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GRA 6820

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GRA 6820 Political Aspects of Decision Making (Harrison, Ch.9) Overview of chapter 9 A profile of power The managerial decision-making class Conceptual foundations of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: GRA 6820


1
GRA 6820Political Aspects of Decision
Making(Harrison, Ch.9)
2
Overview of chapter 9
  • A profile of power
  • The managerial decision-making class
  • Conceptual foundations of political power
  • Profiles of political power in decision-making
  • Dimensions of managerial decision-making power
  • Constraints on managerial decision-making power

3
Metaphor analysis
  • Management theories provide only a partial view
    of what organizations are like.
  • Definition metaphor
  • A figure of speech by which a thing is spoken of
    as being that which it only resembles.
  • The idea of likeness, as used in metaphor
    analysis, helps to gain insights into difficult
    to understand phenomena or issues in terms of
    things we are familiar with.
  • Types of metaphors used in strategy and
    organization
  • Machine
  • Organism
  • Brain
  • Culture
  • Politics

4
Political metaphor
  • When applied to problem situations, the
    relationships between individuals and groups are
    considered as competitive and involving the
    pursuit of power.
  • Focuses on issues of...
  • Interests
  • Conflict
  • Power

5
Political metaphor assessment
When is it useful?
When is it not useful?
  • Highlights all organizational activity as
    interest-based, emphasizes the important role of
    power in determining political outcomes - power
    is at the center of all organizational analysis.
  • Emphasizes that goals may be rational for some,
    but not all actors.
  • Proposes disintegrative strains and tensions.
  • Encourages recognition of the organizational
    actor as political for motivational and
    structural reasons.
  • When explicit recognition of the politics of the
    situation leads to further heightening of tension
    and mistrust.
  • May over-emphasize the need to deal with
    political issues at the expense of other factors
    essential for organizational health.

6
Power
  • Some definitions
  • Power is the probability that one actor within a
    social relationship will be in a position to
    carry out his own will, despite resistance, and
    regardless of the basis on which this probability
    rests. (Weber, 1947).
  • Power is the ability of persons as groups to
    impose their will on others despite resistance
    through deterrence either in the form of
    withholding regularly supplied rewards or in the
    form of punishment inasmuch as the former, as
    well as the latter, constitutes in effect
    negative sanction. (Blau, 1964).
  • Power is defined as a force that results in
    behavior that would not have occurred if the
    forces had not been present. (Mechanic, 1962).
  • A has power over B to the extent that he can get
    B to do something that he otherwise would not do.
    (Dahl, 1957).
  • Power is the ability of one person or group of
    persons to influence the behavior of others, that
    is, to change the probabilities that others will
    respond in certain ways to certain inputs.
    (Kaplan, 1964).
  • Power is latent forcePower itself is the prior
    capacity which makes the application of force
    possible. (Bierstedt, 1950).
  • Power we may define as the realistic capacity of
    a system-unit to actualize its interests within
    the context of system-interaction and in this
    sense exert influence on processes in the system.
    (Parsons, 1955).

7
Social control and social order
  • Not simply a function of people conforming to the
    demands of others, to divine precepts, to natural
    law or to fixed norms of an equilibrial or
    homeostatic system.
  • Whatever control or disorder that exists at any
    time in a society is a function of the
    interrelations and interactions of the components
    of an on-going system process.

8
Terminology
  • Power
  • Inherently coercive (tvingende).
  • Implies involuntary submission.
  • Influence
  • Persuasive (overtalende).
  • Implies voluntary submission.

9
Content dimensions of power Authority and
influence
  • Authority is the static, structural aspect of
    power in organizations influence is the dynamic,
    tactical element.
  • Authority is the formal aspect of power
    influence is the informal.
  • Authority refers to the formally sanctioned right
    to make final decisions influence is not
    sanctioned by the organization and is, therefore,
    not a matter of organizational rights.
  • Authority implies submission by subordinates
    influence implies voluntary submission and does
    not necessarily entail a superior-subordinate
    relationship.
  • Authority flows downward and is unidirectional
    influence is multidirectional and can flow in any
    direction.
  • The source of authority is solely structural the
    source of influence may be personal
    characteristics, expertise, or opportunity.
  • Authority is circumscribed, that is, the domain,
    scope and legitimacy of the power are
    specifically and clearly delimited influence is
    uncircumscribed, that is, its domain, scope and
    legitimacy are typically ambiguous.

10
Theoretical basis of power
  • Social exchange theory
  • Efficient way to examine social relationships.
  • Power is a central aspect of an exchange approach
    to social relationships.
  • Dependence is what makes exchange an integral
    part of any social relationship.
  • Economic - Supply and Demand
  • Political

11
Organizational typologyRelationships
  • Pluralist
  • Basic interest compatibility.
  • Some divergence of values and beliefs.
  • Not necessarily in agreement on ends and means.
  • Participative decision making.
  • Act in accordance with agreed objectives.
  • Coercive
  • Do not share common interests.
  • Values and beliefs likely to conflict.
  • No agreement on ends and means.
  • Use of coercion and power.
  • No agreement on objectives.
  • Unitary
  • Share common interests.
  • Compatible values and beliefs.
  • Agreement on ends and means.
  • Participative decision making.
  • Act in accordance with agreed objectives.

