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BrokerRole PassiveActive

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Generate creative ideas. Complementing your boss's job & style ... Satisfies the other party's concerns while neglecting your own ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: BrokerRole PassiveActive


1
Broker RolePassive---------------------Active
  • Power Mine---------Maintain------------Build
  • Influencing Passive-------------Active
  • Position power Limited----------------Extensive
  • Personal power Limited----------------Extensive
  • Networking Limited/Emergent ----------------------
    ---------------Systematically cultivated
  • Supervisors Passive----------------------Active
  • Peers Passive--------------------Acti
    ve

2
Broker RolePassive---------------------Active
  • Negotiating Power based--------------------------
    ----Joint payoffs
  • Dialogue conditions Unsupportive------------
    ---------------Supportive
  • Purpose Defuse/Conflicting-----------
    ------------------Clear/Mutual
  • Respect Limited/blaming------------
    ---------Extensive/problem focused
  • Meaning Defuse/different-------------
    ---------Clear/common
  • Negotiation approach Constrained---------------
    --------------Exploration
  • Focus People-------------------------------------
    --Problem
  • Issues Positions/means------------
    --------------------Interests/goals
  • Alternatives Single option---------------------Ma
    ny options/dovetail needs
  • Solution criteria Subjective/Personal
    values---------------Objective standard
  • Communicating Emergent----------------------------
    -----------Planned
  • Set Unplanned-----------------------------------
    ----Designed
  • Climate Hostile/neutral----------------------
    ---------------------Rapport cultivated
  • Credibility Negative/Unknown--------------------
    --------------- Authoritative
  • Content Theme emerges-----------------------
    -----------------Roadmap provided
  • Support Impoverished-----------------------------
    ---Rich
  • Sequence Unplanned------------------------------O
    rdered
  • Access Standard model------------------------Cust
    om designed
  • Polish Rough-----------------------------------Ho
    ned down

3
Contrasting styles of exercise of power
influence
  • How to win friends influence people without
    trying (politics in a bureaucratic setting)
  • Machiavelli, The Prince (operating in a turbulent
    environment)
  • JR in the television series (playing the
    political game without morality)
  • The God father movies (combining reciprocity with
    coercion)

4
Use and Abuse of Power
  • Use--Powerful Mangers
  • Intercede favorably on behalf of someone in
    trouble
  • Get approval for expenditures beyond the budget
  • Get items on and off the agenda at policy
    meetings
  • Maintain regular, frequent contact with top
    decision makers
  • AbusePowerful managers are
  • Insensitive to others
  • Cold, aloof, and arrogant
  • Betray others trust
  • Unable to delegate to others or to build a team

5
Model of Power and Influence
  • Source of Personal Power
  • Expertise
  • Personal Attraction
  • Effort
  • Legitimacy
  • Networking
  • Role negotiation
  • Communication
  • Judgment
  • Sources of Position Power
  • Centrality
  • Criticality
  • Flexibility
  • Visibility
  • Relevance

Gaining Power
Power of an Individual
Transforming power into influence
Increasing Upward influence
Effects on attitudes behavior
6
Degree of Position Power
  • Centrality establishing a network of task
    relationships
  • Criticalityimportance of the activities
  • Flexibility freedom to exercise ones judgment
  • Visibility interacting with influential people
    in the organization
  • Relevance working on the central objectives and
    issues in an organization

7
Position powerLimited----------------------Extens
ive
  • Centrality of activities
  • Peripheral------------------------------ Central
  • Criticality of activities
  • Marginal ---------------------------------critica
    l
  • Flexibility
  • Rigid ------------------------------- -------
    flexible
  • Visibility
  • Low --------------------------------------- high
  • Relevance significance of activities
  • Limited -------------------------------------exten
    sive

8
Sources of Personal PowerLimited-----------------
---Extensive
  • Expertise work related knowledge
  • Effort doing whatever it takes to get the job
    done
  • Legitimacy taking action congruent with the
    prevailing value system
  • Attraction charisma, agreeable behavior,
    physical characteristics
  • Role negotiationdegree of adaptability in
    adjusting to different roles
  • Networkingdegree that trading relations are
    systematically established
  • Judgmentdegree of balance, rush to conclusions,
    letting go the past, constraints in framing
    problems.

