Chapter 1 - What is organizational behavior?
“Soft skills” (e.g. team working, communicating effectively, leadership and cultural awareness)
Essential for managerial effectiveness
Likely to make workplace more pleasant
Nice working environment generate superior financial performance
Manager: individual who achieves goals through other people
Make decisions, allocate resources and direct activities to others to attain goals
Organization: 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.
Management functions
Planning: defining goals, establishing strategy and developing plans to coordinate activities.
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.
Leading: motivating employees, directing others, selecting most effective communication channels and resolving conflicts.
Controlling: monitoring activities to ensure that they are being accomplished as planned and correcting any significant deviations.
Management roles
Interpersonal roles:
Figurehead → symbolic head; required to perform a number of routine duties of a legal or social nature
Leadership → responsible for the motivation and direction of employees
Liaison → maintains a network of outside contacts who provide favors and information
Informational roles:
Monitor → receives a wide variety of information; serves as nerve centre of internal and external information of the organization
Disseminator → transmits information received from outsiders or from other employees to members of the organization
Spokesperson → transmits information to outsiders on organization’s plans, policies, actions and results; serves as expert on organization’s industry
Decisional roles:
Entrepreneur → searches organization and its environment for opportunities and initiates projects to bring about change
Disturbance handler → responsible for corrective action when organization faces important, unexpected disturbances
Resource allocator → makes or approves significant organizational decisions
Negotiator → responsible for representing the organization at major negotiations
Management skills
Technical: ability to apply specialized knowledge or expertise
Human: ability to work with and understand and motivate other people, individually and in groups
Conceptual: mental ability to analyze and diagnose complex situations
Organizational behavior (OB): 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.
Systematic study: looking at relationships, attempting to attribute causes and effects and drawing conclusions from scientific evidence
Evidence-based management (EBM): basing managerial decisions on the best available scientific evidence
Intuition: gut feeling not necessarily supported by research
Psychology: science that seeks to measure, explain and sometimes change behavior of humans and animals
Social psychology: area of psychology that blends concepts from psychology and sociology and focuses on the influence of people on one another
Sociology: study of people in relation to their social environment or culture
Anthropology: study of societies to learn about human beings and their activities
Contingency variables: situational factors: variables that moderate the relationship between two or more variables
Responding to economic pressures
When times are bad, managers are front line
Bad times → stress, decision-making, coping
Good times → understanding how to reward, satisfy and retain employees
Responding to globalization
The world has become a global village and managers must be ready for their job to change
Increased foreign assignments
Working with people from different cultures
Overseeing movements of jobs to countries with low cost labour
Adapting to differing cultural and regulatory norms
Managing workforce diversity
Workforce diversity: organizations are becoming more heterogeneous in terms of gender, age, race, ethnicity, sexual orientation
Improving customer service
Create customer responsive culture
Improving people skills
Designing motivating jobs, techniques to improve listening skills and create more effective means
Working in networked organizations
Managers need to develop new skills since motivating and leading people has to be done online, which is quite different
Enhancing employee well-being at work
Helping employees get away from work when they need to (disconnect during vacation)
Creating a positive work environment
Positive organizational scholarship: area of OB research concerning how to develop human strength, foster vitality and resilience, and unlock potential
Improving ethical behavior
Ethical dilemmas and ethical choices: situations in which individuals are required to define right and wrong conduct
Model: abstraction of reality, a simplified representation of some real world phenomenon
Inputs: variables like personality, group structure, and organizational culture that lead to processes
Processes: actions that individuals, groups, and organizations engage in as a result of inputs and that lead to certain outcomes
Outcomes: key factors that are affected by some other variables
Attitudes: evaluations employees make about objects, people or events
Stress: unpleasant psychology process that occurs in response to environmental pressures
Task performance: combination of effectiveness and efficiency at doing your core job tasks
Citizenship behavior: discretionary behavior that contributes to the psychological and social environment of the workplace
Withdrawal behavior: set of actions employees take to separate themselves from the organization
Group cohesion: extent to which members of a group support and validate one another while at work
Group functioning: quantity and quality of a work group’s output
Productivity: combination of the effectiveness and efficiency of an organization
Effectiveness: degree to which an organization meets the needs of its clientele or customers
Efficiency: degree to which an organization can achieve its ends at a low cost
Organizational survival: degree to which an organization is able to exist and grow over the long term
“Soft skills” (e.g. team working, communicating effectively, leadership and cultural awareness)
Essential for managerial effectiveness
Likely to make workplace more pleasant
Nice working environment generate superior financial performance
Manager: individual who achieves goals through other people
Make decisions, allocate resources and direct activities to others to attain goals
Organization: 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.
