Chapter 1
Organizational behavior: a field of study devoted to understanding, explaining, and ultimately improving the attitudes and behaviors of individuals and groups in organizations
Disciplines: social psychology, economics, anthropology, political science, industrial and organizational psychology
OB: theory based, how is is learning and job performance related
Human resource management: what is the best way to structure training programs to promote employee learning
Strategic management: focus on actual product of organization, how firm is positioned in industry
Macro level: organizations behavior, reputation, celebrity
Meso level: behavior study of work groups, team emotions
Micro level: study of individuals
OB internationally: cross-cultural differences, common, most recent research in OB should account differences exist across cultures
Why care about OB:
Reason 1: Research in practice
Reason 2: Research yields solutions for managers and bottom line profitability
Why does everyone not do OB: Rule of one eighth
Individuals outcomes: job performance and organizational commitment
Individuals mechanisms: how the x is going to the y
Individuals mechanisms affect the individual outcomes: job satisfaction, stress, motivation, trust justice and ethics, learning and decision making
Individual characteristics: characteristics, factors that are brought into the job
How to prove OB matters: first build a conceptual argument, research evidence
Methods of gathering research evidence: method of experience, method of intuition, method of authority, method of science
Scientific method: theory, hypothesis, data, verification, replication
Workplace ostracism: belief you are getting ignored by others
Sources of random error: interview distractions, tests with poorly worded questions, surveys with ambiguous items
Validity: the degree to which a measure assess what it is meant to asses
Confidence interval: CI = r + (1.50 x 1/SQRT(n))
Chapter 2
Job performance: regarded as a behavior not a result
Job performance: the value of the set of employee behaviors that contribute, either positively or negatively to organizational goal accomplishment
Good performer: task performance, citizenship behavior
Routine: well known responses to demands that occur in a normal, routine or otherwise predictable way
Adaptability: employee responds to task demands that are novel, unusual or unpredictable
Creativity: degree to which individuals develop ideas or physical outcomes that are both new and useful
Citizenship behaviors: voluntary activities that may or may not be rewards but that contribute to the organization by improving the quality of the setting where work occurs
Category 1: interpersonal citizenship behaviors
Category 2: organizational citizenship behaviors
360 degree feedback: this is the best choice and it is collecting feedback from everyone around you
BARS: a rubric
Forced ranking: rank and yank or dead mans curve, jack Welch's vitality curve
Social networking systems: social media to evaluate employee job performance
Property deviance: behaviors that harm the organization’s assets
Production deviance: focuses specifically on reducing efficiency of work, output and its directed against the organization
Chapter 3
What are some hidden costs of employee turnover: decreased morale and lost productivity
Burnout: employers want you around 50% committed because they do not want you to burnout
Organizational commitment: A desire on the part of an employee to remain a member of an organization
Affective Commitment: Desire to stay based off an emotional attachment to the organization, loyal
Continuance commitment: Desire to stay because of the costs of leaving
Normative commitment: Desire to stay because you feel obligated, stay because you ought to
Negative scenarios:
Exit: Active, destructive
Voice: Active constructive
Loyalty: Passive, constructive
Neglect: Destructive, passive
Four types of employees
Stars: role models, easy to spot (VOICE)
Citizens: Highly committed in voluntary activities (LOYALTY)
Lone wolves: Motivated to achieve work goals for themselves, not for the company (EXIT)
Apathetic: exert minimum level needed to keep their job (NEGLECT)
Withdraw behavior
Psychological behavior: actions that provide a mental escape from the work environment
Physical withdraw: actions that provide physical escape
Withdrawal behavior common: 50 percent
Diversity of the workforce: social network implications of diversity
Psychological confront:
Transactional control
Do the job we pay you
Relational contracts
Be loyal and we will train you to improve your skills
Chapter 4
Job satisfaction: A pleasurable emotional state resulting from the appraisal of one's job or job experience
Rare job satisfaction: decreasing satisfaction from 61% to 45%
Increased satisfaction: pay or work environment
Values: things that people consciously or subconsciously want to seek or attain supplies the things you value
Value percent theory: job satisfaction depends on whether you perceive that your job supplies the things you value
Dissatisfaction: (Vwant-Vhave) x (Vimportance)
Facets: pay, promotion, supervision, coworkers, work itself
Altruism and status are not facets
Pay satisfaction
Employees feelings about their pay
Promotion satisfaction
Employees feelings about the company’s promotion policies and their execution
Supervisor satisfaction
Employees feelings about their boss
Coworker satisfaction
Employees feelings about their fellow employees
Satisfaction with work itself
Employees feelings about their actual work
Most influential
Job characteristics theory: jobs are more enjoyable when work tasks are more challenging and fulfilling
Core rewarding characteristics: variety, identity, significances, autonomy, feedback
Variety: degree to which the job requires a number of different activities that involve a number of different skills and talent
Identity: degree to which the job requires completing a whole, identifiable, piece of work form beginning to end with visible outcome
Significance: degree to which the job has a substantial impact on the lives of other people
Autonomy: Degree to which a job performs freedom, independence, and discretion to the individual performing the work
Feedback: Degree to which carrying out activities required by the job provides employees with clear information about how well there performing
Moods: state of feelings that are often mild in intensity, last for extended period of time
Emotions: intense and clearly caused by someone or something
Emotional labor: the need to manage emotions to complete job duties successfully
Emotional Contagion: one person can catch or be infected by the emotions of another person