ORGANISATIONAL BEHAVIOUR
ORGANISATIONAL BEHAVIOUR
Christ college,
Mysore.
Organizational behavior is the study of how people interact within groups. The
principles of the study of organizational behavior are applied primarily in
attempts to make businesses operate more effectively.
Organizational Behavior (OB) is the study of human behavior in organizational
settings, the interface between human behavior and the organization, and the
organization itself.
The study of organizational behavior includes areas of research dedicated to
improving job performance, increasing job satisfaction, promoting innovation,
and encouraging leadership and is a foundation of corporate human resources.
Organizational Behavior (OB) is the multidisciplinary study of the employee
interactions and the organizational processes that seek to create more
efficient and cohesive organizations.
Definitions of OB
According to L. M. Prasad, “Organisational behaviour can be defined as the
study and application of knowledge about human behaviour related to other
elements of an organisation such as structure, technology and social systems.
According to Stephen P Robbins - “Organisational behaviour is a field of study
that investigates the impact that individuals, groups and structure have on
behaviour within the organizations for the purpose of applying such knowledge
towards improving organizations effectiveness”.
According to Fred Luthans - “Organisational behaviour is directly concerned
with the understanding production and control of human behaviour in
organization”.
The following five elements are key to studying organizational behavior:
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• People
• Structure
• Technology
• Social system
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• Environment
Understanding these elements and their dynamic interrelationships can help
business leaders achieve short and long-term goals for improving employee
productivity and success by informing strategies around training, ongoing
development, collaboration, and workforce processes.
Principles of OB:
Organizational behavior (OB) is the study of how individuals, groups, and
structures affect behavior within an organization. Understanding OB can help
improve efficiency, performance, and employee satisfaction in a workplace. Here
are some key principles of organizational behavior:
1. Individual Behavior
Motivation: Understanding what drives people to perform well in their
jobs, such as intrinsic and extrinsic rewards. Theories like Maslow's
Hierarchy of Needs, Herzberg's Two-Factor Theory, and McClelland's
Theory of Needs provide insights into motivation.
Perception: How individuals interpret and make sense of their
Page | 5 environment. This can affect their behavior, decision-making, and
interactions within the organization.
Learning: How individuals acquire knowledge and skills that influence
their behavior. The process of learning in organizations, such as training
and development programs, is critical to improving employee
performance.
2. Group Dynamics
3. Organizational Culture
Values and Norms: The shared beliefs, values, and norms within an
organization shape how employees behave. A strong organizational
culture can foster a positive work environment, while a weak or toxic
culture can lead to issues like low morale and high turnover.
Socialization: The process by which new employees learn the
organization's culture and become integrated into the organization. Proper
socialization can lead to greater job satisfaction and organizational
commitment.
4. Communication
5. Decision-Making
7. Organizational Structure
Formal Structure: The way tasks, roles, and responsibilities are divided,
coordinated, and controlled within the organization. Structures can be
hierarchical, matrix-based, or flat.
Flexibility: The ability of the organization to adapt to changes in its
external environment or internal processes. A flexible structure supports
innovation and responsiveness.
8. Change Management
Page | 7 1. Psychology
2. Sociology
3. Anthropology
4. Economics
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Incentives and Decision Making: Economic principles, such as the
theory of incentives and rational choice theory, inform OB in
understanding how employees make decisions based on rewards and
resource allocation. This is particularly important in areas like
compensation, performance rewards, and motivation.
Resource Allocation: OB incorporates economic theories to understand
how organizations allocate resources, including human resources, and how
organizational efficiency can be improved by optimizing resource use.
Behavioral Economics: This field, which combines psychology and
economics, looks at how psychological factors affect economic decisions.
This is useful in understanding employee behavior, particularly in contexts
like decision-making, risk-taking, and fairness.
5. Political Science
6. Management Theory
Conclusion
Organizational behavior is inherently interdisciplinary because it requires the
integration of diverse theories and approaches to understand the complexities of
human behavior in organizations. Each discipline provides valuable insights into
different aspects of behavior, from individual actions and motivations to group
dynamics, organizational culture, power, and politics. By borrowing from multiple
fields, OB can offer more comprehensive strategies to improve organizational
performance and employee well-being.
