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Principles of Supervision

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Title: Principles of Supervision


1
Principles of Supervision
  • Solving Problems and Decision Making
  • Chapter 7

2
Learning Goals
  • List the seven steps in the decision-making
    process
  • Describe expected value analysis
  • Explain the four types of decision styles
  • Identify and explain the common decision-making
    errors
  • Describe the two types of decision problems and
    the two types of decisions that are used to solve
    them
  • Compare and contrast group decision and
    individual decision making
  • List and describe three techniques for improving
    group decision making
  • Explain three different ethical viewpoints

3
The Decision Making Process
  • Identify the problem
  • Collect relevant information
  • Develop alternatives
  • Evaluate each alternative
  • Select the best alternative
  • Implement the decision
  • Follow up and evaluate

4
The Decision Making Process
Identify the problem
Collect relevant information
Develop alternatives
Evaluate alternatives
Evaluate decision
Implement decision
Select best alternative
5
The Decision Making Process
  • Identify the problem
  • Discrepancy between an existing and desired state
    of affairs
  • Identify the problem not just the symptom
  • Identify the correct problem
  • Collect relevant information
  • All facts relevant to the problem
  • Requires quality information

6
The Decision Making Process
  • Develop alternatives
  • Creative endeavor that should embrace all
    alternatives
  • The more alternatives the better the solution may
    be
  • Evaluate each alternative
  • Strengths and weaknesses
  • Cost and time
  • Best case/worst case

7
The Decision Making Process
  • Select the best alternative
  • The ingenuity in developing and analyzing
    alternatives and your risk propensity will play a
    role
  • Implement the decision
  • Convey the decision to those affected and get
    their commitment
  • Assign responsibilities, allocate necessay
    resources, clarify deadlines

8
The Decision Making Process
  • Follow up and evaluate
  • Measure results
  • Did it work on the problem you identified
  • Did it create any new problems or challenges
  • The decision process will be used in many
    situations

9
Decision Tools
  • Expected value analysis calculates the expected
    value of a particular alternative by weighting
    its possible outcomes by the possibility of
    achieving the alternative, then summing up the
    totals derived from the weighting process
  • Permits decision makers to place a monetary value
    on the various consequences of a decision

10
Decision Tools
  • Decision trees a diagrammatic techniques for
    analyzing a decision by assigning probabilities
    to various outcomes and calculating payoffs for
    each
  • Useful for analyzing hiring, marketing,
    investment, equipment purchases
  • Encompasses expected value analysis by assigning
    probabilities to each possible outcome

11
Decision Tools
  • Marginal analysis
  • Helps decision makers optimize returns or
    minimize costs by by dealing with the additional
    cost in a particular decision rather than the
    average cost
  • Analyzes decisions in terms of their incremental
    costs and revenues

12
Management Information Systems
  • Provides managers with needed and accurate
    INFORMATION on a regular and timely basis
  • Collects raw, unanalyzed facts and figures (data)
    and turns it into information
  • The quality of a decision depends on the quality
    of a managers information
  • Are becoming decentralized pushed down to the
    end-users

13
Information Vs. Data
  • Data raw, unanalyzed facts such as names,
    numbers, or quantities
  • Information analyzed and processes data, used
    by managers to make decisions
  • End users users responsible for decision and
    control of systems

14
Decision Making Styles
  • Recognize people differ along two dimensions
  • Way of thinking logical and rational vs.
    intuitive and creative
  • Tolerance for ambiguity high vs. low

15
Way of Thinking
  • Some people are logical and rational, they
    process information serially
  • Others are intuitive and creative, they perceive
    things as whole

16
Tolerance for Ambiguity
  • Some people have a high need to structure
    information in ways that minimize ambiguity
  • Others are able to process many thoughts at the
    same time

17
The Decision Style Model
Analytic
Conceptual
High
Tolerance For Ambiguity
Directive
Behavioral
Low
Intuitive
Rational
Way of Thinking
18
Directive Style
  • Low tolerance for ambiguity
  • Very efficient and rational
  • May make hasty decisions on little information
    without assessing alternatives
  • Make decisions fast
  • Tend to focus on the short run

19
Analytical Style
  • Both logical and high tolerance for ambiguity
  • No snap decisions they want more information
    to consider alternatives
  • Very deliberate and thoughtful
  • Careful decision-makers with the ability to adapt
    or cope with new situations

