OB Final
Team diversity
A- attraction S- similarity A- attribution
Distinctiveness
Does he act differently in other situations? Low internal, high external
ESS
Environment, Strategy, Structure
teams
a group of people working together for a common goal
organizational design: company strategy
an organizations objectives and goals and how it tries to capitalize and make profit
bureaucratic structure (5)
an organized form that exhibits many of the facets of the mechanistic organization
inspirational appeal
appeal to the targets values and ideals to create an emotional connection
substitutability
are they able to be replaced? can we access their skills or recourses elsewhere?
organizational design: company size
as companies get bigger they have to become more mechanistic
bureaucratic structure: geographic structures
based around locations where the company does business
intergroup
between the groups
Human Zoo Video
cohesion- at first everyone was getting along but once they ere labeled into different teams it became a compeition
organizational climate
daily basis of how it feels to work at a company
centralization
decisions made at headquarters
consensus
did others act the same way in that situation? low internal, high external
Mechanistic organization
efficient, rigid predictable and standardized organizations that thrive in stable environments
bureaucratic structure: multi-divisional structure
employees are grouped into divisions around products, geographic regions, or clients
external attribution
environmental factors are to blame
Attribution theory
explains how individuals pinpoint the causes of their own and others behavior
contingency factors
factors that increase or decrease a leaders ability to use power to influence others
organic organizations
flexible, adaptive, organizations that thrive in dynamic environments
organizational structure
formally dictates how jobs and tasks are divided and coordinated between individuals and groups within a company (5 elements)
Before they were stars class activity
groups are beneficial in a workplace but the highest performing individual usually gets the least out of working in a team
bureaucratic structure: product structures
groups business round different products that the company produces
bureaucratic structure: functional structure
groups employees by the function or tasks that they perform
visibility
how aware others are of a leaders power and position
centrality
how important a persons job is, do others depend on this person?
span of control
how many employees each member is in control of
Self-serving bias
if we do well its because we are great and smart but if we do poorly its because of an outside factor such as a hard teacher or test
Internal attribution
individual factors such as ability, motivation, or attitudes are to blame
Consistency
is this a common re-accurance? High internal, low external
organizational design: business environment
its customers, competitors, suppliers, distributors, and other external factors
competition and cohesion
made the teams within themselves more cohesive but destroyed overall group cohesion
collaboration
makes it easier for the target to complete the task
simple structures
more common because there are more small organizations than large ones
bureaucratic structure: matrix structure
more complex- use 2 structures at the same time
Shopping cart video
nominal group techniques- take the time at the beginning to create, explain and vote on everyones ideas instead of arguing
bureaucratic structure: client structure
organize business around customers that group into different categories
groupthink
people start to conform their opinions with majority or don't voice conflicting opinions
chain of command
reporting to people at different levels of command
formalization
rules and behaviors are used to standardize behaviors and decisions
organizational culture
shared social knowledge within an organization regarding the rules, norms, and values that shape the attitude and behavior of its employees
common organizational forms (2)
simple structures vs. bureaucratic structures
heuristics
simple, efficient, rules of thumb that allow us to make decisions more easily (mental shortcuts)
basic underlying assumptions
taken for granted beliefs and philosophies that are so ingrained that employees simply act on them rather then questioning their validity (ex: founders values, underlying assumptions)
power
the ability to influence the behavior of others and resist unwanted influence in return
espoused values
the beliefs, philosophies, and norms that a company explicitly states (ex: mission statement)
discretion
the degree to which managers have the right to make decisions on their own
observable artifacts
the manifestations of an organizations culture that employees can easily see or talk about (ex: symbols, closed vs. open doors)
organizational design: technology
the method by which it transforms inputs into outputs
additive tasks
the performance is pooled together independently
Disjunctive tasks
the performance is the ability of the highest performing member
conjunctive tasks
the performance is the ability of the lowest performing member
organizational design
the process of creating, selecting, or changing the structure of an organization (4 factors)
personal appeals
the requestor asks for something based on a personal friendship
appraising
the requestor clearly explains why performing the task will benefit the target personally
Synergy
the sum of the while is greater than the sum of its parts
consultation
the target is allowed to participate in deciding how to complete the request
influence
the use of an actual behavior that causes behavioral or attitudinal change in others
pressure
the use of coercive power through threats and demands
rational persuasion
the use of logical arguments and hard facts
leadership
the use of power and influence to direct the activities of followers toward goal achievement
ingratiation
use of favors, compliments, or friendly behavior
American express video
use the horrible acts of 9/11 as a way to motivate people to move forward and strengthen the company (appeal to emotions)
Fundamental attribution bias
we tend to blame people for their actions- we think its an internal thing that causes them to do that
coalitions
when the requestor enlists others to help influence the target
exchange tactic
when the requestor offers a reward in exchange for performing the task
intragroup
within your group
work specialization
you are very good at one specific thing but can loose sight of the organization as a whole