Encyclopedia Organization Management (768 Terms)
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Management Topic
Keyword
Definition
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Organization Management
360 degree feedback
Performance appraisal that uses the input of superiors, subordinates, peers, and clients or customers of the appraised individual.
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Organization Management
Absenteeism
Failure to report to work.
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Organization Management
Acceptance theory of The theory that the manager's authority depends on the subordinate's acceptance of the manager's right to give and expect compliance with directives. authority
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Organization Management
Accommodating
A conflict management style in which one cooperates with the other party while not asserting one's own interest.
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Organization Management
Accommodating style
A style that involves trying to resolve conflict by giving in to the desires of others, sometimes without raising conflicting points/issues at all.
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Organization Management
Action learning
A process in which a group of people come together, more or less regularly, to help each other learn from experience. Participants typically come from different organizations or situations, and each of them is involved in different activities.
A to Z
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Encyclopedia Organization Management (768 Terms)
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Organization Management
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Action planning
A process usually associated with training, linking improvements or actions with what has been learned. Action planning establishes a course of actions chosen to realize the application of what was learned or decided.
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Organization Management
Action research
A participatory, democratic process concerned with developing practical knowledge in the pursuit of worthwhile human purposes, grounded in a participatory worldview, which is currently still emerging. It seeks to bring together action and reflection, theory and practice, in participation with others, in the pursuit of practical solutions to issues of pressing concern to people, and more generally the flourishing of individual persons and their communities.
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Organization Management
Active listening
A technique for improving the accuracy of information reception by paying close attention to the sender.
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Organization Management
Actor-observer effect The propensity for actors and observers to view the causes of the actor's behavior differently.
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Organization Management
Adaptive capacities
The capacities needed for an organization to learn and change in response to changing circumstances.
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Organization Management
Additive tasks
Tasks in which group performance is dependent upon the sum of the performance of individual group members.
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Organization Management
Adhocracy
This structure is typically found in young organizations in highly technical fields. Within it, decision making is spread throughout the organization, power resides with the experts, horizontal and vertical specialization exist, and there is little formalization.
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Organization Management
Administrative hierarchy
The system of reporting relationships in the organization, from the lowest to the highest managerial levels.
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Organization Management
Administrative model
A set of decision making principles that recognize that a completely rational analysis of information and choice options is often not feasible in realistic decision-making.
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Organization Management
Advanced information The generation, aggregation, storage, modification and speedy transmission of information made possible by the advent of computers and related devices. technology
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Organization Management
Adversarial intervention
Involves a manager listening to both parties present evidence to support their cases and then making a decision.
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Organization Management
Advisory teams
Small groups of employees (10-20) that meet a few hours a week to suggest solutions to problems in their work (e.g., quality circle).
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Organization Management
Affect
A person's feeling toward something.
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Organization Management
Affective commitment Commitment based on identification and involvement with an organization.
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Organization Management
Age norms
Widely accepted expectations in society about appropriate behavior for a person at a given age.
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Organization Management
Agreeableness
A person's ability to get along with others.
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Organization Management
All-channel network
In this type of network, all members communicate with all other members.
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Organization Management
Analytic style
A style characteristic of someone who approaches decisions in a highly rational way and who is capable of tolerating uncertainty/ambiguity.
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Anchoring effect
The inadequate adjustment of subsequent estimates from an initial estimate that serves as an anchor.
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Organization Management
Applied research
Conducted to solve particular problems or answer specific questions.
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Organization Management
Apprentice
A junior person, sometimes called a protĂŠgĂŠ, who has a mentor
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Organization Management
Assimilation
The process through which a minority group learns the ways of the dominant group. In organizations favouring assimilation, people from diverse backgrounds are expected to change to fit the existing organizational culture.
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Organization Management
Attitude
A fairly stable emotional tendency to respond consistently to some specific object, situation, person, or category of people.
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Organization Management
Attribution
The process by which causes or motives are assigned to explain peoples' behavior.
