Title: Understanding and
1Chapter 2
- Understanding and
- Valuing Differences
2A Rich Stew
- The modern workplace is much more than a melting
pot in which contents are transformed into a
uniform mass. - It is more like a rich stew, with ingredients
varying in origin and properties, providing
different flavors, nuances, and textures, and
retaining their character while contributing to
the whole. - Many characteristics of these ingredients are
important, including race and ethnic origin,
gender, age, abilities, sexual orientation,
personality, attitudes, and much more.
3A Rich Stew (Continued)
- As the ingredients become more varied, they offer
the potential for an expanded, more exotic and
exciting menu. - Still, it is a challenge to blend the ingredients
in ways that bring out their best properties. - And, a stew that is a delight to one person may
seem bland or bitter or simply unpalatable to
another. - In this chapter we explore the challenge of
recognizing and capturing the best qualities of
available ingredients -- valuing diversity --
while creating a successful stew -- managing
diversity.
4Some Individual Differencesin Organizations
Individual Differences
5Managing Diversity
- Diversity refers to the membership mix in
organizations in terms of gender, race, ethnic
origin, and other characteristics. - The Pillsbury Company defines diversity as all
the ways in which we differ. - Historically, many companies have focused on the
potential problems created by a diverse
workforce. - It was felt there would be more misunderstandings
and coordination problems as diversity increased. - Very real prejudices against members of certain
groups, such as blacks and women, could lead to
conflict and mistrust. - Increasingly, organizations are learning to value
diversity.
6Valuing Diversity
- Diversity can provide a powerful competitive
advantage. - A diverse workforce brings more perspectives and
a wider range of knowledge to bear on problems,
increasing creativity and decision-making
effectiveness. - Diversity helps the firm understand and meet the
needs of diverse markets. - Companies that become successful at managing a
diverse workforce also see their recruiting
prospects enhanced. - Active steps toward fostering diversity in the
workplace include training for tolerance,
rewarding diversity efforts, changing employee
attitudes toward diversity, and developing
supportive personnel policies.
7Focus on ManagementDiversity Awareness at
Celanese
- Ernest Drew, the former CEO of Celanese, became
an advocate of a more diverse workforce while
attending a conference for Celaneses top 125
officers, mostly white men, who were joined by
about 50 lower-level women and minorities. - The group split into problem-solving teams, some
mixed by race and sex and others all white and
male, to address questions relating to Celaneses
corporate culture. - When the teams presented their findings, one
thing seemed clear to Drew. It was so obvious
that the diverse teams had the broader solutions.
For the first time, I realized that diversity
is a strength as it relates to problem solving. - As a result, Drew made Celanese a pioneer in
attracting, retaining, and promoting women and
minorities.
8The Best Companies for Minorities(From Figure
2-1)
9Training for Tolerance
- Firms are adopting many approaches toward
training for tolerance. - At Celanese, the top 26 officers are each
required to join two organizations in which they
are a minority. - Firms are also providing training to integrate
sexual orientation into ongoing diversity
efforts. - Many firms are gender training to promote
tolerance between the sexes.
10Rewarding Diversity Efforts
- Some firms are tying performance appraisal to
their efforts to increase diversity. - At Celanese, attainment of workforce diversity is
one of four sets of outcomes that are equally
weighted in performance appraisals. - Coca-Colas then chairman and CEO, Douglas Daft,
announced in 2000 that he would tie his own
compensation and that of others throughout the
management ranks to diversity goals and would
create an executive position for promoting
minorities.
11Changing Employee Attitudes Toward Diversity
- Companies are using a variety of innovative
approaches to develop more positive employee
diversity-related attitudes and skills. - US WEST Dex trains its employees via a three-day
diversity awareness workshop. - US WEST Dex also uses resource groups,
volunteer-driven meetings that address the
concerns of particular employees, such as women,
blacks, Hispanics, gays, and lesbians all
employees are encouraged to attend.
12Focus on Management DiversitySeminars at Rohm
Haas Texas Inc.
- At Rohm Haas cross-functional teams are part of
total quality efforts and were selected to take
advantage of the variety of experiences and
perspectives offered by diversity. - However, as positions opened up on other teams,
employees began to migrate to teams composed of
members with whom they felt they had more in
common African American employees, for example,
would apply for teams with more African American
members. - Rohm Haas launched five-hour awareness seminars
that stressed the benefits of diversity and
focused on tension that any kind of difference
creates. - 95 of employees participated, and the company
credits the seminars with getting its quality
efforts back on track.
13Developing Personnel PoliciesThat Support
Diversity
- ATT, which has announced major job cuts every
year since 1990, monitors workforce reduction by
department and finds creative ways to keep valued
workers, regardless of their gender or color. - Workers may be retrained for work elsewhere in
ATT or assigned to the in-house temporary agency
and loaned out to various departments until
permanent jobs are found for them. - ATT also offers valued laid-off employees an
enhanced leave of absence in which the employee
takes two years off to go to school or travel,
with full benefits and assurance of reemployment
at the same level and pay if a job in the company
is available upon return.
