Organizational Behavior, 9/E Chapter 1 Introduction to OB - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 92
About This Presentation
Title:

Organizational Behavior, 9/E Chapter 1 Introduction to OB

Description:

Organizational Behavior, 9/E Chapter 1 Introduction to OB Prepared by Michael K. McCuddy Valparaiso University John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Chapter 1 Study Questions What ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:683
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 93
Provided by: facultyLo
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Organizational Behavior, 9/E Chapter 1 Introduction to OB


1
Organizational Behavior, 9/EChapter
1Introduction to OB
  • Prepared by
  • Michael K. McCuddy
  • Valparaiso University
  • John Wiley Sons, Inc.

2
Chapter 1 Study Questions
  • What is organizational behavior and why is it
    important?
  • What are organizations like as work settings?
  • What is the nature of managerial work?
  • How do we learn about organizational behavior?

3
What is organizational behavior and why is it
important?
  • Workplace success depends on 
  • Respect for people.
  • Understanding of human behavior in complex
    organizational systems.
  • Individual commitment to flexibility, creativity,
    and learning.
  • Individual willingness to change.

4
What is organizational behavior and why is it
important?
  • Organizations and their members are challenged
    to 
  • Simultaneously achieve high performance and high
    quality of life.
  • Embrace ethics and social responsibility.
  • Respect the vast potential of demographic and
    cultural diversity among people.
  • Recognize the impact of globalization.

5
What is organizational behavior and why is it
important?
  • Organizational behavior.
  • Study of human behavior in organizations.
  • A multidisciplinary field devoted to
    understanding individual and group behavior,
    interpersonal processes, and organizational
    dynamics.

6
What is organizational behavior and why is it
important?
Pick up Figure 1.1 from the textbook.
7
What is organizational behavior and why is it
important?
  • Reasons for importance of scientific thinking.
  • The process of data collection is controlled and
    systematic.
  • Proposed explanations are carefully tested.
  • Only explanations that can be scientifically
    verified are accepted.

8
What is organizational behavior and why is it
important?
  • Contingency approach.
  • Tries to identify how different situations can be
    best understood and handled.
  • Important contingency variables include
  • Environment.
  • Technology.
  • Tasks.
  • Structure.
  • People.

9
What is organizational behavior and why is it
important?
  • Modern workplace trends.
  • Commitment to ethical behavior.
  • Importance of human capital.
  • Demise of command and control.
  • Emphasis on teamwork.
  • Pervasive influence of information technology.
  • Respect for new workforce expectations.
  • Changing definition of jobs and career.

10
What are organizations like as work settings?
  • An organization is a collection of people working
    together in a division of labor to achieve a
    common purpose.

11
What are organizations like as work settings?
  • The core purpose of an organization is the
    creation of goods and services.
  • Missions and mission statements focus attention
    on the core purpose.
  • Mission statements communicate
  • A clear sense of the domain in which the
    organizations products and services fit.
  • A vision and sense of future aspirations.

12
What are organizations like as work settings?
  • A strategy is a comprehensive plan that guides
    organizations to operate in ways that allow them
    to outperform their competitors.
  • Key managerial responsibilities include strategy
    formulation and implementation.
  • Knowledge of OB is essential to effectively
    strategy implementation.

13
What are organizations like as work settings?
14
What are organizations like as work settings?
  • Stakeholders.
  • People, groups, and institutions having an
    interest in an organizations performance.
  • Customers, owners, employees, suppliers,
    regulators, and local communities are key
    stakeholders.
  • Interests of multiple stakeholders sometimes
    conflict.
  • Executive leadership often focuses on balancing
    multiple stakeholder expectations.

15
What are organizations like as work settings?
  • Organizational culture and diversity.
  • Organizational culture refers to the shared
    beliefs and values that influence the behavior of
    organizational members.
  • Positive organizational cultures
  • Have a high-performance orientation.
  • Emphasize teamwork.
  • Encourage risk taking.
  • Emphasize innovation..
  • Respect people and workforce diversity.
  • Success in business world is tied to valuing
    diversity.