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Organization Management
Attribution theory
Suggests that we observe behaviour and then attribute causes to it. Also, suggests that employees observe their own behaviour, determine whether it is a response to external or internal factors, and shape their future motivated behaviour accordingly.
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Organization Management
Attribution.
The process by which causes or motives are assigned to explain peoples' behavior.
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Organization Management
Audience extraction
The process whereby perceivers (the audience) subtlely pulls/draws behavior from others (also known as the Pygmalion effect).
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Organization Management
Audience selectivity
This terms refers to our tendency as social observers to selectively look for and process certain pieces of information about people to form impressions
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Organization Management
Authoritarianism
The belief that power and status differences are appropriate within hierarchical social systems such as organizations.
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Organization Management
Authority
Power that has been legitimized within a particular social context.
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Organization Management
Autonomy
The freedom to schedule one's own work activities and decide work procedures.
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Organization Management
Avoidance (negative reinforcement)
The opportunity to avoid or escape from an unpleasant circumstance after exhibiting behaviour. Occurs when the interacting parties' goals are incompatible and the interaction between groups is relatively unimportant to the attainment of the goals.
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Organization Management
Avoiding
A conflict management style characterized by low assertiveness of one's own interests and low cooperation with the other party.
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Organization Management
Avoiding style
When faced with conflict, a person who uses this style often try to ignore conflict all together rather than trying to directly resolve it.
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Organization Management
Avoiding.
A conflict management style characterized by low assertiveness of one's own interests and low cooperation with the other party.
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Organization Management
Basic research
Discovering new knowledge rather than solving specific problems.
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Organization Management
Behavioral style
A decision making who is very attuned to how decisions affect employees and the work environment; tends to be more deliberate and slower in style.
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Organization Management
Behavioural approach
This approach to leadership tries to identify behaviours that differentiate effective leaders from nonleaders. It uses guidelines, suboptimizing, and satisficing in making decisions.
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Organization Management
Benchmarking
A systematic process for examining the products, services, and work processes of firms that are recognized as illustrating the best practices for organizational improvement.
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Organization Management
Benefits
An important form of indirect compensation. big five personality traits A set of personality traits that are especially relevant to organizations.
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Organization Management
Biosocial life stages
Alternating periods of stability and transition, with predictable themes that are based in psychological and biological factors and patterns of social expectations.
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Organization Management
Body language
Nonverbal communication by means of a sender's bodily motions, facial expressions, or physical location.
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Organization Management
Boundary roles
Positions in which organizational members are required to interact with members of other organizations or with the public.
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Organization Management
Bounded rationality
A decision strategy that relies on limited information and that reflects time constraints and political considerations.
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Organization Management
Brainstorming
An attempt to increase the number of creative solution alternatives to problems by focusing on idea generation rather than evaluation.
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Organization Management
Breakthrough culture
A corporate value system which recognizes that normal business rules and pressures don't apply to innovative thinking.
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Organization Management
Bureaucracy
Max Weber's ideal type of organization that included a strict chain of command, detailed rules, high specialization, centralized power, and selection and promotion based on technical competence.
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Organization Management
Burnout
Emotional exhaustion, depersonalization, and reduced personal accomplishment among those who work with people.
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Organization Management
Capacity
The ability of individuals and organizations to perform effectively, efficiently, and in a sustainable manner.
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Organization Management
Capacity development
An ongoing process by which individuals, groups, organizations, and societies increase their abilities to perform core functions, solve problems, define and achieve objectives, and understand and deal with their development needs in a broad context and sustainable manner.
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Organization Management
Career
An evolving sequence of work activities and positions that individuals experience over time as well as the associated attitudes, knowledge, and competencies that develop throughout one's life.
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Organization Management
Career
An evolving sequence of work activities and positions that individuals experience over time as well as the associated attitudes, knowledge, and competencies that develop throughout one's life.
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Organization Management
Career advisors and counsellors
These people can help others find and analyze career information, but the ultimate career decision must be made by the individual.
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Organization Management
Career management The process of implementing organizational career planning.
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Organization Management
Career orientation
The fairly stable pattern of preferred occupational activities, talents, values, and attitudes.
