perilaku individu chapter 9 mata kuliah: j0754 - pengelolaan organisasi entrepreneurial dosen...
TRANSCRIPT
Perilaku Individu
Chapter 9
Mata kuliah : J0754 - Pengelolaan Organisasi EntrepreneurialDosen Pembuat : D3122 - Rudy AryantoTahun : 2009
Learning Objectives
– Define perception and explain its role in understanding and coping with organizational life
– Describe how self-efficacy can influence an employee’s behavior
– Discuss why increasing diversity of the workforce requires the adoption of a different approach/style of managing employees
– Compare the meaning of the psychological contract from employee and employer perspectives
– Explain why it’s difficult to change an attitude
Understanding Behavior
• Variables that influence behavior– Abilities and skills– Background– Demographic variables
• Can any manager modify, mold, or reconstruct behaviors?– This is much debated among behavioral scientists and
managerial practitioners
Individual Behavior
• To understand individual differences, managers must– Observe and recognize the differences– Study variables that influence individual behavior– Discover relationships among the variables
Individual Behavior
• Research finds that behavior – Is caused– Is goal directed– Can be observed – Is measurable– Is motivated
• Behavior that is not directly observable is also important in accomplishing goals
Individual Behavior
• Questions that help managers pinpoint performance issues
– Does the employee have the skill and ability to perform the job?
– Does the employee have the resources to perform the job?
– Is the employee aware of the performance problem?
Individual Behavior• Questions (continued)
– When did the performance problem surface?
– How do the employee’s co-workers react to the performance problem?
– What can I do as a manager to alleviate the performance problem?
Individual Differences• Poor performance
– Even highly motivated employees may not have the abilities or skills to perform well
• Ability– A biological or learned trait that permits a person to do
something mental or physical
• Skills– Task-related competencies
Individual Differences• Job analysis
– Defining and studying a job in terms of behavior
– Specifying education and training needed to perform the job
– Used to take some of the guesswork out of matching jobs to people
• Matching people with jobs is often a problem
Matching People to Jobs• Matching people to jobs involves
– Employee selection– Training and development– Career planning– Employee counseling
• Managers must examine– Job content– Required behaviors– Preferred behaviors
Skills and Abilities• Mental ability examples
– Flexibility– Fluency and verbal comprehension– Inductive reasoning– Associative memory– Span memory– Number facility– Deductive reasoning– Spatial orientation and visualization
Skills and Abilities• Physical skill examples
– Dynamic strength– Extent flexibility– Gross body coordination– Gross body equilibrium– Stamina
Demographics
• Among the most important demographic classifications– Gender– Race– Cultural diversity
Demographics• White male research results should
not influence– Decisions– Prescriptions– Techniques
• Faulty generalizations lead to– Improper assumptions– Inadequate solutions– Inaccurate rewards and evaluations
Perception• Perception is based on five senses
– Sight– Touch– Hearing– Taste– Smell
• Perception helps individuals– Select, organize, store, and interpret stimuli into a
meaningful and coherent picture of the world.
Differing Perceptions• A manager believes employees have
opportunities to judge how to do the job– The employee feels there is no freedom
to make judgments
• A worker’s response to a request is based on what she thought she heard– It was not based on what was actually requested
• A manager considers a product to be of high quality– The customer feels it is poorly made
Perceptual Differences & BehaviorFreedom worker is given
Manager’s perception
Worker has lots of freedom to make decisions
Manager’s behavior
No concern about freedom given to worker
Manager’s behavior
Puzzled by the absence record of worker
Worker’s perception
I am not given freedom to make decisions
Worker’s behavior
Feeling of being left outStaying home
Worker’s behavior
Belief that no one really cares
Stereotyping• Over-generalized, over-simplified belief about
people’s personal characteristics– Most people engage in stereotyping– Applies to both people and occupations– Self-perpetuating– Affects promotions, motivation, job design, or
performance evaluation
• Situational factors, needs, emotions can affect perceptual accuracy
Stereotyping• Stereotyping is perpetuated by
– Selective perception– The manager’s characteristics– Situational factors– Needs– Emotions
Attribution• Dispositional attributions
– Emphasize some aspect of the individual
• Situational attributions– Emphasize the environment’s effect on behavior
• Before deciding if behavior is due to the person or the situation, consider– Consensus– Distinctiveness– Consistency
Attribution• Types of attribution errors