2. Sociology
3. Anthropology
4. Political Science
5. Economics
6. Social Psychology
Each discipline contributes unique insights that help in managing people and
improving organizational effectiveness.
Page | 16 Until recently, physiologists and psychologists felt that certain biological
functions such as brainwave patterns, gastric and hormonal secretions, and
fluctuations in blood pressure and skin temperature were beyond conscious
control.
Now some scientists believe that these involuntary functions can be consciously
controlled through biofeedback techniques. In BFT, the individual learns the
internal rhythms of a particular body process through electronic signals that are
feedback from equipment that is wired to the body.
Physical Features
A vital ingredient of the personality, an individual’s external appearance, is
biologically determined. The fact that a person is tall or short, fat or skinny,
black or white will influence the person’s effect on others and this in turn, will
affect the self-concept.
2. Cultural Factors
Among the factors that influence personality formation is the culture in which we
are raised, early conditioning, norms prevailing within the family, friends and
social groups and other miscellaneous experiences that impact us.
The culture largely determines attitudes towards independence, aggression,
competition, cooperation and a host of other human responses.
3. Family Factors
Whereas the culture generally prescribes and limits what a person can be taught,
it is the family, and later the social group, which selects, interprets and
dispenses the culture. Thus, the family probably has the most significant impact
on early personality development.
A substantial amount of empirical evidence indicates that the overall home
environment created by the parents, in addition to their direct influence, is
critical to personality development.
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The parents play an especially important part in the identification process, which
is important to the person’s early development.
4. Social Factors
There is increasing recognition given to the role of other relevant persons, groups
and especially organisations, which greatly influence an individual’s personality.
This is commonly called the socialization process.
Socialization involves the process by which a person acquires, from the
enormously wide range of behavioral potentialities that are open to him or her,
those that are ultimately synthesized and absorbed.
Socialization starts with the initial contact between a mother and her new infant.
After infancy, other members of the immediate family – father, brothers, sisters
and close relatives or friends, then the social group: peers, school friends and
members of the work group – play influential roles.
Socialization process is especially relevant to organisational behaviour because
Page | 17 the process is not confined to early childhood, taking place rather throughout
one’s life. In particular, the evidence is accumulating that socialization may be
one of the best explanations for why employees behave the way they do in
today’s organisations.
4. Situational Factors
Human personality is also influenced by situational factors. The effect of the
environment is quite strong. Knowledge, skill and language are obviously
acquired and represent important modifications of behavior.
Personality Characteristics
Managers should learn as much as possible about personality in order to
understand their employees. Hundreds of personality characteristics have been
identified.
7 personality characteristics that influence individual are:
1. Locus of Control
2. Self-Efficacy
3. Self-Esteem
4. Self-Monitoring
5. Positive/Negative Affect
6. Risk-Taking
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Locus of Control
The degree to which individuals perceive control over a situation being internal
or external is called locus of control.
Locus of control refers to the range of beliefs that individuals hold in terms of
being controlled by self (internal locus) or controlled by others or the situation
(external locus). Self-Efficacy
Generalized self-efficacy refers to a belief about one’s own ability to deal with
events and challenges.
High self-efficacy results in greater confidence in one’s job-related abilities to
function effectively on the job. Success in previous situations leads to increased
self-efficacy for present and future challenges.
Self-Esteem
An individual’s self-worth is referred to as self-esteem. Individuals with high self-
esteem have positive feelings about themselves.
Low self-esteem individuals are strongly affected by what others think of them,
and view themselves negatively.
Page | 18 Self-Monitoring
The extent to which people base their behavior on cues from other people and
situations is self-monitoring. Individuals high in self-monitoring pay attention
to what behavior is appropriate in certain situations by watching others and
behaving accordingly. Low self-monitoring individuals prefer that their
behavior reflects their attitudes, and are not as flexible in adapting their
behavior to situational cues.
Positive/Negative Affect
Individuals exhibit attitudes about situations in a positive or negative fashion. An
individual’s tendency to accentuate the positive aspects of situations is referred
to as positive effect, while those accentuating less optimistic views are referred
to as having negative affect. Employees with positive affect are absent from
work less often. Negative affect individuals report higher levels of job stress.