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Organization Management
Career pathing
The identification of a certain sequence of jobs in a career that represent a progression through the organization.
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Organization Management
Career planning
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Organization Management
Career skills portfolio The sum total of one's occupational skills, abilities, and knowledge.
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Organization Management
Career stages
General patterns of developmental issues, key tasks, and changes in work role activities.
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Organization Management
Case study
The detailed investigation of one or more organizations, or groups within organizations, with a view to providing an analysis of the context and processes involved in the phenomenon under study. The phenomenon is not isolated from its context (as in laboratory research for example) but is examined in relation to its context.
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Organization Management
Central tendency
The tendency to assign most ratees to middle-range job performance categories.
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Organization Management
Central traits
Personal characteristics of a target person that are of particular interest to a perceiver.
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Organization Management
Centralization
The extent to which decision making power is localized in a particular part of an organization.
A system in which individuals evaluate their abilities and interests, consider alternative career opportunities, establish career goals, and plan practical development activities.
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Organization Management
Chain network
In this type of a network, each member communicates with the person above and below but not with the individuals on each end.
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Organization Management
Chain of command
Lines of authority and formal reporting relationship.
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Organization Management
Change
The implementation of a program or plan to move an organization and/or its members to a more satisfactory state.
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Organization Management
Change
The implementation of a program or plan to move an organization and/or its members to a more satisfactory state.
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Organization Management
Change agents
Experts in the application of behavioral science knowledge to organizational diagnosis and change.
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Organization Management
Change-oriented behavior
Leadership behavior focused on making significant change happen (e.g., communicating an inspiring vision, gaining subordinate commitment for change).
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Organization Management
Channel noise
A disturbance in communication that is primarily a function of the medium.
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Organization Management
Charisma
The ability to command strong loyalty and devotion from followers and thus have the potential for strong influence among them.
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Organization Management
Charismatic leadership
A form of leadership in which the leader is viewed as having extraordinary abilities, being 'larger than life,' and inspiring tremendous effort. Often the result of a complex interplay between leader characteristics, subordinate perceptions, and situational pressures.
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Organization Management
Churning
When firms fire many people and hire many people at the same time.
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Organization Management
Circle network
In this type of network, each member communicates with the people on both sides but with no one else.
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Organization Management
Civil law
The most common legal system in the world, practiced in over 70 countries (e.g.,Germany, Japan, Turkey, etc.). Referred to as code law since it is based on an elaborate list of rules about actions and misdeeds, but considerable consistency in adjudication.
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Organization Management
Classical conditioning A simple form of learning that links a conditioned response with an unconditioned stimulus.
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Organization Management
Classical organization Focused on how organizations can be structured most effectively to meet their goals. theory
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Organization Management
Classical viewpoint
An early prescription on management that advocated high specialization of labor, intensive coordination, and centralized decision making.
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Organization Management
Coercive power
Power derived from the use of punishment and threat.
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Organization Management
Cognition
The knowledge a person presumes to have about something.
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Organization Management
Cognitive biases
Tendencies to acquire and process information in an error-prone way.
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Organization Management
Cognitive dissonance A feeling of tension experienced when certain cognitions are contradictory or inconsistent with each other.
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Organization Management
Collaborating
A conflict management style that maximizes both assertiveness and cooperation.
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Organization Management
Collaborating style
A style that ranks high on both assertiveness and cooperation; often called a win-win approach because efforts are made to see the best options for both parties to conflict.
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Organization Management
Collective knowledge Collective knowledge is an outcome of organizational or institutional learning.
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Organization Management
Collectivism
The extent to which people emphasize the good of the group or society; compare with individualism.
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Organization Management
Command group
A relatively permanent, formal group with functional reporting relationships.
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Organization Management
Commitment
A pledge or obligation to carry out some action or policy or to give support to a policy or person.
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Organization Management
Common law
Also a popular legal system around the world (e.g., U.S., U.K, etc.). In contrast to civil law's reliance on elaborate codes, common law uses precedent or the balance of prior rulings to resolve disputes.