14The Bottom Line Developing aDiversity Program
Obtain the Support of Top Management
15Personality
16Understanding Personality
- Personality is the organized and distinctive
pattern of behavior that characterizes an
individuals adaptation to a situation and
endures over time. - The distinctive character of personality allows
us to tell people apart. - The enduring character of personality permits us
to recognize people and to anticipate their
behaviors. - Personality determines how people respond to new
situations and interact with others, whether they
can work on their own, and much else.
17Aristotles Challenge
Anyone can become angry -- that is easy. But to
be angry with the right person, to the right
degree, at the right time, for the right purpose,
and in the right way -- this is not easy.
ARISTOTLE, The Nichomachean Ethics
18In The Nichomachean Ethics, Aristotle presented a
challenge to manage our emotional life with
intelligence. Our passions, when well
exercised, have wisdom they guide our thinking,
our values, our survival. The question is, how
can we bring intelligence to our emotions?
19The Marshmallow Test
- Children at age 4 were given an IQ test and the
Marshmallow Test. With the Marshmallow Test,
the child is given a marshmallow and told that if
s/he can put off eating it until later, s/he can
have two.
- Twelve to fourteen years later, reaction to this
moment of impulse was twice as powerful a
predictor as IQ of how children did on the
Scholastic Aptitude Test. It also predicted
adjustment, popularity, confidence, and
dependability.
20Is IQ Enough?
- Most experts now agree that IQ scores are heavily
influenced by a relatively narrow range of
linguistic and math skills. - So, IQ taps only a small part of the structure of
intellect. - The skills tapped by IQ tests may be relevant to
classroom performance but less so as lifes path
diverges from academe. - This suggests the need to take a broader view of
intelligence.
21How Do People Describe An Intelligent Person?
- Solves problems well
- Displays interest in the world at large
- Accepts others for what they are
- Admits mistakes
- Is goal oriented
- Converses well
- Together, these suggest that people focus on the
practical and worldly side of intelligence,
rather than just on academic intelligence.
22Some Forms of Intelligence(Howard Gardner --
Frames of Mind)
- Logical-mathematical
- Linguistic
- Bodily-kinesthetic
- Visual-spatial
- Musical
- Interpersonal
- Intrapersonal
- Naturalist
23Personal Intelligences
- Interpersonal intelligence is the ability to
understand other people what motivates them, how
they work, how to work cooperatively with them. - Intrapersonal intelligence is the capacity to
form an accurate model of oneself and to be able
to use that model to operate effectively in life.
24What Is Emotional Intelligence?
25Two Brains
- The amygdala -- the emotional brain, the source
of emotional life - The neocortex -- the thinking cap, source of
planning, learning, and memory
26Questions Calling for EQ
- Should you trust a coworker with a confidence?
- Is a friend on the verge of a nervous breakdown?
- How should you behave in an escalating argument?
- How should you respond to a racist joke?
27Why Care About Emotional Intelligence?
- The emotional brain may highjack the rational
brain. Fear, rage, and jealousy may prevent us
from rationally addressing problems. - EQ is especially important in higher-level jobs,
including leadership roles. While technical
skills may suffice in lower-level positions, the
ability to deal with others becomes critical as
we advance in organizations. - EQ is critical for working in groups.
- EQ is needed to effectively manage diversity.
- EQ helps us adapt to new situations.
28Key Emotional Intelligence Abilities
- Self-Awareness -- Recognizing an emotion as it
engulfs us - Emotion Management -- Controlling reactions to
emotion-laden events so that our response fits
the situation - Self-Motivation -- Directing emotions in service
of a desirable goal - Empathy -- Recognizing emotions in others
- Relationship Management -- Managing the emotions
in others.
29Some Consequences of EQ
- In business settings, EQ has been found to be
related to - leadership ability
- group performance
- individual performance
- interpersonal/social exchange
- change management skills
- ability to conduct performance appraisals
30Multiple Intelligences at Saturn Corp.
- At Saturn Corp., all 10,000 employees are
required to take 92 hours of instruction each
year. - They first learn about the multiple
intelligences. - They then select courses of their choosing, such
as safety or leadership. - Instructors adapt multiple-intelligence training
to the programs. They might, for instance, use
music to enhance technical training courses.
31Personality Theories
- Some early personality theories saw behavior as
being related to innate traits, such as
independence, sociability, and humility. These
traits were felt to be stable, enduring, and
interrelated. The unique combination of these
traits was seen as a clue to personality. - According to Sigmund Freuds psychoanalytic
theory, we are motivated by drives or instincts.
We may be unaware of these drives, and they are
largely outside our control.
