Chapter 14
Foundations of Behavior
The Economics and
Management Department of
Shanghai University of Polital
Science and Laws
Song Yuan
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Content
Why look at individual behavior?
Explain why the concept of an organization as an iceberg is
important to understanding organizational behavior
Describe the focus and the goals of organizational behavior
Define the five important employee behaviors that managers
want to explain, predict, and imfluence
Attitudes
Describe the 3 components of an attitude
Discuss the 3 job-related attitudes
Describe the impact job satisfaction has on employee behavior
Explain how individuals recondile inconsistencies between
attitudes and behavior
Content(contd)
Personality
Contrast the MBTI and the Big Five Model of personality
Describe the five personality traits that have proved to be the
most powerful in explaining individual behavior in organizations
Explain how emotions and emotional intelligence impact
behavior
Perception
Explain how an understanding of perception can help
managers better understand individual behavior
Describe the key elements of attribution theory
Discuss how the fundamental attribution error and self-serving
bias can distort attributions
Name 3 shortcuts used in judging others
Content(contd)
Learning
Explain how operant conditioning helps managers understand,
predict, and influence behavior
Describe the implications of social learning theory for
managing people at work
Discuss how managers can shape behavior
A managers dilemma
Why look at individual behavior?
Behavior
Organizational behavior
The action of people
The actions of people at work
OB provides managers with considerable
insights into these important, but hidden,
aspects of the organization
OB fouces on people
Hidden aspects
Visible aspects
Strategies
Objectives
Policies and procedures
Structure
Technology
Formal authority
Chain of command
Attitudes
Perceptions
Group norms
Informal interactions
Interpersonal and
intergroup conflicts
Why look at individual behavior?
Focus of organizational behavior
First, OB looks at individual behavior.
Attitudes
Personality
Perception
Learning
Motivation
Second, OB in concerned with group behavior
Norms
Roles
Team building/leadership/conflict
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Why look at individual behavior?
Goals of organizational behavior
Explain behavior
Predict behavior
Influence behavior
Five important employee behaviors to explain,
predict, and influence
Employee productivity
Absenteeism
Turnover
Organizational citizenship behavior
Job satisfaction
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Employee productivity
Absenteeism
A performance measure of both efficiency and
effectiveness
The failure to report to work
Turnover
The voluntary and involuntary permanent
withdrawal from an organization
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Organizational citizenship behavior (OCB)
Discretionary behavior that is not part of an
employees formal job requirements, but that
nevertheless promotes the effective functioning
of the organization
Job satisfaction
An employees general attitude toward his or her
job
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Attitudes
discrimination is
wrong
Evaluative statements,
favorable or unfavorable,
Definition
concerni9ng objects, people, or events
Reflecting how an individual feels about sth
Components
I dont like John because
Cognitive component
he discriminates
that part of anagainst
attitude
thats made up of the
beliefs, opinions held by a
minorities
person
Affective component that part of an
attitude thats the emotional or feeling part
might
choose
to avoid
Behavioral component I
that
part
of an
Johninbecause
of my
attitude that refers to behave
a certain
way
feelings about him
toward someone or sth
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Cognitive component
attitude
Affective component
Behavioral component
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What attitudes are
managers interested in?
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Attitudes
Job satisfaction
The effect of job satisfaction on EB
Refers to a persons general attitude toward his
or her job
As time goes, theres been a marked decline in
job satisfaction
Higer incomes lead to higher job satisfaction?
Satisfaction and productivity
Satisfaction and absenteeism
Satisfaction and turnover
Job satisfaction and coustomer satisfaction
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Attitudes
Job involvement and organizational
commitment
Job involvement: the degree to which an employee
identifies with his or her job, actively participates
in it, and considers his or her job performance to
be important to self-worth
Organizational commitment: an employees
orientation toward the organization in terms of his
or her loyalty to, identification with, and
involvement in the organization
Perveived organizational support
Emlpoyees general belief that their organizational
values their contribution and cares about their
well-being
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Attitudes
Attitudes and consistency
Research has generally concluded that people
seek consistency among their attitudes and
between their attitudes and behavior
When there is an inconsistency
Altering the attitudes
Altering the behavior
Developing a retionalization for the inconsistency
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Attitudes
Can
an individuals
behavior be predicted if
Cognitive dissonance
we knowtheory
his or her
Cognitive dissonance:
Any incompatibility or
attitudes?
