What factors ensure effective teams?
Context: Leadership, resources, and trust.
Composition: Skill diversity, personality, and size (5–9 members).
Process: Clear goals, team cohesion, and conflict management.
How can social loafing in teams be reduced?
Set clear goals.
Use peer evaluations.
Align individual contributions with rewards.
What are common shortcuts in perception?
Halo Effect: Judging based on one positive trait.
Contrast Effect: Comparing individuals against recent others.
Stereotyping: Generalizing based on group membership.
How can biases in decision-making be reduced?
Use objective data and avoid relying on intuition alone.
Generate multiple alternatives to expand perspectives.
What is Kurt Lewin's change management model?
Unfreeze: Challenge the status quo.
Moving: Implement desired changes.
Refreeze: Stabilize and integrate changes
How does organizational culture form and persist?
Formation: Driven by founders' philosophies and behaviors.
Persistence:
Selection: Hiring culture-aligned candidates.
Socialization: Teaching values through rituals, symbols, and stories.
Explain the role of organizational justice in motivation.
Distributive Justice: Fairness of outcome allocation.
Procedural Justice: Fairness of decision-making processes.
Interactional Justice: Respect and dignity in interpersonal treatment.
What is Expectancy Theory, and how does it explain motivation?
Effort → Performance: Belief that effort will lead to success.
Performance → Reward: Assurance that performance leads to rewards.
Reward → Valence: Perceived value of the reward.
What is groupthink, and how can it be avoided?
Definition: Desire for consensus suppresses alternative ideas.
Avoidance: Encourage critical evaluation, diverse input, and avoid isolation.
What are strengths and weaknesses of group decision-making?
Strengths: Diverse perspectives, better solutions, higher acceptance.
Weaknesses: Time-consuming, groupthink, and dominance by a few members.
What are the properties of groups that influence behavior?
Roles: Expected behaviors for positions.
Role Conflict: Contradictory role expectations (e.g., work-family conflicts).
Norms: Shared standards guiding behavior.
Can be positive (team collaboration) or negative (workplace deviance).
Status: Social ranking within the group.
Size: Impacts performance; smaller groups (5–7) are more cohesive.
Cohesiveness: Emotional attachment among members.
Diversity: Adds creativity but may initially slow cohesion.
What defines a group, and why do people join them?
Definition: Two or more individuals working interdependently to achieve objectives.
Reasons to Join:
Security
Status
Self-esteem
Affiliation
Power
Goal achievement
How do high-context and low-context cultures differ in communication?
High-Context Cultures: Rely on nonverbal cues and situational context (e.g., Japan, Korea).
Low-Context Cultures: Depend on explicit verbal communication (e.g., US, Germany).
How is feedback effectively delivered?
Be specific and descriptive.
Focus on behavior, not the person.
Use positive reinforcement and allow self-evaluation.
What are barriers to effective communication?
Filtering: Manipulating information for favorability.
Selective Perception: Interpreting based on personal biases.
Information Overload: Exceeding processing capacity.
Language Differences: Variations in meaning across individuals
Explain the communication process and its elements.
Sender: Initiates the message.
Encoding: Converts thoughts into a communicable form.
Message: The content being communicated.
Channel: Medium (formal or informal).
Decoding: Receiver interprets the message.
Receiver: The intended audience.
Noise: Disturbances like distractions or misunderstandings.
Feedback: Ensures understanding.
What are the core functions of communication in an organization?
Managing Behavior: Aligning employee actions with organizational goals.
Feedback: Providing insights for improvement.
Emotional Sharing: Building connections and morale.
Persuasion: Influencing decisions or behaviors.
Information Exchange: Disseminating knowledge efficiently.
What are effective ways to reward employees?
Intrinsic Rewards: Recognizing contributions personally (e.g., appreciation letters).
Extrinsic Rewards: Bonuses, profit-sharing, flexible benefits, and stock options
How can job design motivate employees?
Job Rotation: Reduces routine boredom, enhances skills, and increases engagement (e.g., Singapore Airlines).
Alternative Work Arrangements:
Flextime: Flexible work hours.
Job Sharing: Two people share one full-time role.
Telecommuting: Work from home for flexibility and cost-saving.
What is the Motivating Potential Score (MPS)?
A predictive index to assess the motivation potential of a job. High MPS jobs excel in at least one of the three meaningfulness factors (skill variety, task identity, task significance) and are high in both autonomy and feedback.
How does the Job Characteristics Model (JCM) enhance motivation?
It proposes five dimensions that enhance motivation:
Skill variety: Use of different skills reduces monotony.
Task identity: Completing a whole piece of work enhances purpose.
Task significance: Work impacts others positively.
