Title: Introduction to Organizational Behavior
1Introduction to Organizational Behavior
- MGMT 360H
- Organizational Behavior
- Instructor Marie S. Mitchell
2Agenda
- Part I Whats OB?
- Part II What are current trends in OB?
- Part III What are the course requirements?
3Part I Whats OB?
4Organizational Behavior Defined
- Organizational Behavior (OB)
- The study of what people thin, feel and do in and
around organizations - Organizations
- Groups of people who work interdependently toward
some purpose - Structured patterns of interactions
- Coordinated tasks
- Work toward some purpose
5Organizational Behavior in Context
Value System
Organizational Behavior
Personality
Emotions
Behavior
Perceptions
Motivation
Learning Styles
(Micro)
Physical Attributes
Cognitions
KSAOs
Conflict
Teams
(Meso)
Leadership
Stress
Structure
Organizational Development
Culture
Organizational Theory
Industry Environment
Organizational Change
(Macro)
6Why Study Organizational Behavior
Understand organizational events
Organizational Behavior Research
Predict organizational events
Influence organizational events
7Organizational Behavior Anchors
Multidisciplinary Anchor
Organizational Behavior Anchors
8Multidisciplinary Anchor
Traditional Disciplines Relevance to OB Topics
Psychology Drives, perception, attitudes, personality, stress, conflict, emotions, leadership
Sociology Teams, roles, socialization, communication, power, structures
Anthropology Culture, structure, intergroup conflict, coalition formation, power and politics, decision-making, organizational environments
Economics Decision-making, negotiation, power
Industrial engineering Job design, productivity, work measurement
Emerging Disciplines
Communications Knowledge management, e-mail, socialization
Information systems Team dynamics, decision-making, knowledge management
Marketing Knowledge management, creativity, decision-making
Womans studies Power, perceptions, diversity
9Organizational Behavior Anchors
Multidisciplinary Anchor
Organizational Behavior Anchors
Systematic Research Anchor
10Systematic Research Anchor
- Scientific Method
- Understand, predict and control
- Provide precise and operational definitions
- Use reliable and valid measures
- Follow systematic methods
- Ensure results are cumulative
- Grounded Theory Approach
11Organizational Behavior Anchors
Multidisciplinary Anchor
Organizational Behavior Anchors
Systematic Research Anchor
Contingency Anchor
12Contingency Anchor
- It depends factors
- Idea that a particular action may have different
consequences in different situations and with
different individuals - Discovering
- Which conditions apply to understand behavior
and organizational events
13Organizational Behavior Anchors
Multidisciplinary Anchor
Organizational Behavior Anchors
Systematic Research Anchor
Contingency Anchor
Multiple Levels of Analysis Anchor
14Multiple Levels of Analysis Anchor
15Organizational Behavior Anchors
Multidisciplinary Anchor
Organizational Behavior Anchors
Systematic Research Anchor
Open Systems Anchor
Contingency Anchor
Multiple Levels of Analysis Anchor
16Open Systems Anchor
- Open systems
- Organizations that take their sustenance from the
environment and, in turn, affect that environment
through their output
17Open Systems Anchor of OB
- Need to monitor and adapt to environment
- External environment -- natural and social
conditions outside the organization - Receive inputs from environment transform them
into outputs back to the environment - Stakeholders anyone with a vested interest in
the organization - Organizations consist of interdependent parts
(subsystems) that need to coordinate
18Open Systems Anchor of OB
19Purpose of OB Intellectual Capitol
- Human Capital
- KSAOs of employees (e.g., knowledge, education,
experience, skill, abilities) - Social Capital
- Relationships of employees (e.g., networks,
connections, friends) - Structural Capital
- Knowledge captured and retained in organizational
systems and structures
20Knowledge Management
- Defined
- Structuring activity to improve organizations
capacity to acquire, share and use knowledge in
ways that improve its survival and success
21Knowledge Management
Knowledge acquisition
- Awareness
- Freedom to apply
- Communication
- Communities of practice
- Hiring talent
- Acquiring firms
- Individual learning
- Experimentation
22Organizational Memory
- The storage and preservation of intellectual
capital - Retain intellectual capital by
- Keeping knowledgeable employees
- Transferring knowledge to others
- Transferring human capital to structural capital
- Successful companies also unlearn
23Part II Trends in Organizational Behavior
24Trends in OB
- Globalization
- Information Technology
- Changing Workforce
- Emerging Employment Relationships
- Workplace Values and Ethics
25Globalization
- Defined
- Economic, social, and cultural connectivity with
people in other parts of the world - Effects of globalization
- New organizational structures
- Different forms of communication
- More diverse workforce.