9
Personal powerLimited------------Extensive
  • Expertise Limited --------------
    Extensive
  • Effort continuity Limited --------------extens
    ive
  • Role Negotiation Ridged--------------
    flexible
  • Attraction Dour/unattractive------------
    ------ Charismatic/personable/attractive
    physically
  • Legitimacy Limited -----------
    extensive
  • Networking Limited-----------extensive
  • Communication
  • Nonassertive----------------------------
    assertive
  • Nonsupportive--------------------------
    supportive
  • Judgment Poor ------------ excellent

10
JudgmentPoor-----------------------Excellent
  • Framing of problems issues
  • Operate w/in constraints-----pressing constraints
  • Collecting information Limited/rapid
    closure---------------- extensive/cross
    checking/slow closure
  • Balance Narrow limited-------------- broad
    cosmopolitan
  • Grievance list Extensive/ accumulative----------
    ----------------------------------
    nominal/written off

11
  • Enhancing your personal power in the organization
    by
  • Expertise--Developing an area that are the
    acknowledged expert cultivating critical
    skills.
  • Networking--Fostering friendship (genuineness,
    intimacy, acceptance, validation of self-worth,
    tolerance, social exchange).
  • Attractiveness--Enhancing your personal
    appearance.
  • Effort--Putting forth more effort than expected.
  • Legitimacy--Reinforcing core organizational
    values using stories and ceremonies to socialize
    new members.

12
  • Increase the centrality and criticality of your
    position
  • Networking
  • Expand your network of communication contacts.
  • Route information through you (act as a clearing
    house).
  • Taking on tasks critical to the work flow
  • Making at least part of your job responsibilities
    unique.
  • Increasing the technical sophistication of your
    work.

13
  • Increasing the latitude and flexibility of your
    job
  • Initiate new ideas.
  • Get involved in new projects.
  • Participate in the early stages of
    decision-making processes.
  • Seek unusual and design-oriented jobs, rather
    than those that are repetitive and
    maintenance-oriented.

14
  • Increasing the visibility of your job
    performance
  • Expand contacts with senior people.
  • Make oral presentations of written work.
  • Participate in problem-solving task forces.
  • Involve senior managers in recognizing important
    accomplishments within your work group.
  • Send personal notes of congratulations
  • Compose cover notes providing useful information
    that accompany reports

15
  • Increase the relevance of your tasks to the
    organization
  • Become an internal coordinator or external
    representative.
  • Provide services and information to other units.
  • Expand the domain of your work activities.
  • Become involved in activities central to the
    organizations top priorities.
  • f. Become a trainer or mentor for new members.

16
  • To develop influence with your boss
  • Initiative
  • Be faster than expected on assignments
  • Solve problems whose solutions arent expected or
    requested.
  • Generate creative ideas
  • Complementing your bosss job style
  • Diagnose your bosss strengths, weaknesses
  • Complement his/her weaknesses
  • Maintain trustworthiness
  • Balance keeping your boss informed screening
    unwanted or unimportant matters.
  • Listen to multiple perspectives from multiple
    sources.

17
Broker role
  • Negotiating approaches
  • Negotiation processes for compromise
    collaboration

18
Negotiating Approaches
Assertive
Collaborating
Forcing
Compromising
ASSERTIVENESS
Avoiding
Accommodating
Unassertive
Uncooperative
Cooperative
COOPERATIVENESS
19
Forcing
  • An attempt to satisfy personal or group interests
    at the expense of the other party
  • Use of power--formal authority, physical threats,
    manipulation, etc..
  • If you win, the other party is defeated
  • Approach leads to adverse unanticipated
    consequences
  • Return

20
Avoiding
  • Neglects the interests of both parties by
    sidestepping the conflict or postponing a
    solution
  • Used on minor issues, or by managers that are
    unable to handle conflict
  • Problems dont get resolved
  • On minor issues, usually of little consequence
  • On major issues, they surface again often in more
    extreme form
  • Return

21
Accommodating
  • Satisfies the other partys concerns while
    neglecting your own
  • Emphasis on preserving a friendly relationship at
    the expense of resolving issues
  • Other party may take advantage of your
    permissiveness escalate the demands
  • Return

22
Compromising
  • Tries to bring partial satisfaction for both
    parties by joint accommodation, or trading
  • Participants seek expedient solutions, but ones
    that they can live with
  • Often results in game playing where excess
    demands by both parties are made to lay the
    middle ground for compromise.
  • Errors of judgment can lead to intense conflict
    that are resolved by power.