20
Conceptual Style
  • High tolerance for ambiguity and more intuitive
    than rational
  • Very broad in their outlook,consider many
    alternatives
  • Focus is long-range and they are good at finding
    creative solutions to problems

21
Behavioral Style
  • Low tolerance for ambiguity
  • Good interpersonal skills, work well with others
  • Concern with achievements of subordinates
  • Attempt to avoid conflict and seek acceptance

22
Whats the Point of the 4 Styles
  • Style used
  • Some supervisors rely on their dominant style
  • Others can shift their style depending on the
    situation
  • Problem solving influenced by the supervisors
    style

23
Whats the Point of the 4 Styles
  • Education
  • Can develop rational decision-making skills
  • Explains why business students, managers and
    executives tend to score the highest in
    analytical style
  • Conflict
  • Arises when styles clash
  • This emphasizes the value of being able to shift
    styles, depending on the situation

24
Ethics In Decision Making
  • Common rationalizations
  • Its not really illegal or immoral
  • Its in my (or the organizations) best interest
  • No one will find out (MY Favorite)
  • Since it helps the organization, the organization
    will condone and protect me

25
Three Views on Ethics
  • Utilitarian view
  • Rights view
  • Justice view

Ethical questions
Does it provide the greatest good for the
greatest Number?
Does it respect the rights of the individuals
affected?
Is it fair and equitable?
26
Utilitarian View
  • Decisions based solely on the basis of outcomes
  • Goal is to provide the greatest good for the
    greatest number
  • Consistent with the business goals of efficiency,
    productivity, and high profits, tends to dominate
    business decision making

27
Rights View
  • Decisions emphasize respect and protecting the
    basic rights of individuals
  • Decision making is consistent with fundamental
    liberties and privileges and privileges as set
    forth in documents like the bill of rights

28
Justice View
  • Decisions that seek fair and impartial
    distribution of benefits and costs
  • Typically favored by unions as it justifies
    paying people the same wage for a given job,
    regardless of performance differences
  • Protects the interests of the underrepresented
    but reduces risk taking, innovation and
    productivity

29
Group Decision Making
  • Advantages
  • Provides more complete information
  • Generates more alternatives
  • Increases acceptance of a solution
  • Increases legitimacy

30
Group Decision Making
  • Disadvantages
  • Time consuming
  • Minority domination
  • Pressures to conform
  • Ambiguous responsibility

31
Group Decision MakingAdvantages Vs. Disadvantages
ADVANTAGES More information More
alternatives Solution acceptance Legitimacy
DISADVANTAGES Time consuming Minority
Domination Conformity Ambiguous responsibility
32
Group Decision Making
  • More accurate
  • Less speed
  • More creative
  • More acceptance

33
Stimulating Creative Problem Solving
  • Attribute listing individualized brainstorming,
    isolation of major characteristics of traditional
    alternatives, which are considered in turn and
    changed in every conceivable way

34
Stimulating Creative Problem Solving
  • Vertical Thinking highly rational, orderly
    thinking
  • Lateral Thinking sideways, nonconsequential
    thinking
  • Synectics use of analogies to make the strange
    familiar and the familiar strange

35
Group Decision Making Techniques
  • Brainstorming
  • Nominal group technique
  • Electronic meetings

36
Brainstorming
  • A technique for overcoming pressures to conform
    that retard creative idea development
  • A process that specifically encourages
    alternatives by keeping criticism at bay
  • Free-wheeling, no holds barred

37
Nominal Group Technique
  • All members are present but are required to
    operate independently, unlike traditional
    interacting groups
  • Reduces the term
  • It restricts discussion but does not restrict
    independent thinking

38
Electronic Meetings
  • A group of individuals make decisions by
    communicating anonymously on computer networks
  • Blends nominal group technique with sophisticated
    computer technology
  • Excellent way to exchange information and make
    decisions

39
Principles of Supervision
  • Motivating Your Employees
  • Chapter 8

40
Learning Goals
  • Define motivation
  • Identify and define five personality
    characteristics relevant to understanding the
    behavior of employees at work
  • Explain the elements and the focus of the three
    early theories of motivation
  • Identify the characteristics that stimulate the
    achievement drive in high achievers
  • Identify the three relationships in expectancy
    theory that determine an individuals level of
    effort
  • List actions a supervisor can take to maximize
    employee motivation
  • Describe how supervisors can design individual
    jobs to maximize employee performance
  • Explain the effect of workforce diversity on
    motivating employees

