CH 1 What Is Organizational Behavior
CH 1 What Is Organizational Behavior
What Is Organizational
Behavior?
OBJECTIVES
After studying this chapter, you should
be able to:
Managerial Activities
• Make decisions
• Allocate resources
• Direct activities of others to
attain goals
Where Managers Work
Organization
A consciously coordinated social unit,
composed of two or more people, that
functions on a relatively continuous basis to
achieve a common goal or set of goals
Management Functions
Planning Organizing
Management
Functions
Controlling Leading
Management Functions (cont’d)
Planning
A process that includes defining goals,
establishing strategy, and developing plans
to coordinate activities
Management Functions (cont’d)
Organizing
Determining what tasks are to be done, who is
to do them, how the tasks are to be grouped,
who reports to whom, and where decisions
are to be made
Management Functions (cont’d)
Leading
A function that includes motivating
employees, directing others, selecting the
most effective communication channels,
and resolving conflicts
Management Functions (cont’d)
Controlling
Monitoring activities to ensure they are being
accomplished as planned and correcting any significant
deviations
Management Skills
Technical Skills
The ability to apply specialized
knowledge or expertise
Human Skills
The ability to work with,
understand, and motivate other
people, both individually and
in groups
Conceptual Skills
The mental ability to analyze and
diagnose complex situations
Allocation of Activities by Time
Enter Organizational Behavior
Intuition
“Gut” feelings about “why I do what I do” and “what makes
others tick”
Systematic Study
Looking at relationships, attempting to attribute causes
and effects, and drawing conclusions based on scientific
evidence
Provides a means to predict behaviors
Contributing Disciplines to the OB Field
Psychology
The science that seeks to measure, explain, and
sometimes change the behavior of humans and other
animals
E X H I B I T 1–3 (cont’d)
Contributing Disciplines to the OB Field (cont’d)
Sociology
The study of people in relation to their fellow human
beings
E X H I B I T 1–3 (cont’d)
Contributing Disciplines to the OB Field (cont’d)
Social Psychology
An area within psychology that blends concepts from
psychology and sociology and that focuses on the influence
of people on one another
E X H I B I T 1–3 (cont’d)
Contributing Disciplines to the OB Field (cont’d)
Anthropology
The study of societies to learn about human beings and
their activities
E X H I B I T 1–3 (cont’d)
Challenges and Opportunities for OB
• Responding to Globalization
– Increased foreign assignments
– Working with people from different cultures
– Overseeing movement of jobs to countries with
low-cost labor
– Managing people during the war on terror
• Managing Workforce Diversity
– Embracing diversity
– Changing U.S. demographics
– Implications for managers
• Recognizing and responding to differences
Major Workforce Diversity Categories
Gender
National
Disability Origin
Age
Faith/Religion
Race
Relationship
Status
E X H I B I T 1–4
Challenges and Opportunities for OB (cont’d)
Productivity
A performance measure that includes
effectiveness and efficiency
Effectiveness
Achievement of goals
Efficiency
Meeting goals at a low cost
The Dependent Variables (cont’d)
Absenteeism
The failure to report to work
Turnover
The voluntary and
involuntary permanent
withdrawal from an
organization
The Dependent Variables (cont’d)
Job Satisfaction
A general attitude toward one’s job; a positive feeling of
one's job resulting from an evaluation of its characteristics
Basic OB
Model, Stage
II
E X H I B I T 1-7