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LISTENING TO MY LECTUER,I HOPE THTAT YOU WILL BE ABLE TO: 1. Define organizational behavior (OB). 2. Describe what managers do. 3. Explain the value of the systematic study of OB. 4. List the major challenges and opportunities for managers to use OB concepts. 5. Identify the contributions made by major behavioral science disciplines to OB.

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AFTER STUDYING THIS CHAPTER AND LISTENING TO MY LECTUER,I HOPE THTATYOU WILL BE ABLE TO:

1. Define organizational behavior (OB).2. Describe what managers do.3. Explain the value of the systematic study of OB.4. List the major challenges and opportunities for

managers to use OB concepts.5. Identify the contributions made by major

behavioral science disciplines to OB.

6. Describe why managers require a knowledge of OB.

7. Explain the need for a contingency approach to the study of OB.

What is the field of Organizational Behavior all about?

OB helps in understanding human behavior and helps in enhancing organizational effectiveness and individual well beingOB highlights four central characteristics of the fieldFirst OB is firmly grounded in the scientific methodSecond OB studies individuals groups and organizationsThird OB is interdisciplinary in natureFourth OB is used as he basis for enhancing effectiveness and individual well-being

What is the field of Organizational Behavior all about?OB is the study of what people think feel and do in and around

organizationsOB emerged as a distinct field around the 1940s-origin can be

traced much furtherThe Greek philosopher Plato wrote about the essence of

leadershipThe writings of Chinese philosopher Confucius in 500 BC are

beginning to influence contemporary thinking about ethics and

leadershipIn 1776 Adam advocated a new form of organizational structure

based on the division of labor

One hundred years later German sociologist Max Weber wrote about rational organizations and initiated discussion on charismatic leadershipFrederick Winslow Taylor introduced the systematic use of goal setting and rewards to motivate employeesIn the 1920s Elton Mayo and his colleagues discovered the importance of formal and informal group dynamicsOB was organized into a unified discipline until World War II

Enter Organizational BehaviorOrganizational behavior (OB)Deals with human behavior in organizations. It is a multidisciplinary field devoted to understanding individual and group behavior, interpersonal processes and organizational dynamics

What is Organizational behavior?

The Meaning of Organisational Behaviour (OB) OB is the study of human attitudes, behaviour and performance. It is the study of what people do in an organisation and how that behaviour affects the performance of the organisation. As rightly indicated by J.W. Newstrom, OB is the systematic study and careful application of knowledge about how people – as individuals and as groups – act within organisations. It is an action-oriented and goal-directed discipline. Its goals are to make managers more effective at describing, understanding, predicting, and controlling human behaviour. Describe behaviour Understand behaviour Predict behaviour Control behaviour

Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

What is organizational behavior and why is it important?Scientific thinking is important to OB because:

Process of data collection is controlled and systematic

Proposed explanations are carefully testedOnly explanations that can be scientifically

verified are accepted

1-8

Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Scientific methods modelsScientific methods models

simplified views of reality that attempt to identify major factors and forces underlying real-world phenomenon

Link independent variables with dependent variables

1-9

Copyright © 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

OB uses scientific methods to develop test generalization about behavior in organization

1-10

What is Organizational behavior?

OB applies the Scientific Method to Practical Managerial problems Managers rely heavily on knowledge derived from OB researchFor example researchers have shed light on such practical questionsHow can goals be set to enhance people’s job performance?How many jobs be designed so as to enhance employees feelings of satisfaction?Under what conditions do individuals make better decisions than groups?What can be done to improve the quality of organizational communication?What steps can be taken to alleviate work related stress?What do leaders do to enhance the effectiveness of their teams?How can organizations be designed to make people highly productive?

What is Organizational behavior?

OB applies the Scientific Method to Practical Managerial problems•OB through the scientific research and theory will answer to the questions •It is safe to say that the scientific and applied facets of OB not only coexist but complements each other•Just as knowledge about the properties of physics may be put to use by engineers and engineering data can be used to test theories of basic physics •Knowledge and practical applications are closely interwined in the field of OB

What is the secret source that makes company the best place to work

the secret source that makes a company the best place to work for?

