MGMT 3720 1,2,3,4
Manager
An individual who achieves goals through other people.
Intellectual Abilities
Are abilities needed to perform mental activities - thinking, reasoning, and problem solving.
Biological characteristics
Are personal characteristics that are objective and easily obtained from personnel records.
Psychological Empowerment
Belief in the degree of influence over one's job, competence, job meaningfulness, and autonomy.
Core Self-evaluations
Bottom-line conclusions individuals have about their capabilities, competence, and worth as a person.
Four managerial Activities: 1. Traditional Management
Decision making, planning, and controlling.
Which of the following functions do managers undertake as part of planning functions?
Defining an organization's goals
Job Involvement
Degree of psychological identification with the job where perceived performance is important to self-worth.
Perceived Organizational Support (POS)
Degree to which employees believe the organization values their contribution and cares about their well-being.
Organizing
Determining what tasks are to be done, who is to do them, how the tasks are to be grouped, who reports to whom, and where decisions are to be made.
Surface-level Diversity
Differences in easily perceived characteristics, such as gender, race, ethnicity, age, or disability, that do not necessarily reflect the ways people think or feel but that may activate certain stereotypes.
Deep-level Diversity
Differences in values, personality, and work preferences that become progressively more important for determining similarity as people get to know one another better.
Citizen Behavior
Discretionary behavior that contributes to the psychological and social environment of the workplace.
Moral Emotions
Emotions that have moral implications because of our instant judgement of the situation that evokes them.
Affective Events Theory (AET)
Employees react emotionally to things that happen to them at work and this influences job performance and satisfaction.
According to Mintzberg's classification of managerial roles, a(n) ________ searches the organization and its environment for opportunities and initiates projects to bring about change.
Entrepreneur
Attitudes
Evaluations employees make about objections, people, or events.
Four managerial Activities: 2. Communication
Exchanging routine information and processing paperwork.
Surface acting
Hiding one's inner feelings and foregoing emotional
Affect Intensity
How strongly people experience their emotions.
Organizational Commitment
Identifying with a particular organization and its goals and wishing to maintain membership in the organization.
Emotion Regulation
Involves identifying and modifying the emotions you feel.
Ability
Is an individual's current capacity to perform various tasks in a job. 1. Intellectual 2. Physical
General mental ability
Is an overall factor of intelligence as suggested by the positive correlations among specific intellectual ability dimensions.
Cognitive Dissonance
Is any incompatibility an individual might perceive between two or more attitudes or between behavior and attitudes.
Diversity Management
Is the process and programs by which managers make everyone more aware of and sensitive to the needs and differences of others.
Discrimination
Is to note a difference between things.
Which of the following is true regarding positive organizational scholarship?
It studies how organizations develop human strengths, foster vitality, and unlock potential.
360.org, an organization working toward curbing climate change, recently conducted an interview with Jessica for the position of a public relations officer. However, interviewers Brenda and Laura are divided over whether Jessica should be given the job. Brenda believes that Jessica does not have in-depth knowledge about the issue of global warming and its impact. On the other hand, Laura feels that Jessica would be perfect for the job because she has strong interpersonal skills. Which of the following, if true, would weaken Laura's argument?
Jessica was unable to communicate clearly why she was right for the job.
Outcomes
Key factors that are affected by some other variables.
Systemic Study
Looking at relationships, attempting to attribute causes and effects, and drawing conclusions based on scientific evidence.
Controlling
Monitoring activities to ensure they are being accomplished as planned and correcting any significant deviations.
Four managerial Activities: 3. Human Resource Management
Motivating, discipling, managing conflict, staffing, and training.
A common characteristic of service jobs is that they ________.
Need substantial interaction with an organization's customers
Displayed
Required or appropriate emotions.
Hidden Disabilities
Sensory disabilities, chronic illness or pain, cognitive or learning impairments, sleep disorders, and psychological challenges.
Which of the following is an example of an ethical dilemma?
Should I play politics to advance my career?
Contingency Variables
Situational factors: variables that moderate the relationship between two or more variables.
Ethical Dilemmas and Ethical Choices
Situations in which individuals are required to define right & wrong conduct.
