistency
always an external attribution
job satisfaction
an effective or emotional response toward facets of one's job
expectancy
an individual's belief that a particular degree of effort will be followed by a particular level of performance
Valence
an individual's personal preferences for the value of the reward or outcome
organizational behavior
an interdisciplinary field dedicated to understanding and managing people at work
organizational justice
an overall perception of what is fair in the workplace
internal consistency reliability
assess the consistency of responses across questions that measure the same construct
forced distribution method
assigns a certain percentage of employees to each category in a set of categories
self-serving bias
attributing success to internal factors while attributing failure to external factors
compensation system consideredations
base pay, pay for performance, employee benefits
cognitive
beliefs and knowledge one has about a situation
how values affect behavior
can help us self-manage our decisions and can be more effective and influencing others' attitudes and behaviors
person factors
characteristics that give individuals their unique identities (values, attitudes, personality)
Three components of attitude
cognitive, affective, behavioral
negative inequity
comparison in which another person receives greater outcomes for similar inputs
positive inequity
comparison in which another person receives lesser outcomes for similar inputs
commission
compensation based on a percentage/flat rate of goods or services sold
Piecework
compensation on a per-unit basis rather than time spent
What is the first dimension of Schwartz's Value Theory
concern for others to pursuit of own interest (self-transcendence to self-enhancement)
self-transcendence
concern for the welfare of others
pursuit of incongruent goals may lead to ____ employee actions and behaviors.
conflicting
What is the best personality predictor of job performance?
conscientiousness
Which of the big 5 personality traits can predict performance across most occupations?
conscientiousness and emotional stability
reliability
consistency of measurement
alternate or parallel form reliability
consistency of measures when two forms of the same test are administered to the same person or group of people
personality trait
consistent pattern of behavior or emotions
long-term memory
consists of separate by related apartments one each of events, semantic materials and people
Types of Validity
content, criterion, construct
characteristics of the situation
context of interaction, culture and race consistency
Which selection method is the final check before employment?
contingent tools
_______ represents a broad personality trait composed of four narrow traits.
core-self evaluations
A lack of integrity is associated with _____ behaviors.
counterproductive
Step 3 Performance Management Process
delivery feedback and coaching
locus of control
describes how much personal responsibility someone takes for their behavior and its consequences
option 4 of the framework to manage diversity: suppress
differences are squelches or discouraged
mediators of goal setting theory
direction of attention, effort, persistence, strategies
characteristics of the target
direction of gaze, facial features and body shape, nonverbal cues, appearance or dress, physical attractiveness
motivation = ____ + _____ + _____
direction, intensity, persistence
Relative Evaluation Method
directly comparing employees to one another
internal behavior causes are also called
dispositional factors
types of organizational justice
distributive, procedural, interactional
consensus
do other people react this way to the situation
stable behavior causes
due to permanent factors
unstable behavior causes
due to temporary factors
What are the three components to managing diversity?
educational component, enforcement component, exposure component
situation factors
elements outside us that influence what we do, the way we do it, and the ultimate results of our actions (economy, bad bosses, ethics inside an organization)
The 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 is ____.
emotional intelligence
The 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 is...
emotional stability
criterion data
employee performance data
Which term describes the idea that not all individuals prefer an equal ratio of outputs to incomes?
equity sensitivity
Can I accomplish the task given to me? Is a measure of ______.
expectancy
The question "What are the chances of reaching my performance goal?" represents which element of Vroom's expectancy theory?
expectancy
Major elements of the expectancy theory
expectancy, instrumentality, valence
Motivation = __ x __ x __
expectancy, instrumentality, valence
Traits ____ behavior.
explain.
employee engagement
extent to which employees give it their all at work
What are the two types of locus of control?
external and internal
What is the best personality predictor of jobs involving a social component?
extraversion
Rewards that come from the environment are ____ rewards.
extrinsic
T/F We do not differ along a vast number of personal attributes.