12
Unitary and pluralist views of interests,
conflict and power
Unitary view Pluralist view
Interests Places emphasis on achievement of common objectives. Organization is united under the umbrella of common goals, working towards their achievement as a well-integrated team. Places emphasis on diversity of individual and group interests. The organization is a loose coalition which has only a remote interest in the formal goals of the organization.
Conflict Regards conflict as a rare and transient phenomenon which can be removed through appropriate managerial action. When it arises, it is usually attributed to the activities of deviants and trouble makers. Regards conflict as an inherent and permanent charactistic of organizational affairs and stresses its potentially positive or functional aspects.
Power Largely ignores the role of power in organizational life. Concepts such as authority, leadership and control tend to be the preferred means of describing managerial prerogative of guiding the organization towards the common goal. Regards power as a variable that is crucial to understanding organizational activities. Power is the medium through which conflicts of interest are eased and resolved. The organization is a plurality of power holders drawing their power from a plurality of sources.
13
Theoretical perspectives
  • Rationalists
  • Satisficers
  • Organizationalists
  • Politicians
  • Individualists

14
School of ThoughtThe Rationalists
  • Main elements...
  • The individual is confronted with a number of
    different specified alternatives.
  • Each alternative is associated with a set of
    consequences that will result if that alternative
    is chosen.
  • The individual has a system of preferences of
    utilities.
  • No descriptive support for this conception of
    decision making.
  • The rational choice concept defines the logic of
    optimal choice.

15
School of ThoughtThe Satisficers
  • Main elements...
  • We generally do not have a choice between
    satisfactory and optimal solutions.
  • We are limited in our ability to generate and
    compare all possible alternatives.
  • The best alternative cannot be recognized.
  • We satisfice by looking for alternatives in
    such a way that we generally find an acceptable
    one after a moderate search effort.
  • Most problem solving strategies are based on
    heuristics.
  • Heuristics reflect bounded rationality.

16
School of Thought The Organizationalists
  • Main elements...
  • Considers the effect of organizational structure
    and conventional practice.
  • The organization is made up of coalitions with
    separate priorities, goals and focus of
    attention.
  • Decision making necessarily involves bargaining
    among these coalitions.
  • Large scale problems are factored into
    sub-problems.
  • System designers must identify the sub-units and
    their standard behavior patterns.
  • Specialization is generally more efficient for a
    given problem, but may impede integrating,
    changing or evolving the organization.

17
School of ThoughtThe Politicians
  • Main elements...
  • The entire decision process is pluralistic.
  • Decision makers are multiple actors with no
    consistent set of strategic objectives.
  • Power, advocacy and consensus are legitimate and
    important aspects of decision making.
  • This view stresses the importance of the
    implementation process - the issue is not so much
    design as how to introduce, position and use the
    system.

18
School of Thought The Individualists
  • Main elements...
  • People have specialized styles of decision
    making.
  • Outcomes of the decision process are affected by
    these individual characteristics.
  • Any analytic aid proposed for a decision maker
    must be consistent with the individuals decision
    making style.
  • The decision making process must mesh with the
    cognitive structures of the individual.
  • This perspective suggests that decision makers be
    looked at as they are, not as they should be.

19
Strategic decision making theories
  • Model I Rational choice and cognitive
    processes
  • Model II Organizational processes
  • Model III Political processes

20
Categories of normative prescription
Model
Goal
Sources of normative prescriptions
  • Improve problem comprehension by providing
    frameworks
  • Improve problem comprehension by clarifying
    decision makers own frameworks
  • BCG Matrix
  • Market Life Cycles
  • Industry analysis
  • Multiple scenarios
  • Decision analysis
  • Influence diagrams
  • Cognitive mapping

Model I Rational choice and cognitive processes
21
Categories of normative prescriptions
Sources of normative prescriptions
Model
Goal
  • Formal planning systems
  • Regular, Irregular, and Continuous Scanning
  • Structural perceptions
  • Increase the quality of scanning and
    formulation processes

Model II Organizational processes
22
Categories of normative prescriptions
Sources of normative prescriptions
Model
Goal
Model III Political processes
  • Dependence Reduction/ Autonomy Strategies
  • Stakeholder Management
  • Strategic Assumptions Analysis
  • Integrating social responsibility into planning
  • Logical Incrementalism
  • Social Response Matrix
  • Intensity Diffusion/ Convergence Analysis
  • Cultural Risk Management
  • Improve stakeholder representation and
    management

23
Combining multiple perspectives via structured
conflict and the Devils Advocate
Facilitators intervention
Assigns to groups
Assists in development
Preliminary development, debate and consensus
Discussion and debate of different views
Model I views
Model II views
Development, debate and consensus
Final synthesis
Development, debate and consensus
Model III views
Consensus and commitment building
P Individual perspective on a particular
strategic problem.
24
Integrating the three perspectives
Cognitive perspective
Organizational perspective
Political perspective
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