41
What Is Motivation?
  • The willingness to do something
  • Is conditioned by the actions ability to satisfy
    some need for the individual

42
Need
  • A physiological or psychological deficiency that
    makes certain outcomes seem attractive
  • An unsatisfied need (need deficiency) creates
    tension
  • This tension causes a person to act in such a way
    (is driven) to reduce tension, thereby satisfying
    the need
  • The higher the degree of tension, the greater the
    drive

43
Motivation and Needs
Motivation
Unsatisfied Need
Increased Tension
Drive
Decreased Tension
Satisfied Need
Needs
44
Individual Differences and Motivation
  • You must understand individual differences
    different cultures, backgrounds, ages, values
  • What motivates one person, may not motivate
    another

45
Personality Types
  • Internal Locus of Control
  • Belief that you control your own destiny
  • You are the master of your own domain

46
Personality Types
  • External Locus of Control
  • Belief that you are a pawn of fate
  • What happens to you is based on luck or chance
  • Usually results in lower job satisfaction
  • More alienation on job a bad evaluation is
    because of uncontrollable external factors

47
Personality Types
  • Machiavellianism (High Machs)
  • Tendency to be manipulative
  • Ends justify the means
  • Tend to be motivated on jobs that require
    bargaining skills or where there are substantial
    rewards for winning
  • Are frustrated when forced to follow rules

48
Personality Types
  • Self-esteem
  • The degree to which people like or dislike
    themselves
  • People with high SE believe they possess more of
    the ability they need to succeed
  • People with low SE are more susceptible to
    external influence
  • Low SEs are dependent on receipt of positive
    evaluations and more likely to seek approval of
    others

49
Personality Types
  • Self-monitoring
  • Those with high self-monitoring are very
    adaptable and can easily adjust their behavior to
    external situational factors (as opposed to
    others who are rigid and inflexible)
  • If high are sensitive to external cues and
    capable of presenting striking contradictions
    between public and private personas

50
Personality Types
  • Self-monitoring
  • If low in this trait, they cant disguise
    themselves tend to display their true feeling
    and beliefs in every situation

51
Personality Types
  • Risk Propensity
  • The willingness of a person to take chances
  • If high, the person can make decisions faster
    with less information
  • Tend to prefer riskier jobs such as stock broker
    or firefighter

52
Understanding Personality Effective Supervision
  • Match people to jobs
  • Knowing personality traits allows you better
    understand how people approach problem-solving,
    decision making, job interactions, job
    responsibility and job satisfaction
  • Understanding locus of control can help you
    understand your employees degree of job
    satisfaction and their willingness to accept
    responsibility for their own actions

53
Needs Theories - Maslow
  • Maslows Hierarchy of Needs
  • Physiological hunger, thirst, shelter
  • Safety security and protection
  • Social affection, interpersonal relationships
  • Esteem self-respect, achievement status
  • Self-actualization achieving full potential
  • Usually thought in the form of a pyramid

54
Maslows Hierarchy of Needs
SA
Esteem Needs
Social Needs
Security Needs
Physiological Needs
55
Maslows Hierarchy of Needs
  • Propositions
  • A need needs to be satisfied before moving on to
    the next level
  • A satisfied need no longer motivates
  • A need doesnt have to be completely satisfied,
    just substantially satisfied

56
McGregors Theory X Theory Y
  • Theory X The Slug Theory
  • Employees dislike work, will attempt to avoid it
  • Employees must be coerced, forced, controlled, or
    threatened to work
  • Will shirk responsibilities and seek formal
    direction
  • Security is paramount, will display little
    ambition

57
Theory Y
  • Employees view work as being as natural as rest
    or play
  • A person will exercise self-direction and
    self-control if he or she is committed to the
    objectives
  • Employees can learn to accept, even seek
    responsibility
  • The ability to make good decisions is spread
    throughout the population, not just by supervisors

58
Theory X Theory Y
Think of these theories as a continuum
Theory X
Theory Y
Employees fall somewhere in between the two ends
59
Theory X Theory Y
  • Are you a Theory X or a Theory Y supervisor?
  • Theory X may become a self-fulfilling prophecy
  • Theory X managers may believe their assumptions
    apply to all people, same for Theory Y managers