32Personality Theories (Continued)
- Humanistic-existential theories focus on the
total personality of the individual rather than
on the separate behaviors that make up the
personality. They emphasize striving for
awareness and fulfillment of human potential. - Learning theories see personality as a set of
patterns of learned behaviors. That is,
personalities differ because people have
different experiences in childhood and throughout
life. - Together, the approaches provide a variety of
potentially useful perspectives for examining and
predicting human behavior.
33Some Key Personality Dimensions
PERSONALITY
34Risk-Taking Propensity
- People differ markedly in their risk-taking
propensity. - Some are risk averse they like to play it
safe, choosing alternatives that are likely to
give a relatively low but certain return. - Others -- risk seekers -- like to gamble. They
prefer alternatives that may turn out very well
or very poorly. - Risk seekers tend to make fast decisions based on
relatively little information.
35Proactive Personality
- Proactivity is the extent to which people take
actions to influence their environments/ - Proactive individuals look for opportunities,
show initiative, take action, and persevere until
they are able to bring about change. - Proactive individuals have been shown to engage
in high levels of entrepreneurial activities and
to have relatively high levels of job
performance. - This is a trait that is highly valued by
employers.
36Authoritarianism
- Authoritarian individuals believe that power and
status should be clearly defined and that there
should be a hierarchy of authority. - They feel that authority should be concentrated
in the hands of a few leaders and that this
authority should be obeyed. - Authoritarian leaders expect unquestioning
obedience to their commands. - Authoritarian subordinates willingly give
obedience. - Authoritarian individuals are likely to be
comfortable in organizations that emphasize rules
and the chain of command.
37Dogmatism
- Dogmatic individuals are closed-minded.
- They have rigid belief systems and doggedly
stick to their opinions, refusing to revise them
in the face of conflicting evidence. - Dogmatic individuals make decisions quickly,
based on relatively little information, and are
confident in their decisions. - They like to follow the rules and are unlikely to
consider novel alternatives. - They may perform acceptably in well-defined,
routine situations, but do poorly in situations
requiring creativity.
38Locus of Control
- Locus of control is an indicator of an
individuals sense of control over the
environment and external events. - A person with an internal locus of control feels
in control of his or her life. - A person with an external locus of control feels
controlled by fate, chance, and circumstance. - Internals are generally more highly motivated
than externals. - Leaders who are internal tend to choose more
innovative strategies and to be more proactive
and future oriented.
39Tolerance for Ambiguity
- Individuals with high tolerance for ambiguity
welcome uncertainty and change. - Those with low tolerance for ambiguity see such
situations as threatening and uncomfortable. - Since managers are increasingly facing dynamic,
unstructured situations, tolerance for ambiguity
is clearly an important characteristic.
40Machiavellianism
- Machiavellians
- think any behavior is acceptable if it achieves
their goals - try to manipulate others
- are unemotional and detached
- look out for Number One
- arent likely to be good team players
- are relatively likely to be unethical
41Web Wise Machiavellis The Prince
- The term Machiavellian comes from Niccolo
Machiavelli, author of The Prince. Machiavelli
wrote The Prince as a practical guide for the
ruling Medici family on how to deal with the
problems a monarch faces in staying in power. - The main theme of the book is that princes should
retain absolute control of their territories and
should use any means necessary to accomplish this
end, including deceit. - The book has caused Machiavellis name to become
synonymous with self-serving, manipulative,
deceitful behavior.
42Self-Monitoring
- Self-monitoring is a persons ability to adjust
his or her behavior to external, situational
factors. - High self-monitors
- are very sensitive to external cues and are
chameleon-like. - can present striking contradictions between their
public and private lives -- are capable of
disguise. - are effective in boundary role situations and
other situations requiring multiple faces. - High self-monitors are more likely to assume
leadership roles than low self-monitors
43Type A and Type B
- Type A individuals
- feel great time pressure and impatience.
- work aggressively, speak explosively, and find
themselves constantly struggling. - Type B individuals show the opposite pattern --
relaxed, steady-paced, and easygoing. - Type A individuals
- are much more likely than Type Bs to experience
high stress levels and associated symptoms,
including coronary heart disease. - have trouble delegating responsibility to others,
dont work well in groups, and are impatient with
tasks requiring prolonged problem solving. - Relatively few Type As rise to high levels in
organizations.
44The Big 5 Model
- Extraversion Sociable, talkative, assertive
- Agreeableness Good-natured, cooperative,
trusting - Conscientiousness Responsible, dependable,
persistent, achievement oriented - Emotional Stability Calm, enthusiastic, secure
- Openness to Experience Imaginative, artistically
sensitive, intellectual
45The Big 5 and Performance
- Extraverts tend to take on leadership roles.
- Agreeableness is especially significant in
careers where teamwork or customer service is
important. - Conscientious individuals have high levels of job
performance. - Openness to experience is related to performance
in training programs.
46Why Care About Globalization?
- You are likely to spend part of your career in
other countries. - According to Andrew Grove, with globalization
every employee will compete with every person in
the world who is capable of doing the same job.