false
affective
feelings and emotions
Big Five
five traits that have surfaced repeatedly in factor analyses of personality measures
external behavior causes
from the outside
Assigning someone's behavior to his or her personal characteristics instead of the circumstances is called _____.
fundamental attribution bias
Pay for performance examples at the team level
gain sharing, team bonus
semantic memory
general knowledge about the world including definitions and associated traits, emotional states, physical characteristics, and behavior
option 3 of the framework to manage diversity: assimilate
given time and reinforcement, all diverse people will learn to fit in or become like the dominant group
The use of feedback and participation in deciding how to achieve goals is part of which theory?
goal setting theory
Goal Setting Theory
goals that are specific and quantifiable lead to higher performance than general goals
cognitive categories
groups of objects that are considered equivalent
Managing diversity gives an organization the ability to...
grow and maintain a business in an increasingly competitive marketplace
Which term describes someone who cares more about what they put into a group project than the rewards they receive from participating in the project?
high equity sensitivity
What is low emotional stability called?
high neuroticism
Customer satisfaction and employee productivity were ____ when the racial-ethnic composition of store employees matched that of customers
higher
Positive outcomes of performance management
higher profitability higher productivity higher employee engagement higher customer service lower turnover
Intensity
how hard the person tries
persistence
how long a person can maintain effort
What does motivation boil down to?
how much effort to exert in a specific situation based on the expected results
validity
how well a test actually measures what it was created to measure
Asking "Why or how does this cause a problem" is an important method for achieving which step of the 3-Step Approach to problem solving?
identifying potential causes
In general, people extend more trust, positive regard, cooperation, and empathy to ____ members.
in-group
Bipolar values are _____ while adjacent values are complementary.
incongruent
option 1 of the framework to manage diversity: include/exclude
increase or decreased the number of diverse people at all levels of the organization
The term ______ is used to collectively describe people's traits and behaviors that are influenced by genetics and environment. Multiple choice question.
individual differences
Organizing framework outcomes
individual level, group/team level, organizational level
organizing framework processes
individual level, group/team level, organizational level
stereotype
individual's set of beliefs about the characteristics or attributes of a group
Three levels of OB
individual, group/team, organization
stereotype inferences
infer people in categories have same traits or characteristics
Organizing Framework
inputs lead to processes, which lead to outcomes.
Feedback serves what two functions?
instructional and motivational
Will I be rewarded for my task? Is a measure of _____.
instrumentality
common and voluntary employee benefits
insurance, pension/retirement, paid time off
affirmation action
intervention aimed at giving management a change to correct an imbalance, injustice, mistake or outright discrimination that occurred in the past
Types of Motivation
intrinsic and extrinsic
behavioral
inventions and actions
code switching
involves adjusting one's style of speech, appearance, behavior, and expression in ways that will optimize the comfort of others in exchange for fair treatment, quality service, and employment opportunities
Distinctiveness
is the person's behavior consistent across many circumstances, do they act this way all the time
The activities that involve alteration of specific jobs or sets of interdependent jobs to improve employee experience and motivation are known as _____.
job design
According to Schwartz's Value Theory opposing values are ____ likely to be held by the same person.
less
option 5 of the framework to manage diversity: isolate
maintains the status quo by setting the diverse person off to the side
results-evaluation method
managers and employees set goals for the employees together
Step 2 Performance Management Process
measure and evaluate progress outcomes
Conscientiousness
measures dependability, personal responsibility, persistence
openness to experience
measures interest with novelty (curious, imaginative)
emotional stability
measures our ability to withstand stress (relaxed, unworried)
Extraversion
measures our relational approach towards the social world (outgoing, talkative, assertive)
agreeableness
measures propensity to defer to others (cooperative, trusting)
_________ means measuring, tracking, or otherwise verifying progress and ultimate outcomes.
monitoring performance
According to Schwartz's Value Theory adjacent values are ____ compatible.
more
Employees who feel that they belong are...