High and differentiated compensation

Innovative titles

Faster career progression plans

Meaningful growth avenues

More satisfying jobs

Overseas exposure

Opportunity to work on cutting-edge technologies and problems

Referral schemes etc. (many a time, employees may want a bit of all these and much more!)

What Managers Do

Managerial Activities• Make decisions• Allocate resources• Direct activities of others to

attain goals

Managers (or administrators)Individuals who achieve goals through other people.

Where Managers WorkOrganizationA 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

ManagementFunctions

Planning Organizing

LeadingControlling

Management Functions (cont’d)PlanningA process that includes defining goals, establishing strategy, and developing plans to coordinate activities.

Management Functions (cont’d)

OrganizingDetermining 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.

Management Functions (cont’d)LeadingA function that includes motivating employees, directing others, selecting the most effective communication channels, and resolving conflicts.

Management Functions (cont’d)ControllingMonitoring activities to ensure they are being accomplished as planned and correcting any significant deviations.

RolesManagerial Roles

Henry Mintzberg offered a view of the managing job that throws considerable light on how managers perform their work. Managers, according to Mintzberg, must fill many roles as they carry out the management functions. These roles can be grouped into three categories: interpersonal, informational and decisional.

Mintzberg’s Managerial Roles

Source: Adapted from The Nature of Managerial Work by H. Mintzberg. Copyright © 1973 by H. Mintzberg. Reprinted by permission of Pearson Education.

RolesInterpersonal relationships essential to all managerial work

Managers team leaders should be able to develop maintain and work well with wide variety of people-outside and inside the organization

Work with task networks-(of specific job related contacts

Career networks(of career guidance and opportunity resources)

Social networks(trustworthy friends and peers)

Mintzberg’s Managerial Roles (cont’d)

Source: Adapted from The Nature of Managerial Work by H. Mintzberg. Copyright © 1973 by H. Mintzberg. Reprinted by permission of Pearson Education.

Mintzberg’s Managerial Roles (cont’d)

Source: Adapted from The Nature of Managerial Work by H. Mintzberg. Copyright © 1973 by H. Mintzberg. Reprinted by permission of Pearson Education.

Mindset

•Recently Henry Mintzberg and his colleague Jonathan Gosling asked question

•What does it mean to think like a manager

•Complexity of managerial work

•To help managers develop attitudes and ways of thinking

that can improve their effectiveness

•Defined managerial mind set as an attitude a frame of mind

that opens up new vistas

Mindset

The five mind sets important to success in managerial work

The reflective mindset deals with being able to manage oneself

The analytic mindset deals with managing organizational operations and

decisions

The worldly mindset deals with managing in the global context

The collaborative mindset deals with managing relationships

The action mindset deals with managing change

All five mind sets must work together for managerial decisions

Skills

A skill is an ability to translate knowledge into action that results in a desired performance

Skills

Managerial skills

Performing management functions and roles and achieving competitive advantage are the principal characteristics of a manager’s job. Merely understanding this fact, however, does not guarantee success. Managers need a variety of skills to do these things well. Skills here refer to specific abilities that result from knowledge, information, practice and aptitude. Robert L. Katz has identified three basic types of skills – technical, human and conceptual – that he says are needed by all managers.

Management SkillsTechnical skillsThe ability to apply specialized knowledge or expertise.Human skillsThe ability to work with, understand, and motivate other people, both individually and in groups.

Conceptual SkillsThe mental ability to analyze and diagnose complex situations.

Management SkillsEmotional intelligence ability to understand and deal with emotionsSelf-awareness-ability to understand your own

moods and emotionsSelf-regulation-ability to think before acting and

control disruptive impulsesMotivation-ability to work hard and persevereEmpathy-ability to understand the emotions of

othersSocial skill-ability to gain rapport with others and

build good relationships 2008 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

Effective Versus Successful Managerial Activities (Luthans)

1. Traditional management• Decision making, planning, and controlling

2. Communication• Exchanging routine information and processing

paperwork3. Human resource management

• Motivating, disciplining, managing conflict, staffing, and training

4. Networking• Socializing, politicking, and interacting with others

Allocation of Activities by Time

Source: Based on F. Luthans, R.M. Hodgetts, and S.A. Rosenkrantz, Real Managers (Cambridge, MA: Ballinger, 1988).