There are a lot of them, and many of them are
very hungry. - You may suddenly find yourself working for a
foreign firm. - Your firm -- and your job -- will increasingly
depend on international trade. - You will be managing a culturally diverse
workforce even if you never leave the U.S.
47Diversity on the New York Yankees
- During the 1998 season New York Yankees pitching
coach Mel Stottlemeyer did a masterful job of
overseeing one of the most international pitching
staffs in major league baseball. - The staff included Graeme Lloyd from Australia,
Orlando El Duque Hernandez from Cuba, Hideki
Irabu from Japan, and Ramiro Mendoza and Mariano
Rivera from Panama. - They led the Yankees to 114 wins, the most in
American League history.
48The Hofstede Framework
- Geert Hofstede, a Dutch researcher who worked as
a psychologist for IBM, studied 116,000 people
working in 64 countries. - He identified five important dimensions on which
national cultures differ.
49The Hofstede Framework
National Culture
50Individualism and Collectivism
- Individualism refers to a loosely knit social
framework in which people are chiefly supposed to
look after their own interests and those of their
immediate family. The society offers individuals
a great amount of freedom. - Collectivism refers to a tight social framework
in which people expect other groups to which they
belong to look after them and protect them in
times of trouble. In exchange for security, they
offer loyalty. The nail that sticks out will be
pounded down. - Individualistic countries include Australia, the
U.S., Great Britain, and the Netherlands.
Collectivist countries include Columbia,
Pakistan, Venezuela, Peru, and Taiwan.
51Power Distance
- Power Distance is the degree to which a society
accepts the fact that power in institutions and
organizations is distributed unequally. - A high-power-distance society accepts wide
differences in power in organizations. Employees
show great respect for authority, titles, status,
and rank. Titles are important in bargaining. - A low-power-distance society plays down
inequalities as much as possible. - High-power-distance countries include the
Philippines, Mexico, and India.
Low-power-distance countries include Denmark,
Israel, and Ireland.
52Uncertainty Avoidance
- Uncertainty Avoidance refers to the way societies
deal with uncertainty. - In low-uncertainty-avoidance countries people are
relatively comfortable with risks, and are more
tolerant of behavior and opinions that differ
from their own. - In high-uncertainty-avoidance countries, there is
a high level of anxiety among the people. - Formal rules and other mechanisms are created to
provide security and reduce risk. - There is less tolerance of deviant ideas and
behaviors. - Members strive to believe in absolute truths.
- Low-uncertainty-avoidance countries include
Switzerland Denmark. High-uncertainty-avoidance
countries include Japan Greece.
53Quality Versus Quantity of Life
- Some cultures emphasize the quantity of life and
value assertiveness and the acquisition of money
and natural things. - Some cultures emphasize the quality of life and
the importance of relationships, and show
sensitivity and concern for the welfare of
others. - Japan and Austria score high on quantity of life.
Norway, Sweden, Denmark, and Finland score high
on quality of life.
54Time Orientation
- A long-term orientation is derived from values of
thrift (saving) and persistence in achieving
goals. - A short-term orientation is derived from values
that express a concern for maintaining personal
stability or happiness and living for the
present. - Japan and Hong Kong have a long-term orientation,
while France and Indonesia have a short-term
orientation.
55High-Context and Low-Context Cultures
- Another key factor is whether cultures are high
or low context. - In a high-context culture, such as most Asian,
Hispanic, African, and Arab countries, the
context in which communication occurs is just as
important as the words that are actually spoken,
and cultural clues are important in understanding
what is being communicated. The context includes
the social setting, use of phrasing, gestures,
and tone of voice, and the persons history and
status. - In a low-context culture, such as Germany and the
U.S., the words used by the speaker explicitly
convey the speakers message to the listener.
56Context and Nonverbal Communications
- Nonverbal communications are especially important
in high-context cultures. Most immigrants to the
U.S. are now coming from high-context cultures. - Nonverbal communications have dramatically
different meanings across cultures. For example - Nodding your head means Yes in most countries
but No in Bulgaria and Greece. - The classic OK sign of thumb and forefinger
forming a circle can imply money in Japan,
means worthless in France, and is considered an
obscene gesture in Brazil, Germany, and Russia. - In Saudi Arabia, to cross your legs in such a way
as to display the sole of your foot to your host
is a grievous affront. - Americans expect eye contact in a conversation,
but Hispanics consider eye contact, especially
with a superior, to be disrespectful.
57The Bottom LineManaging Cross-Cultural
Differences
Develop an Understanding of the Cultural
Beliefs and Practices of Others
58Maintaining Accurate Perceptions
- We all live in our own world.
- It is a world created by our attempts to sift
through, to organize, and to interpret the
tremendous number of things we see, hear, feel,
and otherwise constantly sense. - It is different from all other worlds -- the
unique product of a complex process. - The truth in our world depends on whether
something is consistent with the rest of that
world. - The nature of our unique world helps determine
how we behave.