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Risk-Taking
People differ in their willingness to take chances. High-risk-taking managers
made more rapid decisions and used less information in making their choices
than low risk-taking managers.
Personality Traits Influencing Organizational Behavior
(1) Authoritarianism
(2) Bureaucratic Personality
(3) Machiavellianism
(4) Introversion and Extroversion
(5) Problem Solving Style
(6) Achievement Orientation
(7) Locus of Control
(8) Self Esteem
(9) Self Monitoring
(10) Risk Taking
(11) ‘Type A’ and ‘Type B’ Personality
(12) Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI).
1. Authoritarianism:
Authoritarianism as a concept was developed by the psychologist Adorno during
World War II to measure susceptibility to autocratic, fascistic or antidemocratic
appeals. After that the concept was extended to the human personality.
According to Adorno, “This concept refers to a belief that there should be status
and power differences among people in organisations.” Authoritarians tend to
Page | 19 place high moral value on their beliefs and are strongly oriented towards
conformity of rules and regulations. They naturally prefer stable and structured
work environments which are governed by clean rules and procedures.
Further, they believe obedience and respect for authority and blind acceptance
of authority. These people are generally conservatives concerned with
toughness and power, are close
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minded and generally less educated. But because of their belief in acceptance of
authority they make good followers, work better under directive supervision and
are more productive within authoritarian organisational structure.
2. Bureaucratic Personality:
The personality of a bureaucratic person is based upon respect for organisational
rules and regulations. He is different from an authoritarian person in respect that
his acceptance of authority is not total and blind. A person who is bureaucratic
in nature values subordination, conformity to rules, impersonal and formal
relationships. These people become better supervisors when the type of work is
routine, repetitive and proceduralised because these people are not innovative,
they do not like taking risks and feel more at ease in following established
directions.
3. Machiavellianism:
This personality trait of Machiavellianism also known as Mach is named after
Niccolo Machiavelli, who wrote in the 16th century on how to gain and use
power.
The characteristics of high MACH employers are as follows:
(i) A Mach man is pragmatic, maintains emotional distance and believes that
ends can justify means.
(ii) A high Mach man manipulates more, wins more, are persuaded less and
persuade others more than the low machs.
(iii) High Mach people flourish when they interact face to face with others rather
than indirectly.
(iv) These people are successful when the situation has a minimum number of
rules and regulations.
(v) High Mach man has high self confidence and high self esteem. They are cool
and calculating and have no hesitation using others or taking advantage of
others in order to serve their own goals.
(vi) They are not easily swayed by a sense of friendship, trust or loyalty. They are
specially successful in exploiting structured situations and vulnerable people.
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We cannot conclude that whether high machs make good employees or not. The
answer will depend upon the type of the job and whether moral and ethical
values are considered in evaluating the performance of a person.
People who are impatient, aggressive and highly competitive are termed as ‘Type
A’ personality. But those who are easy going, laid back and non-competitive are
termed as ‘Type B’
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personality. Type ‘A’ people tend to be very productive as they work very hard.
Their negative side is that they are very impatient, good team players, more
irritable and have poor judgment. Type ‘B’ people do better on complex tasks
involving judgment and accuracy rather than speed and hard work.
Despite Type ‘A’s hard work, the Type ‘B’ people are the ones who appear to
make it to the top. Great sales persons are usually Type A’s while senior
executives are generally Type B’s. The reason is that promotions in corporate
and professional organisations usually go to those “who are wise rather than to
those who are merely hasty, to those who are tactful, rather than to those who
are hostile and to those who are creative rather than to those who are merely
agile in competitive stride.”
12. Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI):
The personality theory proposed by Carl Jung identified the way people preferred
to perceive their environment. Almost Twenty years later, Briggs and Myers
developed the Myers – Briggs type indicator (MBTI) a personality test that
measured each of the traits in Carl Jung’s model. MBTI is in-fact, one of the most
widely used personality tests. It is used by many organisations to select people
for a particular position.
It measures how people focus their attention (extrovert or introvert), collect
information (sensing or intuition), process the same (thinking or feeling) and
finally direct themselves to the other world (judging or perceiving) MBTI then
combines the four classifications into 16 personality types.