60
HerzbergMotivation Hygiene Theory
  • States that the opposite of satisfaction is not
    dissatisfaction but no satisfaction
  • States that the opposite of dissatisfaction is
    no dissatisfaction
  • The factors leading to job satisfaction are
    separate and distinct from those that lead to
    dissatisfaction

61
Contrasting ViewsHerzberg vs. Traditional
Traditional View
Satisfaction
Dissatisfaction
Herzbergs View
Motivators
Hygiene Factors
Satisfaction
No Dissatisfaction
No Satisfaction
Dissatisfaction
62
HerzbergMotivation - Maintenance
  • What this means is supervisors who seek to
    eliminate dissatisfaction on the job will not
    necessarily create satisfaction
  • They will only placate instead of motivate

63
HerzbergMotivation - Hygiene
  • Hygiene factors also known as maintenance
    factors can create dissatisfaction but if
    properly managed will only provide no
    dissatisfaction not satisfaction or motivation
  • Company policy/administration
  • Quality of supervision
  • Relationships with supervisor/peers/subordinates
  • Work conditions -Safety
  • - fall here
  • Security

64
HerzbergMotivation - Hygiene
  • Motivators also known as satisfiers
  • Certain characteristics of the organization tend
    to be related to job satisfaction, include
  • Achievement
  • Recognition
  • The work itself
  • Responsibility
  • Advancement
  • Growth

65
Contrasting Views
  • The classical view says that the opposite of
    satisfaction is dissatisfaction
  • Herzbergs view - removing dissatisfiers from the
    job does not necessarily make the job satisfying
  • In other words these factors dont motivate
    positively

66
Contrasting ViewsHerzberg vs. Traditional
Traditional View
Satisfaction
Dissatisfaction
Herzbergs View
Motivators
Hygiene Factors
Satisfaction
No Dissatisfaction
No Satisfaction
Dissatisfaction
67
Herzbergs Theory
  • Maintenance factors dont motivate but if they
    are bad or not taken care of they cause
    dissatisfaction (motivate negatively)
  • To motivate you must emphasize the motivation
    factors achievement, recognition, the work
    itself, responsibility and growth

68
McClellands Need for Achievement
  • The drive to do something better than it has ever
    been done before
  • Intrinsic motivation - people high in nAch are
    self-motivated and require little direct
    supervision
  • Set challenging goals but are not gamblers

69
McClellands Need for Achievement
  • People high in achievement avoid very easy or
    very difficult tasks
  • Prefer jobs with personal responsibility,
    feedback, and an intermediate degree of risk
  • Dont always make good supervisors, prefer doing
    things themselves rather than leading others

70
Reinforcement Theory
  • States that people will exert higher levels of
    effort in tasks that are reinforced
  • Totally ignores the inner state of the individual
    and concentrates solely on what happens to a
    person when he or she takes some action

71
Reinforcement Theory
  • Behavior that is reinforced is repeated
  • Proposes that feelings, attitudes, expectations,
    and similar cognitive variables have no impact on
    behavior
  • Has an important influence on motivation but it
    is not the only influence

72
Equity Theory
  • Employees perceive what they get (outcomes) from
    their efforts in relation to what they give
    (inputs) to their job situation
  • Employees compare their input-outcome ratios with
    the input-outcome ratio of others

73
Equity Theory
Individual Others Outcomes Outcomes
Compare with Individual Others I
nputs Inputs
74
Equity Theory
  • If the perception is that ratios are equal,
    equity exists and the employee feels fairly
    treated
  • If the perception is that ratios are unequal,
    inequity exists and the employee will attempt to
    correct the situation, whether it is negative or
    positive inequity

75
Equity Theory
  • Negative equity behavior
  • Reduced work effort
  • Production of lower quality work
  • Sabotage
  • Skipped work or missed days
  • Resignation

76
Expectancy Theory
  • Postulates that individuals analyze
    effort-performance, performance reward, and
    rewards-personal goals relationships, and that
    their level of effort depends on the strengths of
    their expectations that these relationships can
    be achieved

77
Expectancy Theory
  • Explains why workers arent motivated on their
    jobs and merely do the minimum necessary
  • Postulates three relationships
  • Effort-performance
  • Performance-rewards
  • Rewards-personal goals