59The Perceptual Process
- Perception is the complex process by which we
select, organize, and interpret sensory stimuli
into a meaningful and coherent picture of the
world. - The perceptual process involves several steps,
including sensation, selection, organization, and
translation. - In the first step, sensation, many stimuli impact
on our sensory filters, but only some are sensed.
Others are filtered out, perhaps because they
are at very low levels or are not in a particular
range.
60The Perceptual Process(Figure 2-2)
Stimuli
61Selecting Stimuli
- If our perceptions were not selective, we would
be overwhelmed. - Many factors affect selection, some of which are
potentially troublesome. - Perceptual readiness causes us to see things we
expect to see. - Different people will select stimuli based on
their needs and personalities. - Stimuli that contrast with the surrounding
environment are more likely to be selected. - Repetition of a stimulus makes it more likely to
be perceived.
62Organizing Stimuli
- Once stimuli have been selected, they must be
organized in a useful framework. - Things we group together tend to be recalled
together, and their meanings tend to influence
one another. - In general, we are likely to group things that
are somehow similar. - We tend to organize things so closure occurs.
That is, we close up or fill in missing parts
to create a meaningful whole.
63Interpreting Stimuli
- We interpret stimuli at the translation step of
the perceptual process. - The way we interpret the stimuli we have selected
and organized depends on the situation, our
characteristics, and the characteristics of the
thing being perceived. - Many distortions of objective reality are
possible at the translation stage. Some of
these, such as the Hering illusion, are simply
due to quirks in the way our senses work. - Other distortions are more subtle but no less
important. These include stereotyping, Pygmalion
effect, halo effect, projection, primacy/recency
effects, and perceptual defense.
64The Hering Illusion(Figure 2-4)
The Hering Illusion illustrates a quirk in the
way our senses work. Two parallel lines appear
curved because of the nature of their background.
65Stereotyping
- Walter Lippmann coined the term stereotyping in
1922, describing stereotypes as pictures in
peoples heads that distorted their perceptions
of others. - The term is now often used to mean the forming of
an opinion of people based on group membership. - Stereotyping, if accurate, may be useful since it
efficiently places information into categories.
When we face new situations, stereotypes provide
guidelines to help classify people. - Unfortunately, stereotyping may lead to a
distorted view of the situation if stereotyping
is based on false premises. - Stereotyping in work organizations may be harmful
to minority group members, older workers, and
females.
66Pygmalion Effect
- Pygmalion effect refers to creating something in
the image we have of it. - It is a prime example of self-fulfilling
prophecy. - Teachers, managers, and others often demonstrate
this effect. - For instance, teachers who were told that certain
students were especially intelligent (when, in
fact, they were not) later perceived those
students to show signs of greater intelligence
and higher performance. As a result, they
treated them differently. These intelligent
students then showed gains in intellectual
capacity, while others did not.
67Halo Effect
- Halo Effect refers to a process in which a judge
uses a general impression that is favorable or
unfavorable (a horns effect) to evaluate
specific traits. - Sometimes one trait, such as a subordinates
enthusiasm, forms the halo. - So, if the boss feels the subordinate is
enthusiastic, he or she may also see the
subordinate as loyal, efficient, courteous, and
so on. - If we make evaluations on the basis of a halo and
the traits arent really linked, the result is
halo error.
68Other Perceptual Distortions
- Projection is the tendency to project our own
characteristics on others. For instance, if we
feel fearful, we may perceive others as fearful.
People with traits such as stinginess or
obstinacy tend to rate others as relatively high
on these traits. - Primacy/Recency Effects. We give especially
heavy weight to stimuli we receive early (a
primacy effect) or recently (a recency effect).
Intermediate stimuli receive less weight. - Perceptual Defense. When we face information we
find to be threatening or unacceptable, our
perceptions try to defend us. We may fail to
perceive the troublesome stimuli, or we may
distort our perceptions of the stimuli to make
them less troublesome.
69Implicit Theories
- Implicit theories are theories in peoples minds.
- For instance, we may believe that jobs offering
more challenge also offer more authority. Or we
may believe that leaders who let their
subordinates participate more in decision making
also care more about their subordinates. - These implicit theories may be correct or
incorrect. - Implicit theories may influence perceptions at
the selection, organization, and translation
stages. - For instance, if we see evidence concerning one
element of the theory, we are likely to perceive
other elements also.
70Causal Attribution
- Causal attribution is the process of forming
perceptions about the causes underlying others
behaviors. - Causal attribution may be especially important to
determine whether the behaviors were the result
of internal factors, such as the persons motives
or traits, or of external factors, such as luck
or the situation.
71Causal Attribution (Cont.)
- According to attribution theory, we try to sort
out the causes of an individuals behavior by
considering three factors - Did others act the same way in the same
situation? - Does this person always act this way in this
situation? - Does this person act differently in other
situations? - This process is prone to error. For instance, we
tend to attribute the behavior of others to
internal factors, even when this is not
appropriate. Also, self-serving bias -- the
tendency to take credit for successes and deny
personal responsibility for failures -- is often
seen.