Return
23
Collaborating
  • Address the concerns of both parties
  • Avoids assigning blame
  • Focus is on problems
  • The goal is to arrive at a solution that is a
    win-win for both parties
  • Creates a positive climate for resolution of
    future problems
  • Return

24
Collaborative Negotiations Power
based/win-lose----Joint payoffs/win-win
  • Dialogue conditions Unsupportive----------------
    ----Supportive
  • Purpose Defuse/Conflicting-----------
    ------------------Clear/Mutual
  • Respect Limited/blaming------------
    -Extensive/problem focused
  • Meaning Defuse/different-------------
    ----------------Clear/common
  • Negotiation approach Constrained---------------
    ---Exploration
  • Issues Positions/means------------
    ---------------Interests/goals
  • Alternatives Single option---------------Many
    options/dovetail needs
  • Solution criteria Subjective/Personal
    values---------Objective standard

25
Dialogue conditions Unsupportive--------------
-------Supportive
  • Respect--separate the people from the problem
  • Avoid the blame game where differences are
    personalized prejudices move to the forefront
    dominate the exchanges
  • Purposeclarify the goals prioritize their
    importance on part of both parties
  • Active listeningsort out what is important to
    the other party
  • Meaning understandingdo the parties understand
    each othercontent motives (in contrast to
    accepting the positions each is developing)?

26
Negotiation approach Constrained--------------
-------Exploration
  • Establish super ordinate goals
  • What do the parties share in common?
  • E.g. A constructive working relationship
  • The competitive viability of the firm
  • Focus on interests, not positions
  • Positions are demands/assertions
  • Interests are the reasons behind demands
  • E.g. Demands for affirmative action vs.
    underlying issue that discrimination isnt
    practiced

27
Framework for Collaborative Problem Solving
  • Generate alternatives--invent options for mutual
    gains
  • Think out of the box (beyond traditional
    solutions)
  • Brainstorm to generate more alternatives
  • Use objective criteria for evaluating
    alternatives
  • Shift focus from what I want to what is fair
    makes sense
  • Define success in terms of real gains, not
    imaginary losses

28
PRESENTATIONS A SPECIAL CASE OF COMMUNICATION
  • Communication--Interactions between two or more
    persons or groups.
  • It is a two way process of one to one/few/many
    where two major functions are undertaken
  • Information exchange and role negotiations.
  • The latter immensely complicates the information
    exchange process.
  • A------------------------------B
  • -------------------------------

29
Presentations
  • A more restrictive and limited case of
    communication.
  • It is usually a one way process (one to
    one/few/many) with the emphasis on one to many.
  • Roles are largely predefined by the
    initiator-presenter and the context
  • Varying degrees of passive acceptance active
    rejection of the predefined roles of presenter by
    the audience.
  • The content of the information is mostly
    controlled by the presenter
  • Limited opportunity or use of feedback to adjust
    roles or the content of information that is
    transmitted.

30
Typical examples of predefined roles
  • Initiator/presenter Recipient/audience
  • Teacher Student
  • Manager Employee
  • Coach Player
  • Social worker Client
  • Sales agent Customer

31
Techniques communication presentations
32
Broker RolePassive---------------------Active
  • Communicating Emergent----------------------------
    --Planned
  • Set Unplanned-----------------------------------
    ----Designed
  • Climate Hostile/neutral--------------------------
    -----Rapport cultivated
  • Credibility Negative/Unknown--------------------
    Positive/Authoritative
  • Content Theme emerges------------------------
    ----Roadmap provided
  • Support Impoverished------------------------------
    -------------Rich
  • Structure Unstructured----------------------
    ---------------structured
  • Sequence Unplanned--------------------------------
    -----------Ordered
  • Access Standard/few visuals --custom
    designed/rich visuals
  • Polish Rough/unorganized------------------Honed/or
    ganized
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