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Organization Management
Communication
The process by which information is exchanged between a sender and a receiver.
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Organization Management
Communication and decision-making stage
A stage of group development in which members discuss their feelings more openly and agree on group goals and individual roles in the group.
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Organization Management
Communication fidelity
The degree of correspondence between the message intended by the source and the message understood by the receiver.
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Organization Management
Compensation
Applying one's skills in a particular area to make up for failure in another area.
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Organization Management
Compensation package
The total array of money (wages, salary, commission), incentives, benefits, perquisites, and awards provided to an employee by an organization.
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Organization Management
Competing
A conflict management style that maximizes assertiveness and minimizes cooperation.
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Organization Management
Competition
Occurs when goals are incompatible and the interactions between groups are important to meeting goals.
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Organization Management
Competitive strategy An outline of how a business intends to compete with other firms in the same industry.
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Organization Management
Complexity
The extent to which an organization divides labor vertically, horizontally, and geographically.
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Organization Management
Compliance
Conformity to a social norm prompted by the desire to acquire rewards or avoid punishment.
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Organization Management
Compressed schedule
A set of work schedules that use non-traditional methods of completing a 40 hour work week (e.g., 4-40; 4 days of 10-hr work).
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Organization Management
Compressed workweek
An alternative work schedule in which employees work fewer than the normal five days a week but still put in a normal number of hours per week.
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Organization Management
Compromise
A conflict management style that combines intermediate levels of assertiveness and cooperation.
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Organization Management
Compromising style
A person using this style approaches conflict as a give-and-take situation giving up something to get something else.
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Organization Management
Conceptual skills
The manager uses conceptual skills to think in the abstract.
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Organization Management
Conceptual style
A decision maker who can easily see 'the big picture' and is not necessarily mired in the fine details.
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Organization Management
Configuration
An organization's shape. It reflects the division of labour and the means of coordinating the divided tasks.
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Organization Management
Confirmation bias
The tendency to seek out information that conforms to one's own definition of or solution to a problem.
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Organization Management
Conflict
Disagreement among parties. It has both positive and negative characteristics.
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Organization Management
Conflict model
A very personal approach to decision making. It deals with the personal conflicts people experience in particularly difficult decision situations.
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Organization Management
Conflict resolution
Occurs when a manager resolves conflict that has become harmful or serious.
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Organization Management
Conflict stimulation
A strategy of increasing conflict in order to motivate change.
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Organization Management
Congruence
A condition in which a person's words, thoughts, feelings, and actions all contain the same message.
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Organization Management
Conjunction fallacy
Related to the representativeness heuristic in that instead of decreasing our probability judgements for detailed, conjunctive predictions, we actually often believe they are more likely to occur than simple/single events themselves.
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Organization Management
Conjunctive tasks
Tasks in which group performance is limited by the performance of the poorest group member.
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Organization Management
Conscientiousness
The number of goals on which a person focuses.
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Organization Management
Consensus cues
Attribution cues that reflect how a person's behavior compares with that of others.
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Conservative shift
The tendency for groups to make less risky decisions than the average risk initially advocated by their individual members.
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Consideration
The extent to which a leader is approachable and shows personal concern for subordinates.
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Organization Management
Consideration behaviour
Involves being concerned with subordinates' feelings and respecting subordinates' ideas.
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Organization Management
Consistency cues
Attribution cues that reflect how consistently a person engages in some behavior over time.
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Organization Management
Content theories of motivation
Theories that identify the needs that arouse or energize employee behavior.
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Context
The effect of the background under which a message often takes on more and richer meaning. Context is especially important in cross-cultural interactions because some cultures are said to be high context (the culture provides many understood ways to interpret messages) or low context (the words themselves explicitly carry a lot of the message).
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Organization Management
Contingency approach
An approach to management that recognizes that there is no one best way to manage, and that an appropriate management style depends on the demands of the situation.
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Organization Management
Contingency perspective
Suggests that in most organizations, situations and outcomes are contingent on, or influenced by, other variables.
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Contingency plans
Alternative actions to take if the primary source of action is unexpectedly disrupted or rendered inappropriate.