72Focus on ManagementAttribution Theory at Boots
the Chemist
- Boots the Chemist, a British pharmaceutical firm,
wanted a test to select potential sales
assistants. - It developed a new questionnaire based on
attribution theory. - It was predicted -- and shown in subsequent
research -- that the most successful sales
performers and those rated most highly for their
customer care would be more likely to attribute
outcomes to controllable factors, such as their
own effort or choice of sales strategies. - The questionnaire is now used in the selection
process for sales assistants and to help identify
developmental needs.
73Reducing Perceptual Errors
- People who are aware of their own characteristics
make fewer errors in perceiving others and are
less likely to see the world in black-and-white
terms. - People who are able to accept themselves as they
are can see a wider range of characteristics in
others and may be less prone to projection. - Simple knowledge of such tendencies as halo
error, stereotyping, and self-serving bias may
help to avoid them. - It is important to make a conscious effort to
attend to relevant information and to test
reality.
74The Bottom LineIncreasing Perceptual Accuracy
Talk to All Parties Involved in
the Situation Individually -- Emphasize
Obtaining Objective Information
75Attitudes
- Attitudes are the beliefs, feelings, and
behavioral tendencies held by a person about an
object, event, or person (called the attitude
object).
76The Components of Attitudes
- The cognitive component of attitudes is our
cognitions, or beliefs about the facts pertaining
to the attitude object. This is descriptive
information rather than liking or intentions. - The affective component of attitudes is made up
of our feelings toward the attitude object. The
affective component involves evaluation and
emotion. - The behavioral tendency component of attitudes is
the way we intend to behave toward the attitude
object.
77The Components of Attitudes(Figure 2-5)
78Why Care About Attitudes?
- Attitudes may influence work behaviors, such as
turnover or absenteeism. - Attitudes may influence things of direct concern
to the employee, such as stress levels, ability
to sleep, and attitudes toward other aspects of
life. - Attitudes are important for their own sake,
independent of their consequences. Employees
spend half their waking lives at work.
79Some Potential Relationships of Attitudes to
Behaviors (Figure 2-6)
80Job Satisfaction
- Job satisfaction is the affective component of
work-related attitudes. - Quite simply, it is how employees feel about
their jobs. - Managers may be concerned about employees
satisfaction with specific facets of the job, as
well as about their overall job satisfaction.
81Job Facet Satisfaction and Overall Satisfaction
(Figure 2-7)
Overall Job Satisfaction
82Measuring Job Satisfaction
- Measuring job satisfaction provides information
concerning what is, and isnt, being done
correctly in the workplace. - The most popular approach to measuring job
satisfaction is to use standardized scales. They
have been widely used and tested, and norm data
are often available. - The Job Descriptive Index (JDI) is the best-known
scale to measure facets of job satisfaction. - It is often helpful to assess overall job
satisfaction as well.
83Measuring Job Satisfaction (Cont.)
- In addition to paper-and-pencil tests,
satisfaction may be assessed by use of the
critical incidents method, interviews, or
confrontation meetings. - The critical incidents method as applied to
measuring job satisfaction asks employees to
recall incidents that were particularly
satisfying or dissatisfying to them. - Interviews allow in-depth questioning about the
nature and causes of sources of satisfaction or
dissatisfaction. - Confrontation meetings bring together groups of
employees who are encouraged to openly express
their feelings about their jobs.
84Job Descriptive Index Supervision Subscale
Sample Items (Figure 2-8)
- The following adjectives and phrases describe
five aspects of a job the work itself,
supervision, pay, promotions, and coworkers.
Carefully consider each adjective or phrase and
indicate whether or not it is true of your job by
circling - Y for YES, this is true of my job.
- ? for I cannot decide if this is true of my
job. - N for NO, this is not true of my job.
- The Supervision on My Job
- Asks my advice Y ? N
- Hard to please .. Y ? N
- Impolite .. Y ? N
- Influential ... Y ? N
- Stubborn Y ? N
- Knows job well . Y ? N
85Determinants of Job Satisfaction
- There are two primary views of the determinants
of job satisfaction -- situational and
dispositional. - The situational perspective sees satisfaction as
largely due to things in the environment of the
employee, such as the nature of the job, reward
system and supervision. If this view is correct,
it may be possible to influence satisfaction
levels by changing such things. - The dispositional perspective sees satisfaction
as due to individual factors -- some people are
simply more satisfied in general than are others
-- and thus as relatively stable and more
difficult to change. If this view is valid,
varying the situation may have little impact on
satisfaction.
86Situational Determinants of Satisfaction
- Many work-related factors influence job
satisfaction (see Figure 2-9). - Among these, equitable rewards, work itself, and
others in the organization (such as the
supervisor) are quite important. - We examine the specific roles of many of these
factors in later chapters.
