UGBA105: Organizational Behavior - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 36
About This Presentation
Title:

UGBA105: Organizational Behavior

Description:

Walter A. Haas School of Business University of California, Berkeley UGBA105: Organizational Behavior Professor Jim Lincoln Week 7: Power, politics, & networks in ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:151
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 37
Provided by: Jame3296
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: UGBA105: Organizational Behavior


1
UGBA105 Organizational Behavior
Walter A. Haas School of Business University of
California, Berkeley
  • Professor Jim Lincoln
  • Week 7
  • Power, politics, networks in Organizations

2
Power and PoliticsClass Agenda
  • Review forms of power in organizations
  • Consider how power and politics can be good and
    bad for organizations
  • Discuss managing politics up and down
  • Analyze power as the management of resource
    dependencies
  • Examine political and networking strategies for
    advancing your goals and thwarting the opposition
  • View and discuss video on Managing your boss

3
Power and politics in organizations
  • Power a dirty word?
  • Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts
    absolutely
  • What is it?
  • The capacity to get people to do what they would
    not otherwise do
  • And politics?
  • The social relations of interest formation,
    power-seeking and wielding, and decision-making

4
Power corrupts
  • Power tends to corrupt and absolute power
    corrupts absolutely. Great men are almost always
    bad men, even when they exercise influence and
    not authority still more when you superadd the
    tendency or the certainty of corruption by
    authority.
  • John Emerich Edward Dalberg, Lord Acton
    (18341902)
  • Letter to Mandell Creighton, April 5, 1887.
    Reprinted in Acton, Essays on Freedom and Power,
    ed. Gertrude Himmelfarb, pp. 33536 (1972).

5
Leadership is power but not all power is
leadership
  • Leadership
  • Influencing others with charisma and vision
  • Developing committed followership
  • Other ways of getting exercising power
  • Leveraging the formal organization
  • Exercising authority
  • Designing and implementing systems
  • Trading on scarce skills or resources
  • Maneuvering, manipulation

6
Contrasts in presidential power
  • Lyndon B. Johnson
  • 36th President
  • Term of office
  • 11/22/1963 - 1/20/1969
  • John F. Kennedy
  • 35th President
  • Term of office
  • 1/20/1961 - 11/22/1963

7
More powerful politicians
Boss Tweed
Sen. Everett Dirksen
Representative Tom DeLay
8
Niccolo Machiavelli (1469-1527)
  • (A) wise prince ought to adopt such a course
    that his citizens will always in every sort and
    kind of circumstance have need of him.., then he
    will always find them faithful."
  • No enterprise is more likely to succeed than one
    concealed from the enemy until it is ripe for
    execution."
  • He who is the cause of another becoming powerful
    is ruined
  • "Hence it is necessary for a prince wishing to
    hold his own to know how to do wrong, and to make
    use of it or not according to necessity. "

9
The purpose of power decision-making
  • 1. The classical rational model
  • Managers devise programs (standard operating
    procedures) so that decisions are made by the
    book
  • Such routine or programmed decisions are
    delegated down the hierarchy exceptions are
    managed by higher-ups
  • Higher level decisions are uncertain and require
    problem-solving search
  • Modern decision tools can help
  • 2. The political model
  • Decision-making is unplanned and disorderly.
    It can occur without clear rules and behind the
    scenes. It is the outcome of conflicts in which
    one side prevails over others

10
HPs messy (and very public) politics
  • Boardroom DuelBehind H-P Chairman's Fall,Clash
    With a Powerful Director
  • The Cautious Patricia DunnAnd Flashy Tom
    Perkins Were a Combustible Pair
  • WSJ, G. Anders and A. MurrayOctober 9, 2006

Fiorina Board intrigue familiar. Fired chief
executive at HP describes 'veil of
dysfunction' B. Pimentel, SF Chronicle, Tuesday,
October 10, 2006
C. Fiorina Tough Choices A Memoir, 2006
11
Managing power and politics
  • Politics isnt pretty, but it is real, pervasive,
    manageable
  • Myth of the apolitical business organization
  • How to analyze and navigate the political
    terrain
  • Map out the actors, interests, goals,
    resource/power bases, strategies, networks,
    coalitions, decision events
  • How to manage power and politics
  • Managing down (From the organizations
    perspective)
  • Contain channel politics in productive ways
  • Managing up (From the employees perspective)
  • The myth of the good employee
  • How to get power and use it
  • How to be savvy a player on the winning side

12
H. Ross Perot Founder and CEO, Electronic Data
Services and Presidential Candidate, 1992 and 1996
  • If someone as blessed as I am is not willing to
    clean out the barn, who will?
  • Business is not just doing deals business is
    having great products, doing great engineering,
    and providing tremendous service to customers.
  • Perot ran for president of the United States in
    1992 as an independent candidate, winning 19
    percent of the voteone of the largest
    percentages ever for an independent candidate. He
    ran again in 1996 on the Reform Party ticket.