inconsistency between attitudes or between
behavior and attitudes
The theory sought to explain the relationship
between attitudes and behavior
How to cope with dissonance
The importance of the factors creating the
dissonance
The degree of influence the individual believes he or
she has over those factors
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The rewards that may be involved in dissonance
Attitudes
Attitude surveys
Surveys that elicit responses from employees
through questions about how they feel about
their jobs, work groups, supervisors, or the
organization
Using attitude surveys on a regular basis
provides managers with valuable feedback on
how employees perceive their working conditions
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Attitudes
Implications for managers
Managers should be interested in employees
attitudes because attitudes give warnings of
potential problems and because influence
behavior
The findings of satisfaction-productivity
relationship have important implications
Managers should also recognize that employees
will try to reduce dissonance
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Personality
Personality
The unique combination of psychological
characteristics that affect how a person reacts
and interacts with others
MBTI
Social interaction (E or I)
Preference for gathering date (S or N)
Preference for decision making (F or T)
Style of making decisions (P or J)
You want to
have a try?
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Personality
The Big Five Model
Five-factor model of personality that includes
extraversion, agreeableness, conscientiousness,
emotional stability, and openness to experience
Five factor
Extraversion
Agreeableness
Conscientiousness
Emotional stability
Openness to experience
The big five model provide more than a
personality framework. It shows the important
relationship between these personality dimensions
and job performance
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Personality
Additional personality insights
Locus of control
Machiavellianism
Self-esteem
Self-monitoring
Risk propensity
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Personality
Personality types in different cultures
National cultures differ in terms of the degree to
which people believe they control their
environment
Personality traits influence employees
behavior(global management)
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Personality
Emotions and emotional intelligence
Emotions: interse feelings that are directed at
someone or something
EI: an assortment of noncognitive skills,
capabilities, and competencies that influence a
persons ability to succeed in coping with
emvironmental demands and pressures
Self-awareness
Self-management
Self-motivation
Empathy
Social skills
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Personality
Impliation for managers
Employee selection
Personality-job fit theory by John Holland
Work well withy others both inside and outside
the organization
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Perception
Perception
The process of organizing and interpreting
sensory impressions in order to give meaning to
the environment
Factors that influence perception
The perceiver
The target
The situation
Attribution theory
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Old woman
or young lady?
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Attribution theory
A theory used to explain how we judge people
differently depending on the meaning we
attribute to a given behavior
When we observe an individuals behavior, we
attempt to determine whether it was internal
or external
Internal under the personal control of the
individual
External is forced into the behavior by the
situation
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Attribution theory
High
External
Three factors to determine whether the
Distinctivbehavior is internal
or externalLow
eness
Distinctiveness
Internal
High
Whether an individual displays different
behaviors in
External
different situations
Individual
High/low
Consensus
behavior
Consensus
Respond to a similar situation in the same way
High
High/low
Consistency
Low
Internal
External
Consistency
Engage in the behavior regularly and consistently
Low
High/low
Internal
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Attribution theory
Fundamental attribution error
The tendency to underestimate the influence of
external factors and overestimate the influence of
internal factors when making judgements about the
behavior of others
Self-serving bias
The tendency for individuals to attribute their own
successes to internal factors while putting the blame
for failures on external factors
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Perception
Shortcuts frequently used in judging others
Assumend similarity
Stereotyping
The belief that others are like oneself
Judging a person on the basis of ones perception of a
group to which he or she belongs
Halo effect
A general impression of an individual based on a single
characteristic
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Learning
Learning
Any relatively permanent change in behavior that
occurs as a result of experience
Operant conditioning
A type of learning in which desired voluntary
behavior leads to a reward or prevents a
punishment
Behavior is a function of its consequences
Reinforcement strengthens a behavior and
increases the likelihood that it will be repeated
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Learning
Social learning
Social learning theory: a theory of learning that
says people can learn through observation and
direct experience
The influence of others is central to the social
learning theory
Four factors influencing an individuals behavior
Attentional processes
Retention processes
Motor reproduction processes
Reinforcement processes
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Learning
Shaping: a managerial tool
Shaping behavior: the process of systematically
reinforcing each successive step that moves an
individual closer to the desired behavior
Four ways to shape behavior
Positive reinforcement
Negative reinforcement
Punishment
extinction
Result in learning through
Strengthening a desired behavior
Result in learning through
Weakening an undesired behavior
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Learning
Implications for managers
The only issue is whether managers are going to
manage their learning through the rewards they
allocate and the examples they set, or allow it to
occur haphazardly?
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OB???
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OB,
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OB
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