01 - Introduction To Organizational Behavior
01 - Introduction To Organizational Behavior
01 - Introduction To Organizational Behavior
Robbins
Timothy A. Judge
Organizational Behavior, 17th ed., Pearson
INTRODUCTION TO
ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOR
Learning Objectives
1–2
The Importance of Interpersonal
Skills
1–3
What Managers Do
Managerial
ManagerialActivities
Activities
••Make
Makedecisions
decisions
••Allocate
Allocateresources
resources
••Direct
Directactivities
activitiesofofothers
othersto
to
attain
attaingoals
goals
1–4
Where Managers Work
1–5
Management Functions
Planning
Planning Organizing
Organizing
Management
Management
Functions
Functions
Controlling
Controlling Leading
Leading
1–6
Management Roles
by Henry Mintzberg
Interpersonal Roles
• Figurehead, Leader and Liaisons
Informational Roles
• Monitor, Disseminator and Spokesperson
Decisional Roles
• Entrepreneur, Disturbance Handler and Resource
allocator and Negotiator
1–7
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
situation 1–8
ORGANIZATION BEHAVIOR
1–9
Contributing Disciplines
Sociology Anthropology
1-10
Psychology
Unit of Analysis:
Individual
Contributions to OB:
Learning, motivation, personality, emotions, perception
Training, leadership effectiveness, job satisfaction
Individual decision making, performance appraisal attitude measurement
Employee selection, work design, and work stress 1-11
Social Psychology
Contributions to OB:
Behavioral change
Attitude change
Communication
Group processes
Group decision making 1-12
Sociology
Unit of Analysis:
› Organizational System › -- Group
Contributions to OB:
› Organizational culture › Comparative values
› Organizational › Comparative attitudes
environment › Cross-cultural analysis 1-14
Few Absolutes in OB
1-16
Developing an OB Model
1–17
Developing an OB Model
Independent
Independent
Variables
Variables
The independent variable (X) can be at any of these three levels in this model:
Individual
Biographical characteristics, personality and emotions, values and attitudes, ability,
perception, motivation, individual learning, and individual decision making
Group
Communication, group decision making, leadership and trust, group structure,
conflict, power and politics, and work teams
Organization System
Organizational culture, human resource policies and practices, and organizational
structure and design
1-21
The Dependent Variables
x 1-22