16
What are organizations like as work settings?
  • Organizational effectiveness approaches.
  • Systems resource approach focuses on inputs.
  • Internal process approach focuses on the
    transformation process.
  • Goal approach focuses on outputs.
  • Strategic contingencies approach focuses on
    impact on key stakeholders.

17
What are organizations like as work settings?
  • Longitudinal views of organizational
    effectiveness.
  • Short-run emphasis on goal accomplishment,
    resource utilization, and stakeholder
    satisfaction.
  • Intermediate-run emphasis on organizations
    adaptability and development potential.
  • Long-run emphasis on survival.

18
What is the natureof managerial work?
  • Managers perform jobs that involve directly
    supporting the work efforts of others.
  • Managers assume roles such as coordinator, coach,
    or team leader.

19
What is the natureof managerial work?
  • The management process.
  • An effective manager is one whose organizational
    unit, group, or team consistently achieves its
    goals while its members remain capable,
    committed, and enthusiastic.
  • Key results of effective management
  • Task performance.
  • Job satisfaction.

20
What is the natureof managerial work?
21
What is the natureof managerial work?
  • The nature of managerial work.
  • Managers work long hours.
  • Managers are busy people.
  • Managers are often interrupted.
  • Managerial work is fragmented and variable.
  • Managers work mostly with other people.
  • Managers spend a lot of time communicating.

22
What is the natureof managerial work?
23
What is the natureof managerial work?
  • Managerial mind-sets.
  • Reflective mind-set managing ones self.
  • Analytic mind-set managing organizational
    operations and decisions.
  • Worldly mind-set managing in a global context.
  • Collaborative mind-set managing relationships.
  •  Action mind-set managing change.

24
What is the natureof managerial work?
  • Managerial skills and competencies.
  • A skill is an ability to translate knowledge into
    action that results in a desired performance.
  • Categories of skills.
  • Technical.
  • Human.
  • Conceptual.

25
How do we learn about organizational behavior?
  • Learning is an enduring change in behavior that
    results from experience.
  • Organizational learning is the process of
    acquiring knowledge and utilizing information to
    adapt successfully to changing circumstances.

26
How do we learn about organizational behavior?
.
27
How do we learn about organizational behavior?
28
Organizational Behavior, 9/EChapter 2Current
Issues in OB
  • Prepared by
  • Michael K. McCuddy
  • Valparaiso University
  • John Wiley Sons, Inc.

29
Chapter 2 Study Questions
  • What is a high-performance organization?
  • What is multiculturalism, and how can workforce
    diversity be managed?
  • How do ethics and social responsibility influence
    human behavior in organizations?
  • What are key OB transitions in the new workplace?

30
What is a high-performance organization?
  • High-performance organizations.
  • Value and empower people, and respect diversity.
  • Mobilize the talents of self-directed work teams.
  • Use cutting-edge technologies to achieve success.
  • Thrive on learning and enable members to grow and
    develop.
  • Are achievement-, quality-, and
    customer-oriented, as well as being sensitive to
    the external environment.

31
What is a high-performance organization?
  • Stakeholders.
  • The individuals, groups, and other organizations
    affected by an organizations performance.
  • Value creation.
  • The extent to which an organization satisfies the
    needs of strategic constituencies.

32
What is a high-performance organization?
33
What is a high-performance organization?
  • Total quality management (TQM).
  • A total commitment to
  • High-quality results.
  • Continuous improvement.
  • Customer satisfaction.
  • Meeting customers needs.
  • Doing all tasks right the first time.
  • Continuous improvement focuses on two questions
  • Is it necessary?
  • If so, can it be done better?

34
What is a high-performance organization?
  • Human capital.
  • The economic value of people with job-relevant
    abilities, knowledge, ideas, energies, and
    commitments.
  • Knowledge workers.
  • People whose minds rather than physical
    capabilities create value for the organization.
  • Intellectual capital.
  • The performance potential of the expertise,
    competencies, creativity, and commitment within
    an organizations workforce.