Autonomy: Freedom to decide improves ownership.
Feedback: Clear performance feedback aids improvement.
What are the key theories of motivation, and how do they explain workplace behavior?
Hierarchy of Needs (Maslow): Motivation is a progression through five levels:
Physiological needs: Basic survival needs like food and shelter.
Safety needs: Job security, safe working conditions.
Social needs: Interpersonal relationships and belongingness.
Esteem needs: Recognition, status, and self-respect.
Self-actualization: Achieving personal growth and potential.
Two-Factor Theory (Herzberg): Differentiates between:
Hygiene factors: Prevent dissatisfaction (e.g., salary, work conditions).
Motivators: Drive satisfaction and motivation (e.g., achievement, recognition).
Theory of Needs (McClelland):
Need for Achievement: Desire to excel.
Need for Affiliation: Desire for social connections.
Need for Power: Desire to influence others.
What is motivation in organizational behavior?
Motivation is the intensity, direction, and persistence of effort toward achieving organizational goals. It influences behavior and performance.
What is the Goal-Setting Theory (Locke)?
Specific and challenging goals, combined with feedback, lead to higher performance. Success depends on:
Goal clarity.
Commitment.
Feedback mechanisms.
Define Self-Determination Theory.
Focuses on intrinsic and extrinsic motivation. While intrinsic motivation drives internal satisfaction, extrinsic rewards can reduce internal interest in tasks.
Explain Equity Theory
Motivation arises from perceived fairness:
Employees compare their input-outcome ratio to others.
Inequity leads to changes in effort or perceptions to restore fairness
Define Expectancy Theory (Vroom).
Motivation depends on three beliefs:
Effort-Performance linkage: Belief effort will lead to good performance.
Performance-Reward linkage: Belief performance will yield rewards.
Reward-Personal Goals linkage: Value of rewards for personal needs.
What is communication in organizational behavior?
The transference and understanding of meaning between a sender and receiver.
What are the key barriers to communication?
Filtering: Manipulating information.
Selective Perception: Seeing what aligns with personal views.
Information Overload: Exceeding capacity to process information.
Cultural Differences: Variances in interpretation based on cultural norms.
What is Coaching Feedback?
Feedback that focuses on behavior, not the person, encouraging self-evaluation and continuous improvement.
Define a group in organizational behavior.
A group consists of two or more individuals interacting and interdependent, working toward common goals.
Explain Role Perception and Role Conflict.
Role Perception: Individual’s understanding of expected behavior in a role.
Role Conflict: Incompatible demands from different roles (e.g., work vs. family).
What is Groupthink?
The desire for group consensus overrides realistic evaluation of alternatives, leading to poor decisions.
Explain the concept of Cohesiveness.
The extent to which group members are attracted to and motivated to stay in the group. Higher cohesiveness often enhances performance.
Define Social Loafing.
The tendency for individuals to expend less effort when working in groups compared to individually.
What is Organizational Justice?
A broader framework covering:
Distributive Justice: Fairness of outcomes.
Procedural Justice: Fairness of processes.
Interactional Justice: Respectful interpersonal treatment.
Define Self-Efficacy.
Belief in one’s ability to complete tasks, which enhances motivation and performance.
What is organizational culture?
A shared system of meaning held by members that influences behavior. Key characteristics:
Innovation.
Outcome orientation.
People orientation.
Stability.
How is culture maintained?
Selection: Hiring individuals aligned with culture.
Socialization: Teaching new hires cultural norms.
Top Management: Role modeling desired behaviors.
Explain Kurt Lewin’s Change Model.
Unfreeze: Prepare for change by identifying threats and building motivation.
Change: Transition to new behaviors or practices.
Refreeze: Solidify changes through reinforcement.
Define Perception.
The process of organizing and interpreting sensory input to give meaning to the environment.
What is Attribution Theory?
Explains how people assign causes to behaviors:
Internal Attribution: Behavior due to personal traits.
External Attribution: Behavior due to situational factors.
What are Common Perceptual Biases?
Halo Effect: Judging based on one characteristic.
Contrast Effect: Evaluation influenced by comparison with others.
Stereotyping: Generalizing based on group affiliation.
What are the types of teams in organizations?
Problem-Solving Teams: Focus on solving specific issues.
Self-Managed Teams: Operate without direct supervision.
Cross-Functional Teams: Members from different departments collaborate.
Virtual Teams: Work remotely using technology.
Define Team Cohesion.
Emotional attachment among members that increases motivation and commitment.
How can social loafing be reduced?
Set clear individual responsibilities.
Conduct peer evaluations.
Align rewards with contributions.
What is the role of diversity in team performance?
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