- More competition, mergers, work intensification
and demands for work flexibility
26Changing Workforce
- U.S. Descriptive Statistics within 50 years
- 14 African American
- 1 of 4 employees will be Hispanic
- 8 Asian American
- 50 of paid workforce women
- Age issues
- Older staying, younger coming in
- Clash of generational ties!
27Changing Workforce and Diversity
First language
Life experiences
Religion
- Workforce has increasing diversity along several
dimensions - Primary categories
- gender, age, ethnicity, etc.
- Secondary categories
- some control over (e.g. education, marital status)
Geographic location
Occupation
Race
Ethnicity
Mental/physical ability
Marital status
Sexual orientation
Behavioral style
Gender
Age
Parental status
Education
Work style
Income
Work experience
28Changing Workforce Implications
- Leverage diversity advantage
- Adjust to the new workforce
29Employment Relationships
- Work-life balance
- Number one indicator of career success
- Priority for many young people looking for new
jobs - Contingent work
- No explicit or implicit contract for long-term
employment, or minimum hours of work can vary in
a nonsystematic way - Employability
- New deal employment relationship
- Continuously learn new skills
30Employability vs Job Security
Employability
Job Security
- Limited job security
- Jobs are temporary
- Career self-management
- High emphasis on skill development
- Lifetime job security
- Jobs are permanent
- Company manages career
- Low emphasis on skill development
31Virtual Work
- Using information technology to perform ones job
away from the traditional physical workplace - Telecommuting (telework)
- Working from home, usually internet connection to
office - Virtual teams
- Operate across space, time, and organizational
boundaries with members who communicate mainly
through electronic technologies
32Focus on Values and Ethics
- Values
- Stable, long-lasting believes
- Guide decisions and actions
- Organizational culture
- Shared assumptions, values, and beliefs
- Govern the way employees think and act
- Framed by
- Individual norms, beliefs, culture
- Demographic culture
- Industry culture
- Knowledge culture
33Ethics
- Ethics
- Moral principles or values that determine whether
actions are right or wrong - Corporate social responsibility (CSR)
- Organizations moral obligation
- Influenced by
- Stakeholders
- Economics
- Society
- Environment
34Values and Ethics
35Part III Course Requirements
36Individual Assignments
- Exam 1 100 points
- Exam 2 100 points
- Exam 3 100 points
- Self assessments
- (5_at_10 pts) 50 points
- Class participation 100 points
- Total points 450
(58 overall grade)
37Exams
- Format
- Multiple choice, true/false, short-essay, essay
- Graded Exams
- Must be returned to the instructor or students
will receive a zero as a grade - Will review exams in-class
38Self-Assessments
- Build awareness about yourself
- Help you become a better self-manager and build
upon your talents and traits - 1-3 paragraph assessment
- Your computed assessment score
- A description of what that score means
- An explanation of whether or not you believe the
assessment is accurate - Justify your point with examples
39Class Participation
- Actively engage in class discussion
- Showing up to class is not participating
- See Syllabus for metric used for assessing class
participation
40Team Assignments
- Simulations (2_at_50pts)
100 points - Manager Hot Seat Evals (2_at_50pts) 100 points
- Report and presentation
125 points - Total points
325 (41 overall grade)
41Simulations
- Team fictional company
- Must have 50 employees
- Team members must be familiar with
product/service - Conducted in class
- Evaluate scenario provided using simulated
company - Only have space and time provided in-class
- Graded based on
- Evaluative skills
- Use of innovative and creative ideas
- Inclusion of class discussion/readings
- Application to teams business and problem
scenario - Solutions that dont cause more problems
42Manager Hot Seat Evaluations
- Interactive software
- See syllabus for how to acquire it
- Software provides real manager in a problem
situation - Team must evaluate the managers actions
- Out-of-class team assignment
43Manager Hot Seat Evaluations
- Must include
- Teams name and each team member in attendance
for the activity - 1 paragraph Problem Statement
- Describe the scenario and issues involved
- Grade the managers performance (0-100 scale)
- Provide an explanation for manager grade
- What did manager do correctly/incorrectly or
good/bad? - How team respond to each question and why?
- What were the differences in how manager
responded and team responded and which was best - What did the team learn, based on course
material?