13
Managers attitudes toward workplace politics
Agree
Workplace politics are common to most organizations 92.3
Successful executives must be good politicians 89.0
The higher you go in organizations, the more political the climate becomes 76.2
Powerful executives dont act politically 15.7
You have to be political to get ahead in organizations 69.8
Top management should try to get rid of organizational politics 48.6
Politics help organizations function effectively 42.1
Organizations free of politics are happier than those with politics 59.1
Politics in organizations are detrimental to efficiency 55.1
Ganz and Murray The Experience of Workplace
Politics Academy of Management Journal 23 (1980)
14
The myth of the good employee
  • Keep your nose clean and to the grindstone
  • Concentrate on doing your own job well
  • Dont venture outside your silo/cubicle
  • Obey the rules
  • Defer to your betters
  • Assume your superiors know what theyre doing
  • And do what they say
  • Assume that the smartest, best, and
    hardest-working people inevitably win in the end

15
Individual qualities that can serve you well as
an organizational politician
  • Self-efficacy
  • Extroversion/gregariousness/aggressiveness
  • Communication skills
  • Energy/drive
  • Creativity
  • Skepticism
  • Tolerance for uncertainty and risk
  • Introspection/emotional control
  • Commitment/dedication
  • To organization or faction
  • Competence at your job
  • Relish competition and winning

16
Causes of organizational politics
  • Resource scarcity
  • Leadership too weak or too strong
  • Informal organization
  • Culture
  • Weak overall
  • Strong subcultures
  • Shared and strong but values politics
  • Networks
  • Extensive but fragmented
  • Formal organization
  • Too weak
  • Lack of authority and rules ill-defined roles
  • Too strong
  • Segmentation interdependence ? conflict
  • Rigidities are politically exploited
  • Crisis, turbulence (e.g., takeover)

17
The bad side of organizational politics
  • From the organizations perspective
  • Processes
  • Plotting, back-stabbing, rumour-mongering,
    vengeance-seeking, sabotage, corruption, secrecy,
    hoarding, zero-sum games
  • Outcomes
  • Goal subversion/suboptimization factionalism
    stalemate inertia, high cost in time
    resources, loss of transparency and
    accountability
  • For the participants perspective
  • Uncertainty, anxiety, frustration, stress,
    isolation, inability to focus on tasks, failure

18
Bob Ebeling Manager of the Rocket
Ignition System at Morton-Thiokol
  • We did our level best, but it wasnt good
    enough...The decision to recommend a launch was
    pre-ordained by others, by NASA leaning on our
    upper management. The deck was stacked.
  • I was so sure that Challenger was doomed that I
    asked my daughter, Leslie, then 33, to my office
    to watch a super colossal disaster unfold on live
    TV...and then I prayed
  • That he foresaw disaster and could not stop it
    has tortured him since.

19
The good side of organizational politics
  • Positive processes
  • Conflict is open and positive-sum
  • Rules of the game are established and abided by
  • Consensus is maintained on core values
  • Factions and coalitions have shifting memberships
  • Positive outcomes
  • People are motivated and empowered
  • Better teamwork and collective action
  • The organization is more flexible adaptive
  • Fewer silos, entrenched interests
    unproductive routines

20
Politics as empowerment Getting things done
with and through others
  • The modern flat, lean, horizontal organization
  • ? power politics
  • Power is no longer packaged as authority roles
  • People have a mandate to get power and use it
  • Fewer bureaucratic impediments to political
    maneuvering
  • Influence, brokering, networking, alliance
    formation