Four managerial Activities: 4. Networking
Socializing, politicking, and interacting with outsiders.
Age
Studies show that turnover and absenteeism rates are lower among older workers, and age is not associated with lower productivity. The U.S. workforce is aging.
Technical Skills
The ability to apply specialized knowledge or expertise.
Evidence-based Management (EBM)
The basing of managerial decisions on the best available scientific evidence.
Task performance
The combination of effectiveness and efficiency at doing your core job tasks.
Productivity
The combination of the effectiveness and efficiency of an organization.
Employee Engagement
The degree of involvement with, satisfaction with, and enthusiasm for the job.
Efficiency
The degree to which an organization can achieve its ends at a low cost.
Organizational Survival
The degree to which an organization is able to exist and grow over the long term.
Effectiveness
The degree to which an organization meets the needs of its clientele or customers.
Group Cohesion
The extent to which members of a group support and validate one another while at work.
Felt
The individual's actual emotions.
Job conditions
The intrinsic nature of the work itself, social interactions, and supervision are important predictors of job satisfaction.
Conceptual Skills
The mental ability to analyze and diagnose complex situations.
Group Functioning
The quantity and quality of a work group's output.
Psychology
The science that seeks to measure, explain, and sometimes change the behavior of humans and other animals.
Withdrawal Behavior
The set of actions employees take to separate themselves from the organization.
Sociology
The study of people in relation to their social environment or culture.
Anthropology
The study of societies to learn about human beings and their activities.
Deep Acting
Trying to modify one's true inner feelings based on display rules.
Input
Variables that lead to processes.
By 2020, the 55-and-older age group of the U.S. labor force will represent approximately ________ of the total labor force.
one-quarter
Race and Ethnicity
-Employees tend to favor colleagues of their own race in performance evaluations, promotion decisions, and pay raises. -African Americans and Hispanics perceive higher levels of discrimination in the workplace. -African Americans generally fare worse than Whites in employment decisions.
Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity
-Federal law does not protect employees against discrimination based on sexual orientation, but this may soon change. -Most Fortune 500 companies have policies covering sexual orientation and about half now have policies on gender identity.
Disabilities
-The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission classifies a person as disabled who has any physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities. -Workers with disabilities receive higher performance evaluations, but may have lower performance expectations.
Sex
-There are no consistent male-female differences in problem-solving ability, analytical skills, competitive drive, motivation, sociability, or learning drive. -But women earn less than men for the same positions and have fewer professional opportunities.
Six Essentially Universal Emotions
1. Anger 2. Fear 3. Sadness 4. Happiness 5. Disgust 6. Surprise
Management Roles:
1. Interpersonal Roles 2. Informational Roles 3. Decisional Roles
Management Skils
1. Technical Skills 2. Human Skills 3. Conceptual Skills
Four managerial Activities:
1. Traditional Management 2. Communication 3. Human Resource Management 4. Networking
Organization
A consciously coordinated social unit, composed of two or more people, that functions on a relatively continuous basis to achieve a common goal or set of goals.
Organizational Behavior (OB)
A field of study that investigates the impact that individuals, groups, and structure have on behavior within organizations, for the purpose of applying such knowledge toward improving an organization's effectiveness.
Leading
A function that includes motivating employees, directing others, selecting the most effective communication channels, and resolving conflicts.
Emotional Intelligence
A person's ability to: -Perceive emotions in the self and others. -Understand the meaning of these emotions. -Regulate one's emotions accordingly in a cascading model.
Job Satisfaction
A positive feeling about the job resulting from an evaluation of its characteristics.
Planning
A process that includes defining goals, establishing strategy, and developing plans to coordinate activities.
Processes
Actions that individuals, groups, and organizations engage in as a result of inputs and that lead to certain outcomes.
Model
An abstraction of reality a simplified representation of some real-world phenomenon.
Positive Organizational Scholarship
An are of OB research that concerns how organizations develop human strength, foster vitality and resilience, and unlock potential.
Social Psychology
An area of psychology that blends concepts from psychology and sociology that focuses on the influence of people on one another.
Emotional Labor
An employee's expression of organizationally desired emotions during interpersonal transactions at work.