more committed, more engaged, less likely to experience burnout
portable skills
more or less relevant in every job, at every level, and throughout your career
low consensus
most people would behave differently
high consensus
most people would behave the same
Values are ____ and represent broad goals overtime.
motivational
Screening tools ____ applicant pool.
narrow down
need for affiliation
need to establish friendly and close interpersonal relationships
need for achievement
need to excel or achieve to a set of standards
Discrimination in the workplace
occurs when employment decisions about an individual are based on reasons not associated with performance or related to the job
individual bonus
one time additional compensation, not added to base pay
Ajzen's Theory of Planned Behavior
one's behavior beliefs influence their attitude towards a behavior, which affects how they decide to behave
What is the best personality predictor of performance in school and willingness to look for a new job?
openness
What are the big five personality traits?
openness, conscientiousness, extraversion, agreeableness, emotional-stability
Skinner labeled behavior that is learned when one acts on the environment to produce desired consequences ______ behavior.
operant
conservation
order, preservation of the part, resistance to change
Key Workplace Attitudes
organizational commitment, employee engagement, perceived organizational support, job satisfaction
Traits predict...
other more specific behaviors
In Vroom's expectancy theory, instrumentality is the relationship between which two factors?
outcomes and performance
Where do values stem from?
parents' values and experiences
Expectancy Theory
people are motivated to behave in ways that produce desired combinations of expected outcomes
option 2 of the framework to manage diversity: deny
people deny that differences exist and that success is determined solely by merit and performance
external locus of control
people who believe their performance is the product of circumstances beyond their immediate control
internal locus of control
people who believe they control the events and consequences that affect their lives
perceived behavioral control
perceived ease or difficulty of performing the behavior
disruptive justice
perceived fairness of the amount and allocation of rewards among individuals
procedural justice
perceived fairness of the process used to determine the distribution of rewards
subject norm
perceived social pressure for or against a behavior
perceptions are based on the characteristics of...
perceiver, target, situation
When a manager monitors, evaluates, and creates consequences for an employee's work so that it meets defined performance expectations, it is an example of _____.
performance management
What two factors contribute to employee engagement?
person and situation factors
Organizing framework inputs
person factors, situation factors
Pay for performance examples at the individual level
piecework, commission, merit pay increase, individual bonus
There is a ____ correlation between high pay and organizational performance.
positive
selection seeks correlation between
predictive data and criterion data
criterion-related validity
present when a person's score on a selection measure predicts how well they will perform if given the job
construct-related validity
present when the test actually assesses the thing it claims to measure
content related validity
present when the test measures things that are actually done on the job
cognitive dissonance
psychological discomfort that a person experiences when they experience inconsistency between two or more attitudes or between behavior and attitudes
When Lindsay was late three times in two weeks, her manager told her that her pay would be docked by the amount of time she was late. This is an example of _____.
punishment
self-enhancement
pursuit of one's own interest
Two Methods of Relative Approach
ranking and forced distribution
behavioral evaluation methods
rated relative to an absolute standard of what ideal performance looks like in a job (use of rating scale)
BARS (behaviorally anchored rating scale)
rates employee gradations in performance according to scales of specific behaviors
psychological safety
reflects the extent to which people feel free to express their ideas and beliefs without fear of negative consequences
test-related reliability
reflects the reliability of scores over time
Traits summarize ____ in behavior.
regularity
soft skills
relate to human interactions and include both interpersonal skills and personal attributes
option 7 of the framework to manage diversity: build relationships
relationship building is based on the premise that good relationships can overcome differences
Performance Evaluation Methods
relative, behavioral, results
Evaluative tools examine...
remaining applications to determine who to hire
high consistency
repeated behavior/result
attitudes
represent our feelings or opinions about people, places and objects
Schema
represents a person's mental picture or summary of a particular event or type of stimulus
implicit cognition
represents any thoughts or beliefs that are automatically activated from memory without our conscious awareness
Predictive Data
results from selection tests
merit pay increase
rewards employees' high performance over a set period of time and can be added into the employee's total base pay
Categories of Selection Methods
screening tools, evaluative tools, contingent tools
We use the ____ to predict who will be the best employees for the company.