35
What is a high-performance organization?
  • Empowerment.
  • Allows people, individually and in groups, to use
    their talents and knowledge to make decisions
    that affect their work.
  • Social capital.
  • The performance potential represented in the
    relationships maintained among people at work.

36
What is a high-performance organization?
  • Learning and high-performance cultures.
  • Uncertainty highlights the importance of
    organizational learning.
  • High-performance organizations are designed for
    organizational learning.
  • A learning organization has a culture that values
    human capital and invigorates learning for
    performance enhancement.

37
What is a high-performance organization?
38
What is multi-culturalism, and how can workforce
diversity be managed?
  • Workforce diversity.
  • Describes differences among people with respect
    to age, race, ethnicity, gender, physical
    ability, and sexual orientation.
  • Multiculturalism.
  • Refers to pluralism and respect for diversity and
    individual differences in the workplace.
  • Inclusivity.
  • The degree to which the organizations culture
    respects and values diversity.

39
What is multi-culturalism, and how can workforce
diversity be managed?
  • Diversity biases in the workplace.
  • Prejudice.
  • Discrimination.
  • The glass ceiling effect.
  • Sexual harassment.
  • Verbal abuse.
  • Pay discrimination.

40
What is multi-culturalism, and how can workforce
diversity be managed?
41
What is multi-culturalism, and how can workforce
diversity be managed?
  • Managing diversity.
  • Developing a work environment and organizational
    culture that allows all organization members to
    reach their full potential.
  • A diversity mature organization is created when
  • Managers ensure the effective and efficient
    utilization of employees in pursuit of the
    corporate mission.
  • Managers consider how their behaviors affect
    diversity.
  • Well-managed workforce diversity increases human
    capital.

42
How do ethics and social responsibility influence
human behavior in organizations?
  • Ethical behavior.
  • Good or right as opposed to bad or wrong
    in a particular setting.
  • The public demands that people in organizations
    act according to high moral standards.

43
How do ethics and social responsibility influence
human behavior in organizations?
  • Immoral managers.
  • Do not subscribe to any ethical principles
    pursuit of self-interest.
  • Amoral managers.
  • Ethics is simply not on this managers radar
    screen.
  • Moral managers.
  • Incorporate ethical principles and goals into
    their personal behavior .

44
How do ethics and social responsibility
influence human behavior in organizations?
45
How do ethics and social responsibility influence
human behavior in organizations?
  • Ways of thinking about ethical behavior.
  • Utilitarian view the greatest good for the
    greatest number of people.
  • Individualism view best serving long-term
    self-interests.
  • Moral-rights view respects and protects the
    fundamental rights of all human beings.
  • Justice view fair and impartial in the
    treatment of all people.

46
How do ethics and social responsibility influence
human behavior in organizations?
  • Different types of justice.
  • Procedural justice properly following rules
    and procedures in all cases.
  • Distributive justice treating people the same
    under a policy, regardless of demographic
    differences.
  • Interactional justice treating people affected
    by a decision with dignity and respect.

47
How do ethics and social responsibility influence
human behavior in organizations?
  • Ethical dilemmas.
  • Occur when someone must choose whether or not to
    pursue a course of action that, although offering
    the potential of personal or organizational
    benefit or both, may be considered unethical.

48
How do ethics and social responsibility influence
human behavior in organizations?
  • Rationalizations for unethical behavior.
  • Pretending the behavior is not really unethical
    or illegal.
  • Saying the behavior is really in the
    organizations or persons best interest.
  • Assuming the behavior is acceptable if others
    dont find out about it.
  • Presuming that superiors will support and protect
    you.

49
How do ethics and social responsibility influence
human behavior in organizations?
  • Organizational social responsibility.
  • The obligation of organizations to behave in
    ethical and moral ways as institutions of the
    broader society.
  • Managers should commit organizations to
  • Pursuit of high productivity.
  • Corporate social responsibility.
  • A whistleblower exposes others wrongdoings in
    order to preserve high ethical standards.