87Dispositional Determinants of Satisfaction
- A direct approach to examining the dispositional
perspective is simply to measure the degree to
which people seem to be generally positive or
negative in their outlooks. - These are called positive affectivity and
negative affectivity. Research consistently
shows these measures to predict levels of job
satisfaction. - The dispositional view is also supported by
studies that follow people as they move across
jobs through their lives one study found overall
attitudes to be quite stable over a period of
nearly 50 years. - Another interesting approach to examining the
dispositional view looks at identical twins
reared apart. One famous study found identical
twins reared apart to have considerable
similarity in satisfaction levels despite
different jobs.
88Work-Related Influences on Satisfaction(From
Figure 2-9)
89The Bottom LineEnhancing Employee Job
Satisfaction
Assess Employee Satisfaction with Various Job
Facets
90Job Involvement
- Job involvement is the degree to which employees
really are involved with -- that is, get into
-- their jobs. Job involvement is high when the
job is very important in the persons life and
central to the persons self-concept. - Statements reflecting high job involvement
include - The most important things that happen to me
involve my job. - The major satisfaction of my life comes from my
job. - I live, eat, and breathe my job.
- Companies want their employees to be involved in
their jobs, but overly high levels of job
involvement may be undesirable. - Work involvement relates to work in general
rather than the specific job.
91Work Involvement Across Cultures
- Americans work longer hours and take less leisure
time off than peoples of other advanced nations. - The average hours worked per year in 2001 were
- 1,877 in the United States
- 1,840 in Japan
- 1,708 in Great Britain
- 1,596 in France
- 1,480 in Germany
92Organizational Commitment
- Organizational commitment reflects the degree to
which the employee shows - (1) a strong desire to remain as a member of the
organization - (2) a willingness to exert high levels of effort
on behalf of the organization - (3) a belief in, and acceptance of, the values
and goals of the organization.
93Organizational Commitment (Cont.)
- Affective commitment is an emotional attachment
characterized by strong affective ties to the
organization and psychological identification
with it. It flows from liking the firm, sharing
its values, and caring about its fate. - Continuance commitment results from consideration
of the benefits of organizational membership and
the perceived costs of leaving. It flows from
the belief that one needs to stay with the firm
since better alternatives are lacking. - High levels of organizational commitment, while
generally desirable, may cause poor-performing
employees to be reluctant to leave, may stifle
dissent, and may even lead to illegal or
unethical acts.
94Real and Expressed Attitudes
- Peoples expressed attitudes may differ
dramatically from their true attitudes. - People may hide or falsely report their true
attitudes because they feel the attitudes may be
unpopular or somehow lead to retribution. - Further, they may attempt to disguise their
emotions, since emotions reflect attitudes. - In many cases, employees are required to express
certain emotions as part of their work roles,
such as employees who are told they must smile.
As such, these employees smiles say nothing
about their true feelings.
95Do Attitudes Cause Behaviors?
- Many researchers have found surprisingly weak
links between attitudes and behaviors. - One reason for this is that people may have no
choice but to behave in certain ways. They may,
for instance, stay on jobs they hate because they
have no alternatives. - It is important to recognize that a persons
behavior depends on many things beyond attitude,
including pressures exerted by others, the nature
of the job market, and personality
characteristics. - On the other hand, research may underestimate the
strength of the linkage of attitudes to behaviors
if people dont reveal their true attitudes or
the measures of attitudes or behaviors are poor.
96When Do Attitudes Best Predict Behaviors?
- In general, attitudes will best predict behaviors
when - The attitude is specific to the behavior.
- The attitude is potent.
- The attitude is salient (that is, more noticeable
or prominent in our attention). - The behavior is not constrained or subject to
other influences.
97Some Potential Consequences of Dissatisfaction
(Figure 2-10)
98Satisfaction and Turnover
- Costs of turnover include disruption of the work
process, the loss of employees with valuable
skills, knowledge, and experience, and low
productivity of new employees during the training
period. - In some industries, turnover rates may exceed
100 annually. Overall, voluntary turnover rates
were 20.3 in 2002. - Research clearly shows that more satisfied
workers are less likely to leave the firm. A
little over 15 of the variance in turnover is
related to variance in satisfaction. - The relationship of satisfaction to turnover is
indirect and is influenced by many pressures and
factors, such as wishes of family members,
feelings about the community, aversion to change,
and economic conditions.
99A Model of the Relationship of Satisfaction to
Turnover (Figure 2-11)
Job Satisfaction
100Satisfaction and Absenteeism
- Absenteeism can be quite costly for companies.
Typically, companies continue to pay absent
employees. Also, absenteeism causes costly
disruptions, such as the need to reschedule work
and reassign employees. - One estimate is that such disruptions cause
productivity to drop by as much as 2.5 for every
1 increase in absenteeism. - An estimated 400 million person-days are lost
annually to absenteeism, at a cost of 25
billion. - In 2002, overall absence rates were 4.12 and
absenteeism cost firms an average of 789 per
employee. - Satisfaction and absenteeism are negatively
related, though the association is not as strong
as we might expect. - While job satisfaction may influence motivation
to attend, attendance also depends on pressure to
attend and ability to attend.