selection system
What is the second dimension of Schwartz's Value Theory
self-directed independence to conformity (openness to change to conservation)
What are the core self evaluations?
self-efficacy, self-esteem, locus of control, emotional stability
Step 1 Performance Management Process
set goals and communicate performance expectations
job simulation
simulations that measure people's job skills by having them perform tasks similar to those performed on the job
Strong situations
situation strength is the degree to which norms, cues, or standards dictate appropriate behavior
What are the two types of structured interviews?
situational and behavioral
external behavior causes are also called
situational factors
Typical Evaluative Methods
skill/ability test, integrity test, job simulation/work sample, knowledge test, cognitive ability test, personality test, structured interviews
The theory that there is a purposeful if-then link between a target behavior and a consequence is ________.
skinners operant theory
trait activation theory
some situations, events, or interventions "activate" a trait more than others
integrity tests
specific type of personality test designed to assess an applicant's tendency to be honest, trustworthy, and dependable
effective performance management system steps
step 1: define performance step 2: monitor and evaluate performance step 3: review performance step 4: provide consequences
Studies show that women have a harder time being perceived as effective leaders, which is a result of a negative ________.
stereotype
Pay for performance examples at the organizational level
stock ownership, stock options, profit sharing
performance management purposes
strategic, administrative, developmental
Person Memory
supply information about a single individual or groups of people
Causal attributions refer to _____
suspected causes of behavior
problem solving
systemic process for closing such gaps
affinity bias
te tendency to trust/prefer people like ourselves
hard skills
technical expertise and knowledge to do a particular task or job function
contrasts effects
tendency to evaluate people or objects by comparing them to recently observed people or objects
recency effect
tendency to remember recent information better than earlier information
task significance
the degree to which a job affects the lives or work of other people
autonomy
the degree to which a job provides the worker freedom and independence to determine how to the work gets done
task identity
the degree to which a job requires completion of a whole and identifiable piece of work
skill variety
the degree to which a variety of different skills or talents are used on the job
feedback
the degree to which carrying out the activities required by the job provides employees with clear information about how well they're performing
Interaction Justice
the degree to which people are treated with respect, kindness, and dignity in interpersonal interactions
perceived organizational support
the extent to which employees believe their organization values their contributions and genuinely cares about their well-being
individual differences
the many attributes, such as traits and behaviors, that describe each of us as a person
diversity
the multitude of individual differences and similarities that exist among people
competence
the need to feel desired, knowledgeable, and capable to complete tasks
autonomy
the need to feel independent to influence one's environment, the desire to have freedom and discretion in determining what you want to do and how you want to do it
need for power
the need to make others behave in a way that they would not have behaved otherwise
reliability measures ...
the precision of the test
attention
the process of becoming consciously aware of something or someone
performance management
the process through which managers ensure that employees' activities and outputs contribute to the organization's goals
demographics
the statistical measurements of populations and their qualities over time
leniency error
the tendency to give all workers very positive performance appraisals
surface level characteristics
those that are quickly apparent to interactants, such as race, gender, and age
deep-level characteristics
those that take time to emerge in interactions, such as attitudes, opinions, and values
T/F If one of the pieces of the expectancy theory is missing, the outcome (motivation) is zero.
true
T/F Managers should influence behavior by creating work environments that support each of the three self-determination theory needs.
true
T/F Personal assessments are useful in hiring decisions.
true
manager can better manage their employees when they ____ are employees' values and motivation
understand
Contingency Approach
using the OB concepts and tools that best suit the situation, instead of trying to rely on "one best way"
Is the reward valuable to me? Is a measure of _____.
valence
Direction
what the person is trying to accomplish
internal behavior causes
within the person
Pros of Relative Method
- Clear succession planning - Easy to develop and use - Excellent administrative data
Cons of Results Method
- Prioritizes results over behavior - Employee may not control outcome - Can result in resource conflict
characteristics of the perceiver
- direction of gaze - needs and goals - experience with target - category-based knowledge -gender and emotional status -cognitive load
Why is feedback important?