– Attributional bias– Fundamental attribution error– General positivity (the Pollyanna principle)– Self-serving bias
Attitudes• A positive or negative feeling or mental state of
readiness– Learned, organized through experience– Influences a person’s response to people, objects, and
situations
• Components of an attitude– Affect– Cognition– Behavior
Outcomes of Attitudes
Work factors Components Responses
Job design
Manager style
Company policies
Technology
Salary
Benefits
Affect
Cognition
Behavior
Emotional
Perceptual
Action
Stimuli Attitudes Outcomes
Cognitive Dissonance
• A mental state of anxiety– Occurs when there’s a conflict among
an individual’s various cognitions after a decision has been made
Cognitive Dissonance• Organizational implications
– Helps explain the choices made by someone with attitude inconsistency
– Can help predict a person’s propensity to change attitudes
• If one is required to do or say things that contract personal attitudes– An attitude may be chosen that is more compatible with
what they’ve said or done
Attitudes• Changing employee attitudes
– Can hinder job performance
• Factors that affect attitude change– Trust in the sender– The message itself– The situation
Attitudes and Values• Values
– The conscious, affective desires and wants that guide behavior
• Once internalized, values– Become a standard for guiding one’s actions– Affect the perceptions of appropriate ends and the
appropriate means to those ends
Attitudes and Job Satisfaction• Job satisfaction
– Attitude individuals have about their jobs– Results from their perception of the jobs
• Dimensions linked to job satisfaction– Pay– Job– Promotion opportunities– Supervisor– Co-workers
Satisfaction-Performance Views
1. Job satisfaction Job PerformanceJob Performancecauses
“The satisfied worker is more productive.”
2. Job satisfaction Job PerformanceJob Performanceis caused by
“The more productive worker is satisfied.”
3. Job satisfaction Job PerformanceJob Performance“There is no specific direction or relationship.”
Job Satisfaction Comparison• Prottas and Thompson findings
– Self-employment is a better career choice than organizational employment
• Higher levels of job satisfaction• Lower job stress• Higher levels of job autonomy satisfaction• Lower levels of job pressure
Job-Customer Satisfaction
• Most businesses in developed countries are service oriented– Only satisfied customers return– Satisfied employees increase customer satisfaction and
loyalty
• Job satisfaction and customer satisfaction flow in both directions– Rude, unhappy customers can result
in dissatisfied employees
Personality
• Characteristics, tendencies, and temperaments– Determines commonalities and
differences in people’s behavior
Personality• Personality is influenced by
– Hereditary factors– Cultural factors– Social class and other group
membership forces– Family and environment
Ego Defense Mechanisms• Some ego defense mechanisms
– Rationalization– Identification– Compensation– Denial of reality
Theories of Personality• Trait Personality Theories
– Predispositions direct the behavior of an individual in a consistent pattern
• Psychodynamic Personality Theories– Freudian approach (id, superego, ego)– Emphasis on subconscious determinants of behavior
• Humanistic Personality Theories– Emphasis on growth and self-actualization
Measuring Personality• Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory
– Statements to which one responds True, False, or Cannot Say
– Covers health, psychosomatic symptoms, neurological disorders, social attitudes, phobias, delusions, and sadistic tendencies
Measuring Personality• Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI)
– Assesses personality or cognitive style– Extroverted or introverted, sensory or intuitive, thinking
or feeling, perceiving or judging
Big Five Model• “Big Five” personality dimensions
– Conscientiousness– Extraversion-Introversion– Agreeableness– Emotional Stability– Openness to Experience
Self-Efficacy• Self-efficacy has three dimensions
– Magnitude– Strength– Generality
• A person with high self-efficacy is motivated toward achievement
• Machiavellianism– Negative connotation associated with political
maneuvering and power manipulation
Creativity
• The generation of novel ideas that may be converted into opportunities– Should be a core competency– The first step in the innovation process
Developing Creativity• Buffering
– Look for ways to absorb the risks of creative decisions made by employees
• Organizational time-outs– Give people time off to work on a
problem and think things through
• Intuition– Give half-baked or raw ideas a chance
Developing Creativity• Innovative attitudes
– Encourage everyone to solve problems
• Innovative organizational structures– Let employees see and interact with
many managers and mentors
Emotional Intelligence
• The ability to accurately perceive, evaluate, express, and regulate emotions and feelings
The Psychological Contract
• An implied understanding of mutual contributions between a person and an organization