50
What are key OB transitions in the new workplace?
  • Corporate governance and ethics leadership.
  • Society expects and demands ethical decisions and
    actions from businesses and other social
    institutions.
  • Corporate governance.
  • The active oversight of management decisions,
    corporate strategy, and financial reporting by
    Boards of Directors.

51
What are key OB transitions in the new workplace?
  • Corporate governance and ethics leadership
    (cont.).
  • Ethics leadership.
  • Making business and organizational decisions with
    high moral standards that meet the ethical test
    of being good and not bad, and of being
    right and not wrong. .
  • Integrity.
  • Acting in ways that are always honest, credible,
    and consistent in putting ones values into
    practice.

52
What are key OB transitions in the new workplace?
  • Positive organizational behavior.
  • Quality of work life.
  • The overall quality of human experience in the
    workplace.
  • Commitment to quality of work life is an
    important value within organizational behavior.
  • Theory Y provides the theoretical underpinnings
    for contemporary quality of work life concepts.

53
What are key OB transitions in the new workplace?
  • Positive organizational behavior (cont.).
  • Positive organizational behavior focuses on
    practices that value human capacities and
    encourage their full utilization.
  • Positive organizational behavior is based on the
    core capacities of
  • Confidence.
  • Hope.
  • Optimism.
  • Resilience.

54
What are key OB transitions in the new workplace?
  • Globalization, job migration, and organizational
    transformation.
  • Globalization.
  • The worldwide interdependence of resource flows,
    product markets, and business competition.
  • Job migration.
  • The shifting of jobs from one nation to another.

55
What are key OB transitions in the new workplace?
  • Globalization, job migration, and organizational
    transformation (cont.).
  • Global outsourcing.
  • Involves employers cutting back on domestic jobs
    and replacing them with contract workers in other
    nations.
  • Job migration and global outsourcing have
    contributed to organizations redesigning
    themselves for high performance in a changed
    world.

56
What are key OB transitions in the new workplace?
  • Personal management and career planning.
  • Shamrock organizations.
  • Relatively small core group of permanent,
    full-time employees with critical skills.
  • Outside operators contracting to core group to
    perform essential daily activities.
  • Part-timers hired by core group on an as-needed
    basis.

57
What are key OB transitions in the new workplace?
  • Personal management and career planning (cont.).
  • Personal management.
  • Understand ones self, exercising initiative,
    accepting responsibility, working well with
    others, and continually learning from experience.
  • Self-monitoring.
  • Observing and reflecting on ones own behavior
    and acting in ways that adapt to the situation.

58
Organizational Behavior, 9/EChapter 3OB Across
Cultures
  • Prepared by
  • Michael K. McCuddy
  • Valparaiso University
  • John Wiley Sons, Inc.

59
Chapter 3 Study Questions
  • Why is globalization significant for
    organizational behavior?
  • What is culture and how can we understand
    cultural differences?
  • How does cultural diversity affect people at
    work?
  • What is a global view on organizational learning?

60
Why is globalization significant for
organizational behavior?
  • Most organizations must achieve high performance
    within a complex and competitive global
    environment.
  • Globalization refers to the complex economic
    networks of international competition, resource
    suppliers, and product markets.

61
Why is globalization significant for
organizational behavior?
  • Forces of globalization.
  • Rapid growth in information technology and
    electronic communication.
  • Movement of valuable skills and investments.
  • Increasing cultural diversity.
  • Implications of immigration.
  • Increasing job migration among nations.
  • Impact of multicultural workforces.

62
Why is globalization significant for
organizational behavior?
  • Globalization is contributing to the emergence
    of regional economic alliances.
  • Important regional alliances.
  • European Union (EU).
  • North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA).
  • Asia-Pacific Economic Co-operation Forum (APEC).