The alphabet (E) denotes extrovert, (I) stands for introvert, (S) for sensing, (N) for
institution, (T) for thinking, (F) is feeling, (J) judging and (P) perceiving. For
example if we say marketing people tend to be ESTJ, this means that they are
extrovert, sensing, thinking and judging types. MBTI as a test of personality type
is so popular, that many organisations encourage their employees to reveal their
four letter type so that others in the organisation can better understand their
personality.
From the above mentioned personality traits, it becomes very clear that
understanding of personality is of immense help in the selection of right lands of
people for different jobs. Analysis of an individual’s personality wills reveals his
strong and weak points. A person may be unfit for one job but may be fit for
another because job requirements may be different,
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Understanding the personality will also help in designing the training
programmes for the personnel in the organisation.
Perception is an intellectual process of transforming sensory stimuli to
Page | 24 meaningful information. It is the process of interpreting something that we see
or hear in our mind and use it later to judge and give a verdict on a situation,
person, group etc. Perception is the conscious reception, selection,
processing and interpretation of information by our brain via all
senses. Perception is also used to describe what is perceived. Perception may be
defined as “a cognitive process by which people attend to incoming stimuli,
organize and interpret such stimuli into behaviour.”
Perception can also be defined as “a process by which individuals organize and
interpret their sensory impressions in order to give meaning to their
environment”.
According to Joseph Reitz; “Perception includes all those processes by which an
individual receives information about his environment — seeing, hearing,
feeling, tasting and smelling.”
According to B. V. H. Gilmer, “Perception is the process of becoming aware of
situations, of adding meaningful associations to sensations.”
Uday Pareek said perception can be defined as “the process of receiving,
selecting, organizing, interpreting, checking, and reacting to sensory stimuli or
data.”
Factors Influencing the Perceptual Set:
(a) Characteristics of the Perceiver
(b) Characteristics of the Perceived
(c) Characteristics of the Situation.
A. Characteristics of the Perceiver:
When a person looks at a target and attempts to interpreter what he
sees, his interpretation is greatly influenced by his personal
characteristics which are discussed as follows:
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1. Needs and Motives:
Our need pattern play an important part in how we perceive things. A need is a
feeling of discomfort or tension when one things he is missing something or
requires something. Therefore, unsatisfied needs or motives stimulate
individuals and may exert a strong influence on their perception. When people
are not able to satisfy their needs they are engaged in wishful thinking which is
a way to satisfy their needs not in the real world but imaginary world. In such
cases, people will perceive only those items which suit their wishful thinking.
Motives also influence the perception of people. People who are devious are
prone to see others as also devious.
2. Self Concept:
Self concept indicates how we perceive ourselves which then influences how we
perceive others and the situation we are in. The more we understand ourselves,
the more we are able to perceive others accurately. For example, secure people
tend to see others as warm and friendly. Less secure people often find fault with
Page | 25 others. Perceiving ourselves accurately and enhancing our-self concept are
factors that enhance accurate perception.
3. Past Experience:
Our perceptions are often guided by our past experiences and what we expect to
see. A person’s past experiences mould the way he perceives the current
situation. If a person has been betrayed by a couple of friends in the past, he
would tend to distrust any new friendship that he might be in the process of
developing.
4. Current Psychological State:
The psychological and emotional states of an individual are likely to influence
how things are perceived. If a person is depressed, he is likely to perceive the
same situation differently than if he is elated. Similarly, if a person is scared out
of wits by seeing a snake in the garden, she is likely to perceive a rope under
the bed as a snake.
5. Beliefs:
A person’s beliefs influence his perception to a great extent. Thus, a fact is
conceived not on what it is but what a person believes it to be. The individual
normally censors stimulus inputs to avoid disturbance of his existing beliefs.
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6. Expectations:
Expectations affect the perception of a person. Expectations are related with the
state of anticipation of particular behaviour from a person. For example, a
technical manager will expect that the non- technical people will be ignorant
about the technical features of the product.
7. Situation:
Elements in the environment surrounding an individual like time, location, light,
heat etc., influence his perception. The context in which a person sees the
objects or events is very important.