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Organization Management
Contingency theory
Fred Fiedler's theory that states that the association between leadership orientation and group effectiveness is contingent upon how favorable the situation is for exerting influence.
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Organization Management
Continuance commitment
Commitment based on the costs that would be incurred in leaving an organization.
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Continuous improvement
A perspective that suggests performance should constantly be en-hanced.
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Continuous reinforcement
With this type of reinforcement, behaviour is rewarded every time it occurs.
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Contrast effects
Previously interviewed job applicants affect an interviewer's perception of a current applicant, leading to an exaggeration of differences between applicants.
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Contributions
An individual's contributions to an organization include such things as effort, skills, ability, time, and loyalty.
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Organization Management
Control and organization stage
A stage of group development in which the group is mature and members work together and are flexible, adaptive, and selfcorrecting.
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Organization Management
Control group
A group of research subjects who have not been exposed to the experimental treatment.
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Organization Management
Controlling
The process of monitoring and correcting the actions of the organization and its members to keep them directed toward their goals.
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Organization Management
Coordination
A process of facilitating timing, communication, and feedback among work tasks.
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Organization Management
Corporate culture
The whole collection of beliefs, values, and behaviors of a firm that send messages to those within and outside the company about how business is done.
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Organization Management
Corporate wellness programs
Long-term programs that also act to increase and promote employee health and reduce stress (fitness facilities, health classes, etc.).
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Organization Management
Correlational research
Research that attempts to measure variables precisely and examine relationships among these variables without introducing change into the research setting.
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Cosmopolite
Links the organization to the external environment and may also be the opinion leader in the group.
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Organization Management
Creativity
The production of novel but potentially useful ideas.
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Organization Management
Cross-functional teams
Work groups that bring people with different functional specialties together to better invent, design, or deliver a product or service.
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Organization Management
Cultural context
The cultural information that surrounds a communication episode.
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Organization Management
Cultural values
The values employees need to have and act on for the organization to act on strategic values.
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Organization Management
Customer departmentation
Relatively self-contained units deliver an organization's products or services to specific customer groups.
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Organization Management
Customer-based structure
Similar in some respects to product-based structures, this type of structure uses customer groups or segments as an organizing principle.
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Organization Management
Debasement
A series of socialization experiences designed to humble people and remove some self-confidence.
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Organization Management
Decision making
The process of developing commitment to some course of action.
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Organization Management
Decision rule
A statement that tells a decision maker which alternative to choose based on the characteristics of the decision situation.
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Organization Management
Decision-choice models
Rational models that shift the focus away from the information sources to the actual options in trying to reach a systematic decision.
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Organization Management
Decoding
The process by which the receiver of the message interprets the message's meaning.
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Organization Management
Defense mechanisms Psychological attempts to reduce the anxiety associated with stress.
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Organization Management
Defensive avoidance
Making no changes in present activities and avoiding any further contact associated with issues because there appears to be no hope of finding a better solution.
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Organization Management
Deficiency needs
A category in Maslow's hierarchy of needs. It includes physiological, security, and belongingness needs.
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Organization Management
Delegation
Typically refers to a context in which a manager hands over the responsibility and decision control for various tasks or jobs to others, usually subordinates.
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Organization Management
Delphi technique
A method of pooling a large number of expert judgments through a series of increasingly refined questionnaires.
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Organization Management
Departmentalization
The manner in whichdivided tasks are combined and allocated to work groups.
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Organization Management
Dependent variable
In an experiment, the variable that is expected to vary as a result of the manipulation of the independent variable.
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Organization Management
Devil's advocate
A person appointed to identify and challenge the weakness of a proposed plan of strategy.
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Organization Management
Diagnosis
The systematic collection of information relevant to impending organizational change.
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Organization Management
Diagnostic skills
The manager uses diagnostic skills to understand cause-and-effect relationships and to recognize the optimal solutions to problems.
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Organization Management
Differentiation
The tendency for managers in separate departments to differ in terms of goals, time spans, and interpersonal styles.
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Organization Management
Diffusion
The process by which innovations move through an organization.