63
Why is globalization significant for
organizational behavior?
  • Outsourcing.
  • Contracting out of work rather than accomplishing
    it with a full-time permanent workforce.
  • Off shoring.
  • Contracting out work to persons in other
    countries.
  • Job migration.
  • Movement of jobs from one location or country to
    another.

64
Why is globalization significant for
organizational behavior?
  • Global managers.
  • Know how to conduct business in multiple
    countries.
  • Are culturally adaptable and often multilingual.
  • Think with a worldview and are able to map
    strategy in the global context.
  • Have a global attitude.
  • Have a global mindset.

65
Why is globalization significant for
organizational behavior?
  • Culture.
  • The learned, shared way of doing things in a
    particular society.
  • The software of the mind.
  • Helps define boundaries between different groups
    and affects how their members relate to one
    another.
  • Cultural intelligence is the ability to identify,
    understand, and act with sensitivity and
    effectiveness in cross-cultural situations.

66
What is culture and how can we understand
cultural differences?
  • Language.
  • Perhaps the most visible aspect of culture.
  • Whorfian hypothesis considers language as a
    major determinant of thinking.
  • Low-context cultures the message is conveyed by
    the words used.
  • High-context cultures words convey only a
    limited part of the message.

67
What is culture and how can we understand
cultural differences?
  • Time orientation.
  • Polychronic cultures.
  • Circular view of time.
  • No pressure for immediate action or performance.
  • Emphasis on the present.
  • Monochronic cultures.
  • Linear view of time.
  • Create pressure for action and performance.
  • Long-range goals and planning are important.

68
What is culture and how can we understand
cultural differences?
  • Use of space.
  • Proxemics.
  • The study of how people use space to communicate.
  • Reveals important cultural differences.
  • Concept of personal space varies across cultures.
  • Space is arranged differently in different
    cultures.

69
What is culture and how can we understand
cultural differences?
  • Religion.
  • A major element of culture.
  • Can be a very visible aspect of culture.
  • Influences codes of ethics and moral behavior.
  • Influences conduct of economic matters.

70
What is culture and how can we understand
cultural differences?
  • Values and national culture.
  • Cultures vary in underlying patterns of values
    and attitudes.
  • Hofstedes five dimensions of national culture
  • Power distance.
  • Uncertainty avoidance.
  • Individualism-collectivism.
  • Masculinity-femininity.
  • Long-term/short-term orientation.

71
What is culture and how can we understand
cultural differences?
  • Power distance.
  • The willingness of a culture to accept status and
    power differences among members.
  • Respect for hierarchy and rank in organizations.
  • Example of a high power distance culture
    Indonesia.
  • Example of a low power distance culture Sweden.

72
What is culture and how can we understand
cultural differences?
  • Uncertainty avoidance.
  • The cultural tendency toward discomfort with risk
    and ambiguity.
  • Preference for structured versus unstructured
    organizational situations.
  • Example of a high uncertainty avoidance culture
    France.
  • Example of a low uncertainty avoidance culture
    Hong Kong.

73
What is culture and how can we understand
cultural differences?
  • Individualism-collectivism.
  • The cultural tendency to emphasize individual or
    group interests.
  • Preferences for working individually or in
    groups.
  • Example of an individualistic culture United
    States.
  • Example of a collectivist culture Mexico.

74
What is culture and how can we understand
cultural differences?
  • Masculinity-femininity.
  • The tendency of a culture to value stereotypical
    masculine or feminine traits.
  • Emphasizes competition/assertiveness versus
    interpersonal sensitivity/relationships.
  • Example of a masculine culture Japan.
  • Example of a feminine culture Thailand.

75
What is culture and how can we understand
cultural differences?
  • Long-term/short-term orientation.
  • The tendency of a culture to emphasize
    future-oriented values versus present-oriented
    values.
  • Adoption of long-term or short-term performance
    horizons.
  • Example of a long-term orientation culture
    South Korea.
  • Example of a short-term orientation culture
    United States.