21
Apples lack of formal structure ? networks and
politics
  • Apple is highly relationship and network
    oriented. If you know the right people you can
    get things donethere are lots of inner circles.
    Management by coercion doesnt work here..
  • There is a lot of politicslike everywhere-but
    lack of rules and policies may make it more
    important here. Most organizations have their
    smoke-filled rooms Apple does too. The
    difference is that here if you want into the
    argument, you can find your way in.
  • --Apple HR manager

22
How to manage power and politics down (from
the organizations perspective)
  • Stay above the fray and be an observant fair
    referee
  • Have good information on the issues, players,
    arenas, etc.
  • Stay in contact with all the players
  • Provide leadership and build a culture that
    encourages fair play and open competition
  • Monitor how resources are being used as power
    bases
  • Enforce the rules of the game
  • Keep decision outcomes in line with
    organizational goals

23
Power and politics as the management of resource
dependencies(Or how to trade on scarce
resources)
  • Assumption power comes from leveraging resources
    in relationships to manage dependence
  • As dependence on B for resource C is
  • Directly proportionate to Bs need of C
    (criticality)
  • Inversely proportionate to the number of
    alternative suppliers of C (scarcity)
  • A has power over B if
  • B is dependent on A
  • A is not dependent on B

24
Types of resources
  • Authority
  • Alvin Gouldner Patterns of Industrial
    Bureaucracy,
  • Charisma, reputation, status
  • Expertise information
  • Ability to manage (absorb) uncertainty
  • M. Crozier The Bureaucratic Phenomenon,
  • Time effort
  • R. Michels Political Parties A Sociological
    Study of the Oligarchical Tendencies of Modern
    Democracy
  • Position in networks

25
Network position as a resource Power flows to
centrally-placed actors
4
3
15
11
U
5
6
12
David Mechanic "Sources of power of lower participants in complex organizations." Administrative Science Quarterly 7(1962)349 64.
26
Political strategies
  • Having a power base is not enough!
  • The next step is devising political strategies to
    advance goals and overcome opposition
  • Anticipate the oppositions moves (strategies
    tactics) and plan your response

27
Political strategies
  • Monopolistic strategies
  • Claim your resources are critical
  • Restrict supply
  • Bureaucratic strategies
  • Pursue or resist restructurings and formalization
  • Selective use of objective criteria
  • Manage the numbers
  • Manage decision-making events
  • Control whats on the agenda
  • Control the order of consideration
  • Control the decision alternatives

28
Reorgs politics
29
Networking strategies
  • Network widely
  • Work the halls
  • Get good at small talk (learn the culture)
  • Cultivate friendships
  • Position yourself
  • Be central be a bridge or broker
  • Build coalitions
  • Get others obligated to you
  • Logroll You scratch my back and Ill scratch
    yours
  • Prevent or break up their coalitions
  • Exploit structural holes My enemys enemy is my
    friend
  • Divide and conquer

30
Networking strategy Be central be a broker!
4
3
15
11
U
5
6
12
31
Networking strategy Forge weak ties!
1
5
4
8
U
6
3
7
9
12
10
11
32
Networking strategy Exploit structural
holes(My enemys enemy is my friend)
-
B
B
-

A
A
-
C
-
C
33
ConclusionsPower, politics, networking
  • For the employee
  • You can be competent, work hard, do your job,
    accomplish goals.
  • AND STILL LOSE
  • To people better at organizational politics than
    you
  • For the organization
  • Power, politics, and networks are not all bad and
    can be good
  • But they have to be understood and managed

34
Donna Dubinsky case
  • Who were the allies and adversaries in this
    conflict? What were the reasons for the
    conflict? What resources did the parties bring
    to bear? What strategies were used? Who
    prevailed and why? Does the gender of the
    protagonists have any relevance here? Why or why
    not? How might the debate over the distribution
    system have been better managed? How did Apples
    culture, structure, and the leadership styles of
    the executive team shape the evolution of the
    conflict? Was incongruence or poor alignment
    among the various parts of Apples organization
    a cause of the conflict? Was it leveraged or
    exploited in any way by the players?

35
  • xxx

36
Donna Dubinskys 10 lessons
  1. Get your go-to-hell money together
  2. Pick your boss well
  3. Negotiate with two or more options
  4. Treat people with respect
  5. Dont dwell on sunk costs
  6. Challenge convention
  7. Dont fight every battle
  8. Know your competitors
  9. Think global
  10. Dont overestimate others
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com