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Organization Management
Diffusion of responsibility
The ability of group members to share the burden of the negative consequences of a poor decision.
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Diffusion.
The process by which innovations move through an organization.
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Organization Management
Direct observation
Gathering information about things that can be observed. For example, by visiting an organization, one can directly collect information on the physical surroundings. By observing meetings, one can observe who shows up, how people interact, and what decisions are taken.
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Organization Management
Direct use of evaluation results
The instrumental use of evaluation results by decision-makers as the basis for a decision. Direct use occurs when information or findings are applied directly to change an action or alter a decision.
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Organization Management
Directive style
A decision making style characterized by a person who, while analytic, doesn't enjoy juggling lots of data they make a decision and move on.
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Organization Management
Discrepancy theory
A theory that job satisfaction stems from the discrepancy between the job outcomes wanted and the outcomes that are perceived to be obtained.
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Disjunctive tasks
Tasks in which group performance is dependent upon the performance of the best group member.
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Organization Management
Displacement
Directing feelings of anger at a safe target rather than expressing them where they might be punished.
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Organization Management
Dispositional attributions
Explanations for behavior based on an actor's personality or intellect.
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Organization Management
Distinctiveness cues
Attribution cues that reflect the extent to which a person engages in some behavior across a variety of situations.
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Distress
The unpleasant stress that accompanies negative events.
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Organization Management
Distributive fairness
Fairness that occurs when people receive what they think they deserve from their jobs.
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Organization Management
Distributive negotiation
Win-lose negotiation in which a fixed amount of assets is divided between parties.
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Organization Management
Diversity programs
A set of training and information dissemination programs that help employees recognize the value of differences among people.
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Organization Management
Division of labour
The extent to which the organization's work is divided into different jobs to be done by different people.
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Organization Management
Divisionalized form
This structure is typical of old, very large organizations. Within it, the organization is divided according to the different markets served. Horizontal and vertical specialization exists between divisions and headquarters. Decision making is divided between divisions and headquarters, and outputs are standardized.
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Organization Management
Domestic firm
Firms who largely do business in their home country, although they may export some of their products or services across borders.
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Downsizing
The intentional reduction of workforce size with the goal of improving organizational efficiency or effectiveness.
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Organization Management
Downsizing.
The intentional reduction of workforce size with the goal of improving organizational efficiency or effectiveness.
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Organization Management
Downward communication
Information that flows from the top of the organization toward the bottom.
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Organization Management
Dual-structure theory This theory identifies moti-vation factors, which affect satisfaction, as well as hygiene factors, which affect dissatisfaction.
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Organization Management
Effect dependence
Reliance on others due to their capacity to provide rewards and punishment.
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Organization Management
Effective communication
The right people receive the right information in a timely manner.
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Organization Management
Effectiveness
The extent to which desired objectives are achieved. The extent to which an organization achieves its mission and objectives.
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Organization Management
Efficiency
The extent to which results are achieved with minimum use of resources. The degree to which an organization generates its products and services using a minimum of inputs.
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Organization Management
Effort-to-performance A person's perception of the probability that effort will lead to performance. expectancy
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Organization Management
Electronic brainstorming
The use of computer-mediated technology to improve traditional brainstorming practices.
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Organization Management
Electronic groups
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Organization Management
Employee assistance Programs offered by companies to help employees deal with job stress and with personal problems that may have developed from the stress or other sources (alcohol/substance abuse help, counseling for psychological symptoms, etc.). program (EAP)
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Organization Management
Employee survey
Anonymous questionnaire that enables employees to state their candid opinions and attitudes about an organization and its practices.
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Organization Management
Employee-centred leader behaviour
Involves at-tempting to build effective work groups with high performance goals.
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Organization Management
Empowerment
Giving people the authority, opportunity, and motivation to take initiative and solve organizational problems.
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Encoding
The process by which the message is translated from an idea or thought into transmittable symbols.
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Entry stage (exploration stage)
Characterized by self-examination, role tryouts, and occupational exploration.