78
Expectancy Theory
Individual Effort
Individual Performance
Organizational Rewards
Personal Goals
1
3
2
Effort-performance
1
  • Performance-rewards

2
Rewards-personal goals
3
79
Effort-performance
  • If I give maximum effort, will it be recognized
    in my performance evaluation?
  • If the skill level is deficient, or if the
    appraisal system is poorly designed, the employee
    may believe no matter how hard they work, they
    may not get a good appraisal result low
    motivation

80
Performance-rewards
  • If I get a good appraisal, will it lead to
    organizational rewards?
  • Many employees see this relationship as weak
    because organizations reward a lot of things
    other than appraisals.

81
Rewards-personal Goals
  • If Im rewarded, are they the rewards that I
    find personally attractive?
  • If the perceived value of the reward is not worth
    it to the employee, motivation will be sub
    maximized

82
How Does One Motivate?
  • Recognize individual differences
  • Match people to jobs
  • Set challenging goals
  • Encourage participation

83
How Does One Motivate?
  • Individualize rewards
  • Link rewards to performance
  • Check for equity
  • Dont ignore money

84
Motivating a Diversified Work Force
  • Diversity is the norm
  • Women
  • Ethnic minorities
  • Immigrants
  • Seniors
  • Cultural differences

85
Motivating a Diversified Work Force
  • Recognize the need for flexibility
  • Employees have different needs and goals
  • Men value autonomy more than women
  • Women value the opportunity to learn, convenient
    work hours, and good interpersonal relationships
  • What motivates a single mother may not motivate
    an older male

86
Motivating a Diversified Work Force
  • Recognize cultural differences
  • Capitalism/individualism vs collectivisim
  • Self-interest vs. loyalty to organization or
    society
  • Willingness to accept risk vs. concern with
    performance

87
Motivating a Diversified Work Force
  • Methods
  • Flexible work schedules
  • Benefit needs
  • Physical work settings
  • Child care
  • Job sharing
  • Schooling

88
Motivating Low-pay Service Workers
  • Challenges these jobs pay little and offer
    limited opportunities for advancement
  • Options for motivation
  • Job flexibility scheduling and variety
  • Provide recognition
  • Job rotation
  • Capitalize on the role of social support, group
    cohesion

89
Motivating Professionals
  • Are equity sensitive compare salary, job
    assignments with peers
  • Place high value on certain job factors
  • Autonomy
  • Personal growth
  • Recognition
  • Challenging work

90
Motivating Professionals
  • Allegiance priorities
  • Will often place their allegiance to their field
    of expertise over the organization that employees
    them
  • Rewards offered outside the organization often
    take precedent over those from within

91
Pay-for-Performance Programs
  • Compensation plans that pay employees on the
    basis of some performance measure instead of the
    time on the job
  • Piece-rate plans
  • Competency-based compensation
  • Gain sharing
  • Wage incentives
  • Lump-sum bonuses

92
Pay-for-Performance Programs
  • Can be used with individuals, teams, departments
    or based on overall organizational productivity
    and profits
  • Very compatible with Expectancy Theory
  • Motivational viewpoint pay is based on
    performance
  • Cost viewpoint performance based bonuses avoid
    the fixed expense of salary increases

93
Employee Stock Ownership Plans
  • A compensation program in which employees become
    part owners of their organization by receiving
    stock as a performance incentive
  • Allows employees to purchase additional stock at
    attractive prices

94
Employee Stock Ownership Plans
  • In effect, employees become part- owners of the
    organization
  • Research indicates that ESOPS, given time,
    increase employee satisfaction and frequently
    result in higher performance

95
Designing Motivating Jobs
  • Job design the way tasks are designed to form
    complete jobs
  • Some jobs are routine tasks are standardized
    and repetitive
  • Some jobs are nonroutine tasks are varied
    requiring a large number of diverse skills

96
Job Characteristics
  • Skill variety
  • Task identity
  • Task significance
  • Autonomy
  • Feedback
  • When these characteristics are all present, the
    job becomes enriched and potentially motivating

97
Job Enrichment
  • Increases the degree to which a worker controls
    the planning, execution, and evaluation of his or
    her work
  • Accomplished by organizing tasks so as to allow
    the worker to do a complete activity
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