- has the potential to boost performance - given less often and less well than people would like - dramatically underutilized
Why focus on money as an extrinsic motivator?
- it motivates people (most of the time) - there is a positive correlation between high pay and organizational performance
legally required employee benefits
- social security and medicare - worker's compensation and unemployment - family medical leave act
Cons of Code Switching
-Can be a "requirement for entry" that denies individual identity -Cognitively costly/tiring -Requires denial of potentially core identities -Can create double-binds
pros of code switching
-Helps us understand one another better -Connects us with others who share our identity -Allows us to participate fully in broader communities
What are the three key general motives that influence intention and behavior?
-attitude toward the behavior -subject norm -perceived behavior control
People are motivated to maintain consistency by...
-changing attitudes, behaviors, or both -belittle the importance of inconsistent behavior -find consonant elements that outright dissonant ones
organizational commitment leads to...
-greater employee retention -greater motivation in pursuit of organizational goals
Most common barriers to implementing successful diversity programs
-inaccurate stereotypes and prejudice -ethnocentrism -poor career planning -negative diversity climate -a hostile working environment for diverse employees
Increases in employee engagement have been linked to...
-increased customer loyalty and satisfaction -increased employee performance -increased employee well-being greater financial performance
perceived organizational support is associated with...
-increased organizational commitment -job satisfaction -organizational citizen behavior -task performance -lower turnover
Pros of BARS Method
-increases inter-rater reliability -provides standardized feedback -gives developmental direction -easy to update
behavioral outcomes linked with job satisfaction
-job performance -organizational citizenship behavior -counterproductive work behavior -turnover
An employer can win a discrimination case if they can prove that their actions or decisions are based on what criteria?
-job relatedness -business necessity -seniority
What are the three strategies relative to the marketplace with external benchmarking?
-lead = pay above industry average -meet = pay at industry average -lag = pay below industry average
What are characteristics of people who have a need for power?
-likes to be in charge -like to be in control of people and events -appreciates being recognized
What are characteristics of people how have a need for affiliation?
-likes to work in teams with cooperation and collegiality -tends to avoid conflict -liked to be praised in private
attitudes outcomes linked with job satisfaction
-motivation -job involvement -withdrawal cognitions -perceived stress
Cons of Relative Method
-no absolute standard -little developmental feedback -competition
framework of options to manage diversity
-option 1: include/exclue -option 2: deny -option 3: assimilate -option 4: supporess -option 5: isolate -option 6: tolerate -option 7: build relationships -option 8: foster mutual adaption
stereotype maintenance
-overestimating the frequency of stereotypic behaviors exhibited by others -incorrectly explaining expected and unexpected behaviors -differentiating minority individuals from ourselves
How companies are responding to changes in diversity
-paying attention to sexual orientation -addressing changing customer demographics -helping women navigate their career -helping Hispanics succeed -retraining and valuing skills and expertise in aging workforce
What are characteristics of people who have a need for achievement?
-prefers working on challenges -best in situations in which performance is due to effort and ability -prefers to work with other high achievers
Typical Screening Tools
-resumes and cover letters -job applications/weighted application blanks
Pros of Results Method
-strong strategic congruence -enlists employee in process -emphasizes action and results
Cons of BARS Method
-time-consuming to develop -requires observation to properly assign rating -can provide poor administrative data
How we differ has been shown to influence how we approach each of the following
-work -solving problems -conflict -interactions w/co-workers
How are stereotypes formed?
1. Categorization 2. Inferences 3. Expectations 4. Maintenance
Stereotype Formation and Maintenance
1. Categorization 2. Inferences 3. Expectations 4. Maintenance
4 key workplace attitudes
1. Organizational commitment 2. Employee engagement 3. Perceived organizational support 4. Job satisfaction