Management functions
Planning: defining goals, establishing strategy and developing plans to coordinate activities.
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.
Leading: motivating employees, directing others, selecting most effective communication channels and resolving conflicts.
Controlling: monitoring activities to ensure that they are being accomplished as planned and correcting any significant deviations.
Management roles
Interpersonal roles:
Figurehead → symbolic head; required to perform a number of routine duties of a legal or social nature
Leadership → responsible for the motivation and direction of employees
Liaison → maintains a network of outside contacts who provide favors and information
Informational roles:
Monitor → receives a wide variety of information; serves as nerve centre of internal and external information of the organization
Disseminator → transmits information received from outsiders or from other employees to members of the organization
Spokesperson → transmits information to outsiders on organization’s plans, policies, actions and results; serves as expert on organization’s industry
Decisional roles:
Entrepreneur → searches organization and its environment for opportunities and initiates projects to bring about change
Disturbance handler → responsible for corrective action when organization faces important, unexpected disturbances
Resource allocator → makes or approves significant organizational decisions
Negotiator → responsible for representing the organization at major negotiations
Management skills
Technical: ability to apply specialized knowledge or expertise
Human: ability to work with and understand and motivate other people, individually and in groups
Conceptual: mental ability to analyze and diagnose complex situations
Organizational behavior (OB): 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.
Systematic study: looking at relationships, attempting to attribute causes and effects and drawing conclusions from scientific evidence
Evidence-based management (EBM): basing managerial decisions on the best available scientific evidence
Intuition: gut feeling not necessarily supported by research
Psychology: science that seeks to measure, explain and sometimes change behavior of humans and animals
Social psychology: area of psychology that blends concepts from psychology and sociology and focuses on the influence of people on one another
Sociology: study of people in relation to their social environment or culture
Anthropology: study of societies to learn about human beings and their activities
Contingency variables: situational factors: variables that moderate the relationship between two or more variables
Responding to economic pressures
When times are bad, managers are front line
Bad times → stress, decision-making, coping
Good times → understanding how to reward, satisfy and retain employees
Responding to globalization
The world has become a global village and managers must be ready for their job to change
Increased foreign assignments
Working with people from different cultures
Overseeing movements of jobs to countries with low cost labour
Adapting to differing cultural and regulatory norms
Managing workforce diversity
Workforce diversity: organizations are becoming more heterogeneous in terms of gender, age, race, ethnicity, sexual orientation
Improving customer service
Create customer responsive culture
Improving people skills
Designing motivating jobs, techniques to improve listening skills and create more effective means
Working in networked organizations
Managers need to develop new skills since motivating and leading people has to be done online, which is quite different
Enhancing employee well-being at work
Helping employees get away from work when they need to (disconnect during vacation)
Creating a positive work environment
Positive organizational scholarship: area of OB research concerning how to develop human strength, foster vitality and resilience, and unlock potential
Improving ethical behavior
Ethical dilemmas and ethical choices: situations in which individuals are required to define right and wrong conduct
Model: abstraction of reality, a simplified representation of some real world phenomenon
Inputs: variables like personality, group structure, and organizational culture that lead to processes
Processes: actions that individuals, groups, and organizations engage in as a result of inputs and that lead to certain outcomes
Outcomes: key factors that are affected by some other variables
Attitudes: evaluations employees make about objects, people or events
Stress: unpleasant psychology process that occurs in response to environmental pressures
Task performance: combination of effectiveness and efficiency at doing your core job tasks
Citizenship behavior: discretionary behavior that contributes to the psychological and social environment of the workplace
Withdrawal behavior: set of actions employees take to separate themselves from the organization
Group cohesion: extent to which members of a group support and validate one another while at work
Group functioning: quantity and quality of a work group’s output
Productivity: combination of the effectiveness and efficiency of an organization
Effectiveness: degree to which an organization meets the needs of its clientele or customers
Efficiency: degree to which an organization can achieve its ends at a low cost
Organizational survival: degree to which an organization is able to exist and grow over the long term