8. Cultural Upbringing:
A person’s ethics, values and his cultural upbringing also play an important role
in his perception about others. It is difficult to perceive the personality of a
person raised in another culture because our judgement is based upon our own
values.
B. Characteristics of the Perceived:
Characteristics of the person who is being observed can affect what is perceived.
Though, it may go against logic and objectivity, but it cannot be denied that our
perceptions about others are influenced by their physical characteristics such as
appearances, age, gender, manner of communication as well as personality
traits and other forms of behaviour. For example, loud people are more likely to
be noticed in a group than are quite ones. So too are extremely attractive or
extremely ugly individuals.
Page | 26 Persons, objects or events that are similar to each other tend to be grouped
together. People dressed in business suits are generally thought to be
professionals, while employees dressed in ordinary work clothes are assumed to
be lower level employees.
Manner of communication, both verbal and non-verbal, affect our perception
about others. For example, the choice of words and precision of language can
form impressions about the education and sophistication of the person. The tone
of voice indicates the mood of the person. The depth of conversation and choice
of topics provide clues of people’s intelligence. The body language or expressive
behaviour such as how a person sits and the movement of his eyes or a smile
can indicate whether he is nervous or self confident.
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The status or occupation of a person also influences the perception. We tend to
behave in a more respectful way when we are introduced to the principal of a
school in which our child is studying, judge of the high court or Supreme Court
or a famous cricket player. Sometimes our perception of a person tends to be;
biased, depending upon the description given to us by other persons. When we
meet a person who is described to us as warm and friendly, we treat him
differently as compared to meeting a person who is known to be cold &
calculating.
C. Characteristics of the Situation:
The context in which we see objects or events is very important. The surrounding
environment and the elements present in it influence our perception while
perceiving a particular situation or event, its physical, social and organisational
setting can also influence the perception. For example, if you meet a person for
the first time and he is with a person whom you respect and admire, you will
create a favourable image about him in your mind as compared to a situation in
which you see him with another person whom you intensely dislike. Of course,
the initial impressions may change with the passage of time, but the saying that
“First impression is the last impression” is very valued.
Location of a given event is also very important factor in determining the
behaviour. For example, a conversation with the boss taking place in a casual
reception area may be perceived differently than when taking place in the
boss’s office with the door closed. Organisational setting also affects the
behaviour of the people. An organisation setting where people are given an
opportunity to interact in a friendly and sociable work situation, they become
more trustworthy and less defensive.
Perceptual Process
Perceptual process are the different stages of perception we go through. The
different stages are −
• Receiving
• Selecting
• Organizing
• Interpreting
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Receiving
Receiving is the first and most important stage in the process of perception. It is
the initial stage in which a person collects all information and receives the
information through the sense organs.
Selecting
Selecting is the second stage in the process. Here a person doesn’t receive the
data randomly but selectively. A person selects some information out of all in
accordance with his interest or needs. The selection of data is dominated by
various external and internal factors. • External factors −The factors that
influence the perception of an individual externally are intensity, size, contrast,
movement, repetition, familiarity, and novelty.
• Internal factors −The factors that influence the perception of an individual
internally are psychological requirements, learning, background, experience,
self-acceptance, and interest.
Organizing
Keeping things in order or say in a synchronized way is organizing. In order to
make sense of the data received, it is important to organize them.
We can organize the data by −
• Grouping them on the basis of their similarity, proximity, closure, continuity. •
Establishing a figure ground is the basic process in perception. Here by figure we
mean what is kept as main focus and by ground we mean background stimuli,
which are not given attention.
• Perceptual constancy that is the tendency to stabilize perception so that
contextual changes don’t affect them.
Interpreting
Finally, we have the process of interpreting which means forming an idea about a
particular object depending upon the need or interest. Interpretation means that
the information we have sensed and organized, is finally given a meaning by
turning it into something that can be categorized. It includes stereotyping, halo
effect etc.
Errors in Perception
There are some errors in perception;
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• Illusion.
• Hallucination.
• Halo Effect.
• Stereotyping.
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• Similarity.
• Horn Effect.
• Contrast.
Illusion
The illusion is a false perception. Here the person will mistake a stimulus and
perceive it wrongly.