76
What is culture and how can we understand
cultural differences?
77
What is culture and how can we understand
cultural differences?
  • Understanding cultural differences helps in
    dealing with parochialism and ethnocentrism.
  • Parochialism assuming that the ways of ones
    own culture are the only ways of doing things.
  • Ethnocentrism assuming that the ways of ones
    culture are the best ways of doing things.

78
What is culture and how can we understand
cultural differences?
79
What is culture and how can we understand
cultural differences?
  • Cultural differences in handling relationships
    with other people.
  • Universalism versus particularism.
  • Relative emphasis on rules and consistency, or on
    relationships and flexibility.
  • Individualism versus collectivism.
  • Relative emphasis on individual freedom and
    responsibility, or on group interests and
    consensus.

80
What is culture and how can we understand
cultural differences?
  • Cultural differences in handling relationships
    with other people (cont.).
  • Neutral versus affective.
  • Relative emphasis on objectivity and detachment,
    or on emotion and expressed feelings.
  • Specific versus diffuse.
  • Relative emphasis on focused and narrow
    involvement, or on involvement with the whole
    person.

81
What is culture and how can we understand
cultural differences?
  • Cultural differences in handling relationships
    with other people (cont.).
  •  Achievement versus prescription.
  • Relative emphasis on performance-based and earned
    status, or on ascribed status.

82
What is culture and how can we understand
cultural differences?
  • Cultural differences in attitudes toward time.
  • Sequential view of time.
  • Time is a passing series of events.
  • Synchronic view of time.
  • Time consists of an interrelated past, present,
    and future.

83
What is culture and how can we understand
cultural differences?
  • Cultural differences in attitudes toward the
    environment.
  • Inner-directed cultures.
  • Members view themselves as separate from nature
    and believe they can control it.
  • Outer-directed cultures.
  • Members view themselves as part of nature and
    believe they must go along with it.

84
How does cultural diversity affect people at
work?
  • Multinational corporation (MNC).
  • A business firm that has extensive international
    operations in more than one foreign country.
  • Have a total world view without allegiance to any
    one national home.
  • Have enormous economic power and impact.
  • Bring benefits and controversies to host
    countries.

85
How does cultural diversity affect people at
work?
  • Multicultural workforces and expatriates.
  • Styles of leadership, motivation, decision
    making, planning, organizing, and controlling
    vary from country to country.
  • Expatriates.
  • People who live and work abroad for extended
    periods of time.
  • Can be very costly for employers.
  • Progressive employers take supportive measures to
    maximize potential for expatriate success.

86
How does cultural diversity affect people at work?
87
How does cultural diversity affect people at
work?
  • Ethical behavior across cultures.
  • Ethical challenges result from
  • Cultural diversity.
  • Variations in governments and legal systems.
  • Prominent current issues.
  • Corruption and bribery.
  • Poor working conditions.
  • Child and prison labor.
  • Business support of repressive governments.
  • Sweatshops.

88
How does cultural diversity affect people at
work?
89
How does cultural diversity affect people at
work?
  • Advice regarding cultural relativism and ethical
    absolutism.
  • Multinational businesses should adopt core or
    threshold values that respect and protect
    fundamental human rights.
  • Beyond the threshold, businesses should adapt and
    tailor actions to respect the traditions,
    foundations, and needs of different cultures.

90
What is a global view on organizational
learning?
  • Organizational learning.
  • The process of acquiring the knowledge necessary
    to adapt to a changing environment.
  • Global organizational learning.
  • The ability to gather from the world at large the
    knowledge required for long-term organizational
    adaptation.

91
What is a global view on organizational
learning?
  • Are management theories universal?
  • Answer is no.
  • Cultural influences should be carefully
    considered in transferring theories and their
    applications across cultures.

92
What is a global view on organizational
learning?
  • Best practices around the world.
  • Global organizational learning should identify
    best practices around the world.
  • Potential high-performance benchmarks exist
    throughout the world.
  • Cultural diversity enriches global organization
    learning.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com