Multidisciplinary Nature of OB

OB is multidisciplinary in nature. It is, in fact, an applied behavioural science that is built on contributions from a wide variety of social science disciplines, such as psychology, sociology, social psychology, anthropology, political science, economics etc.

The Multidisciplinary Roots of OBDiscipline Relevant OB topics

Psychology - Perception and learning, personality, emotion and stress, attitudes, motivation, decision-making and creativity.

Sociology - Group dynamics, socialisation, communication, intergroup behaviour, power, conflict.

Social Psychology - Intergroup collaboration, group decision-making, integration of individual needs with group activities, effect of change on individuals.

Anthropology- Organisational culture, leadership, organisational empowerment

Economics - Decision-making, organisational power

Political Science - Conflict, intra-organisational politics, manipulating power for individual self-interest.

Toward an OB Discipline

Contributing Disciplines to the OB FieldPsychologyThe science that seeks to measure, explain, and sometimes change the behavior of humans and other animals.

Contributing Disciplines to the OB Field (cont’d)

SociologyThe study of people in relation to their fellow human beings.

Contributing Disciplines to the OB Field (cont’d)Social PsychologyAn area within psychology that blends concepts from psychology and sociology and that focuses on the influence of people on one another.

Contributing Disciplines to the OB Field (cont’d)AnthropologyThe study of societies to learn about human beings and their activities.

Contributing Disciplines to the OB Field (cont’d)Political ScienceThe study of the behavior of individuals and groups within a political environment.

Emerging fields from which organizational behavior knowledge is acquired

Discipline (traditional ) Relevant OB topicsEconomics Decision making, negotiation ,

organizational powerIndustrial engineering Job design, productivity, work

measurementEmerging disciplinesCommunications Knowledge management,

electronic mail, corporate culture , employee socialization

Information systems Team dynamics, decision making, knowledge management

Marketing Knowledge management, creativity, decision making

Women’s studies Organizational power,perception

Five anchors of Organizational Behavior

Multidisciplinary anchor OB should import knowledge from many disciplines

Systematic research anchor OB should study organizations using systematic research methods

Contingency anchor OB theory should recognize that the effects of actions often vary with the situation

Multiple levels of analysis anchor OB knowledge should include three levels of analysis:individual,team,and organization

Open system anchor OB should view organizations as open systems that interact with their environment

Open System view

InputsRMHR

InformationFinancial resource

equipment

SubsytemsTransforming

inputs to outcomes

OutputsProduct/services

Employee behaviors

Profits/lossesWaste/pollution

External Environment

-Subsystems such as process(communication and reward systems)-Task activities(Production, marketing)-Social dynamics(informal groups, power dynamics)-Aid of technology(equipment ,work method and information)These subsystems transform inputs into outputs

External Environment and stakeholders

•Successful organizations monitor their environments and are able to maintain a close fit with changing conditions•Configure their outputs(new products and services, reducing waste)•Transforming their processes•Organizations need to adapt to changing environment•Stakeholders represent a central part of the internal and external environment•Stakeholders influence the firms access to inputs and ability to discharge outputs•If leaders pay attention to only shareholders organization will be trouble•Cannot ignore corporate social responsibility

There Are Few Absolutes in OB

•There are few if any simple and universal principles that explain OB•Laws in the physical sciences-chemistry astronomy physics-that are consistent apply in a wide range of situations•Scientists generalize –pull of gravity-confident about sending astronauts into space to repair satellites•Human beings complex-not alike-our ability to make simple accurate and sweeping generalization is limited•Behavior changes in different situations•Does not mean that reasonably accurate explanations of human behavior or make valid predictions•OB concepts must reflect situational or contingency conditions

There Are Few Absolutes in OB

ContingencyVariablesx y

Contingency variablesSituational factors: variables that moderate the relationship between two or more other variables and improve the correlation.