For example, in the dark, a rope is mistaken for a snake or vice versa. The voice
of an unknown person is mistaken as a friend’s voice. A person standing at a
distance who is not known may be perceived as a known person.
Hallucination
Sometimes we come across instances where the individual perceives some
stimulus, even when it is not present.
This phenomenon is known as a hallucination. The person may see an object,
person, etc. or he may listen to some voice though there are no objects and
sounds in reality.
Selective Perception
Selective perception means the situation when people selectively interpret what
they see on the basis of their interests, background, experience, and attitudes.
It means any characteristics that make a person, object, or event stand out will
increase the probability that it will be perceived.
Because it is impossible for us to assimilate everything we see, only certain
stimuli can be taken in.
Halo Effect
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The individual is evaluated on the basis of perceived positive quality, feature, or
trait. A halo effect operates when we draw a general impression about an
individual based on a single characteristic, such as intelligence, sociability, or
appearance.
In other words, this is the tendency to rate a man uniformly high or low in other
traits if he is extraordinarily high or low in one particular trait: If a worker has
few absences, his supervisor might give him a high rating in all other areas of
work.
Stereotyping
People usually can fall into at least one general category based on physical or
behavioral traits then they will be evaluated. When we judge someone on the
basis of our perception of the group to which he or she belongs, we are using the
shortcut called stereotyping.
For example, a boss might assume that a worker from a Middle East country is
Page | 29 lazy and cannot meet performance objectives, even if the worker tried his best.
Similarity
Often, people tend to seek out and rate those who are similar to themselves
more positively. This tendency to approve of similarity may cause evaluators to
give better ratings to employees who exhibit the same interests, work methods,
points of view, or standards.
Horn Effect
When the individual is completely evaluated based on a negative quality or
feature perceived, these results in an overall lower rating than an acceptable
rate.
He is not formally dressed up in the office. That’s why he may be casual at work
too.
Contrast
The tendency to rate people relative to other people rather than to the individual
performance he or she is doing. Rather will, evaluate an employee by comparing
that employee’s performance with other employees.
The influence the group has on individual members and vice versa.
Types of Groups
1. Formal Groups
2. Informal Groups
4. Secondary Groups
5. Command Groups
6. Task Groups
7. Interest Groups
8. Reference Groups
1. Forming:
Characteristics:
2. Storming
Characteristics:
3. Norming:
Characteristics:
Characteristics:
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High productivity and collaboration.
Stage Descriptions
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Determinants of Group Behaviour:
1. Group Structure
2. Group Composition
3. Group Processes
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Communication: Effective and open communication leads to better
decision-making and conflict resolution.
4. Organizational Context
5. External Environment
Time Pressure: Urgency can increase stress but also focus group
efforts.
Team Dynamics:
Meaning of Team
A team is a group of individuals who come together to achieve a common
goal or complete a specific task. Unlike a general group,
Types of Teams
2. Cross-Functional Teams
3. Self-Managed Teams
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4. Virtual Teams
6. Problem-Solving Teams
7. Committees
Sources of Conflict
1. Interpersonal Differences
2. Communication Problems
5. Organizational Structure
6. Differences in Goals
7. Cultural Differences
8. Poor Leadership
3. Collaborative Problem-Solving
4. Negotiation
5. Mediation
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7. Avoidance (When Appropriate)
1. Problem Identification
2. Diagnosis
4. Implementation of Interventions
6. Institutionalization of Change
Process of OD:
Activities:
Activities:
Activities:
Activities:
Activities:
Activities:
Conclusion:
DIAGNOSING:
1. Systems Thinking:
The model ensures that all relevant aspects of the organization are
considered.
5. Modeling Change:
It focuses on how people are affected by the change and aims to minimize
resistance while maximizing engagement and adoption.
Improves Communication:
It ensures consistent and transparent communication across all
levels of the organization, helping everyone understand the need for
change and how it affects them.
Enhances Efficiency:
By preparing thoroughly, organizations can avoid disruptions,
reduce errors, and implement changes more smoothly and quickly.
Mitigates Risks:
Proper planning helps identify potential issues early and allows for
proactive risk mitigation.
1. Organizational Culture
3. Communication
Clear, transparent, and continuous communication reduces
uncertainty.
7. External Environment
8. Organizational Structure
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