101A Model of the Relationship ofSatisfaction to
Attendance (Figure 2-12)
Job Satisfaction
102Satisfaction and Performance
- While it seems reasonable to expect that
satisfied workers would be more productive, many
studies show this is not the case, at least to
any appreciable degree. - Early studies of the satisfaction - performance
relationship concluded that the relationship is
so low as to be negligible a major statistical
summary of previous research showed that only
about 3 of the variance in performance was
associated with variance in satisfaction. - While the traditional view of this relationship
viewed satisfaction as causing performance, it
may be the case that performance causes
satisfaction.
103Satisfaction and Performance(Continued)
- According to this view, performance levels affect
the rewards people receive. If employees feel
their rewards are fair, they will be satisfied.
If not, they will be dissatisfied. - If this model is correct, why arent
satisfaction-performance relationships stronger?
Quite simply, because some companies dont
properly reward employees. - Most studies of the satisfaction - performance
relationship have used a narrow definition of
performance, such as quantity of output. - Research shows that broader measures of
performance -- such as organizational citizenship
behaviors -- are more directly caused by
satisfaction.
104Two Views of the Satisfaction-Performance
Relationship (Figure 2-13)
(a) View 1 Satisfaction Causes Performance
(b) View 2 Performance Causes Satisfaction
105Satisfaction and Work Violence
- Workplace violence, including homicide, is
increasing. Homicide is now the number-3
work-related cause of death, and is the leading
cause of death for women in the workplace. - An estimated 1.7 million workers are injured in
nonfatal workplace assaults annually and more
than 1,000 are murdered. - Dissatisfaction does play a role in this
violence. Violence is especially great in
regimented settings, such as post offices, where
employees feel they have no control over their
work. - The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
have formally declared workplace homicide an
epidemic. - Some firms, such as IBM, are training managers to
recognize aggressive behavior and effectively
deal with it through communication and conflict
management.
106Satisfaction and Nonwork Life
- Some possible relationships of job satisfaction
to satisfaction with nonwork life include - Perhaps job satisfaction carries over to nonwork
satisfaction (a spillover view). - Perhaps employees who are satisfied at work
devote so much time and energy at work that they
ignore other aspects of their lives, resulting in
low satisfaction with nonwork life. - Perhaps employees compensate for dissatisfaction
at work by focusing more on home life and finding
satisfaction there. - Most research supports the spillover view that
satisfaction in one sphere of life seems to
increase satisfaction in other spheres.
107The Financial Impact of Attitudes
- The area of behavioral accounting is trying to
assess the financial impact of attitudes. - It does this by examining the costs of such
behaviors as turnover and absenteeism and the
strength of their links to attitudes. - One study used behavioral accounting to estimate
the costs of absenteeism, turnover, and balancing
shortages of 160 bank tellers. - The study concluded that moderate improvements in
attitudes averaging perhaps 0.7 on a seven-point
scale would yield the bank savings of 781,892,
or 4,886.83 per employee.
108The Role of Mood
- Mood is a transient mental state or attitude,
perhaps caused by something as fleeting as a
sunny day, convenient parking spot, or good meal. - Mood can affect job satisfaction as well as
behaviors. - People who are in a good mood do helpful things.
- Interestingly, bad mood also often leads to
helping behaviors helping others makes us feel
better about ourselves. - Helping softens a bad mood and sustains a good
mood. - Important work behaviors such as prosocial
behaviors may be heavily influenced by mood.
109Do Behaviors Cause Attitudes?
- Behaviors may cause attitudes by
- Dissonance reduction. Cognitive dissonance is an
uncomfortable situation in which we have
conflicting thoughts, such as I dont like my
job, but I stay on it. To reduce the
dissonance, we may change one or both cognitions
to make them consistent. So, we may change our
attitudes to make them consistent with our
behaviors. - Consequences of behavior. Behaviors may lead to
consequences that affect attitudes. For example,
performance may lead to a pay increase which may
lead to increased satisfaction with pay.
110Do Behaviors Cause Attitudes? (Cont.)
- Self-Attribution. Behaving in a certain way can
lead us to make corresponding attributions about
ourselves. For example, smiling (for no good
reason) can apparently induce a good mood and
increase willingness to laugh at humorous
material. Even though were playing a role, we
seem to internalize the attitudes and moods that
maintain the role. - Indoctrination. Brainwashing and cult
recruitment are two forms of indoctrination that
have proven to be effective. In brainwashing,
for instance, torture or threat may be used to
cause victims to yield to their oppressors
cause. As victims engage in the behavior and
pressure is reduced, they come to infer that the
behavior was voluntary, and their attitudes
change accordingly.