Challenges and Opportunities for OBResponding to Globalization

Increased foreign assignmentsWorking with people from different culturesCoping with anti-capitalism backlashOverseeing movement of jobs to countries with

low-cost laborManaging Workforce Diversity

Embracing diversityChanging demographicsImplications for managers

Recognizing and responding to differences

DomesticPartners

Major Workforce Diversity Categories

Race

NationalOrigin

Age

Disability

Gender

Challenges and Opportunities for OB (cont’d)Improving Quality and Productivity

Quality management (QM)Process reengineering

Responding to the Labor ShortageChanging work force demographicsFewer skilled laborersEarly retirements and older workers

Improving Customer ServiceIncreased expectation of service qualityCustomer-responsive cultures

Improving Quality and ProductivityQuality management (QM)

The constant attainment of customer satisfaction through the continuous improvement of all organizational processes.

Requires employees to rethink what they do and become more involved in workplace decisions.

Process reengineeringAsks managers to reconsider how work would be done

and their organization structured if they were starting over.

Instead of making incremental changes in processes, reengineering involves evaluating every process in terms of its contribution.

Challenges and Opportunity for OB (cont’d)

Improving People SkillsEmpowering PeopleStimulating Innovation and ChangeCoping with “Temporariness”Working in Networked OrganizationsHelping Employees Balance Work/Life ConflictsImproving Ethical Behavior

Models of OB

Models of OBA model is a simplified presentation of some real-world phenomenon. The OB model focuses attention on three distinct levels of analysis—individuals, groups and organisations. It tries to look into the impact the individuals, groups and organisations have on the behaviour of members working in an organisation. It tries to utilise this knowledge with a view to improve organisational performance. The model of OB is generally built around two sets of variables, namely dependent variables (productivity, absenteeism, turnover, job satisfaction) and independent variables (individual level variables, group level variables and organisation system level variables). The basic objective of any model of OB is to make managers more effective at describing, understanding, predicting and controlling human behaviour.

Basic OB Model

ModelAn abstraction of reality.A simplified representation of some real-world phenomenon.

The Dependent Variables

x

yDependent variableA response that is affected by an independent variable.

The Dependent Variables (cont’d)

ProductivityA performance measure that includes effectiveness and efficiency.

EffectivenessAchievement of goals.

EfficiencyThe ratio of effective output to the input required to achieve it.

The Dependent Variables (cont’d)

AbsenteeismThe failure to report to work.

TurnoverThe voluntary and involuntary permanent withdrawal from an organization.

The Dependent Variables (cont’d)

Organizational citizenship behavior (OCB)Discretionary behavior that is not part of an employee’s formal job requirements, but that nevertheless promotes the effective functioning of the organization.

The Dependent Variables (cont’d)Job satisfactionA general attitude toward one’s job, the difference between the amount of reward workers receive and the amount they believe they should receive.

The Independent Variables

IndependentVariables

Individual-Level Variables

OrganizationSystem-Level

Variables

Group-LevelVariables

Independent variableThe presumed cause of some change in the dependent variable.

Cont….

Organisation Structure Organisational Culture, Creativity and Innovation Human Resource Policies and Practices Organisational Change and Development International Organisational Behaviour

Group Behaviour Teams and Teamwork Communication Leadership Power and Politics Conflict and Negotiation

Organisation Level

Group Level Outcomes

Productivity

Absenteeism

Job Satisfaction

Turnover

Personality Perception and Attribution Ethics and Social Responsibilities Values, Attitudes and Job Satisfaction Learning and Behaviour Modification Basic Concepts in Motivation Job Design, Empowerment and Work Scheduling

Individual Level

Resources

Basic OB Model

Basic OB Model

The model examines the variables influencing individual behaviorThe knowledge obtained at the individual level will help us analyse the behaviour at group level and organisational level.