44Case Report and Presentation
- The Report
- Write a case study, based on actual research
- Evaluate your case study, based on standard case
study evaluative criteria - 50 points
- The Presentation
- 15 minute presentation, summarizing the report
- 50 points
- Questions to a Presenting Team
- Must ask one other presenting team (TBA) 2
questions - 25 points
45Case Studies
- Defined
- Written representations that simulate business
situations - Include
- A significant business issue or issues
- A sufficient amount of info to base conclusions
- No stated conclusions
- Basic Team Requirement
- Define the situation
- Provide analysis of the situation
- Draw conclusions about the situation
46Case Study Situational Types
- Problems
- Define problem and explain why it occurred
- Decisions
- Describe decision (scope, consequences) and
analyze it (decision options, criteria for how it
was derived) - Evaluations
- Judge the worth, value or effectiveness of
performance, actions, or outcomes based on
evidence and criteria
47Effective Case Analyses
- Individual Requirement
- Read the case before class
- Think and evaluate while reading
- Take notes on your thoughts to discuss with your
team - Team Requirement
- Synergize thoughts into team evaluation during
class
48Team Case Study Write-Up
- Identify the situation
- Generate a position statement
- Provide evidence to support the position
statement - Provide an action plan regarding how the team
would respond to next steps
491. Identify the Situation
- Is the situation a problem, decision or
evaluation? - Whats the problem, decision or evaluation in
case reading? - What are the causal paths that lead to the
problem, decision or evaluation or how did it
happen?
50Questions to Consider to Evaluate the Situation
- Who/whats the involved?
- Whats the problem, decision or evaluation?
- Whats the significance of it?
- Whos responsible for it?
- Whats at stake?
- Whats possible criteria for the problem,
decision or evaluation? - What might be the most important criteria for
this situation? - Are any of the important criteria mentioned in
the case?
512. Generate a Position Statement
- Organize the case study essay
- Express a conclusion
- Provides the reader with your intention about the
organization of the rest of the essay (i.e., your
justification for your position)
523. Evidence for the Position Statement
- Most crucial part of the case essay
- Provides qualitative and quantitative evidence to
support - Merely citing numbers is not persuasive its a
catalog of events - Use results or outputs as evidence of conclusion
- Carefully select facts dont just list
everything - Combine facts with inferences that connect to the
conclusion - Combine facts with inferences to support your
conclusion
53Action Plans Based on Situations
Case Situation Argument Action Plan
Problem Prove cause-effect relationships that account for problem Solve problem fix weaknesses and reinforce or increase strengths
Decision Recommend best decision Implement decision show the best pathway to achieve desired outcome
Evaluation Provide detailed evaluation of performance, act or outcome Improve performance or outcome implement or change decision
544. Action Plan
- Elements of an Action Plan
- Set goals based on the argument
- Address the actionable content of the argument
- Consist of specific steps
- Has realistic short- and long-term steps
- Identifies and responds to the major risk to the
plan
55Report Content The Evaluation
- 3-4 page evaluation
- Include the 4 basic case study evaluation
components - Identify the situation
- Generate a position statement
- Provide evidence to support the position
statement - Provide an action plan regarding how the team
would respond to next steps - Integrate concepts from course to justify
evaluation
56Report Semantics
- Typed and in 12-point, Times Roman font
- Written in Executive Summary format
- Provide overview of the situation
- Evaluate the situation based on course topics and
materials - Provide team recommendation
- Follow American Psychological Association (APA)
format - See http//apastyle.apa.org
- Due on the date of the presentation no later
57Presentation Semantics
- Should include
- brief summary of the situation in the case study
- the teams evaluation
- Can be no longer than 15 minutes
- I will stop you and will not grade anything past
15 minutes - Must be professional
- Content
- Team appearance
- Integrate appropriate visual aids (e.g.,
PowerPoint)
58Questions to Other Presenting Team
- Instructor will assign each team to another
presenting team - Must ask the presenting team 2 questions
- Questions must be relevant to presentation
- Example types
- Questions addressing important clarifications
- Questions addressing areas that were overlooked
- Questions that might strengthen teams
recommendation
59Peer Reviews and Evaluations
- Evaluate other team members performance
- Team grade received will be weighted based on
team evaluations - Peer reviews
- mid-semester performance check
- does not impact grade
- provides team members feedback on how to improve
as a team member - Peer evaluations
- end of the semester evaluation on each team
member - evaluation averages will be basis of individual
team grade received
60Questions?