Decision-making groups whose members are linked electronically rather than face-to-face.
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Environmental uncertainty
A condition that exists when the external environment is vague, difficult to diagnose, and unpredictable.
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Organization Management
Equity
The belief that we are being treated fairly in relation to others.
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Equity theory
A process theory that job satisfaction and motivation stems from a comparison of the inputs one invests in a job and the outcomes one receives in comparison with the inputs and outcomes of another person or group.
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Organization Management
ERG theory
A three-level hierarchical need theory of motivation (existence, relatedness, growth) that allows for movement up and down the hierarchy.
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Organization Management
Escalation of commitment
The tendency to invest additional resources in an apparently failing course of action.
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Establishment stage In this stage, the individual gets more recognition for improved performance. (setting-down stage)
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Ethics
Systematic thinking about the moral consequences of decisions.
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Eustress
The pleasurable stress that accompanies positive events.
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Evaluation
Systematic investigation of the worth, value, merit, or quality of an object. Assessment of the operation or the outcomes of a program or policy, compared to a set of explicit or implicit standards, as a means of contributing to its improvement. The criteria for evaluation may include relevance, effectiveness, efficiency, impact, and sustainability.
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Organization Management
Evaluation culture
An organizational culture that values evaluation and seeks solutions to problems, trying out tentative solutions, and weighing the results and consequences of actions within an endless cycle of supposition–action–evidence–revision that characterizes good science and good management.
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Evaluation questions Questions formulated to help focus an evaluation on key topics or issues.
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Organization Management
Exemplification
An impression management tactic that involves self-sacrifice.
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Organization Management
Exit (withdrawal) stage
Pattern of decreasing performance in a career as individuals prepare to move on or retire.
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Organization Management
Expectancy
The probability that a particular first-level outcome can be achieved.
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Expectancy theory
A process theory that states that motivation is determined by the outcomes that people expect to occur as a result of their actions on the job.
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Organization Management
Experimental research
Research which changes or manipulates a variable under controlled conditions and examines the consequences of this manipulation for some other variable.
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Organization Management
Expert power
Power derived from having special information or expertise that is valued by an organization.
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Organization Management
Expertise
A source of power to the extent that people around a manager view him or her as an expert; someone whose knowledge and skills can help them do their jobs.
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Organization Management
External attribution
Attributing the cause of work behavior to some reason that is external to the person (e.g., bad luck, unfair circumstances, etc.).
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External career
The objective sequence of positions that comprise one's career.
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Organization Management
External environment Events and conditions surrounding an organization that influence its activities.
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External operating environment
The environment in which an organization operates. Includes such things as the administrative and legal systems that govern the organization, as well as the political, economic, technological, social, and cultural context in which the organization operates.
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Organization Management
Extinction
The gradual dissipation of behavior following the termination of reinforcement.
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Organization Management
Extrinsic motivation
Motivation that stems from the work environment external to the task; it is usually applied by others.
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Organization Management
Extroversion
The quality of being comfortable with relationships; the opposite extreme, introversion, is characterized by more social discomfort.
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Organization Management
Family-supportive policies
A series of programs (e.g., on-site day care) adopted by companies that can help employees deal with work-family conflict and stress.
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Organization Management
Fearlessness culture
A type of culture that can form in firms whose business involves considerable risk and rapid feedback. Attracts and rewards people willing to take chances and decisive.
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Organization Management
Feedback.
Information about the effectiveness of one's work performance.
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Field experiment
Similar to a laboratory experiment, but conducted in a real organization.
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Organization Management
Field survey
Typically relies on questionnaire distributed to a sample of people selected from a larger population.
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Organization Management
Filtering
The tendency for a message to be watered down or stopped during transmission.
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Organization Management
Financial resources
The funding available to the organization to carry out its activities.
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Organization Management
Fixed interval schedule
A partial reinforcement schedule in which some fixed time period occurs between a reinforced response and the availability of the next reinforcement.
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Organization Management
Fixed ratio schedule.
A partial reinforcement schedule in which some fixed number of responses must be made between a reinforced response and the availability of the next reinforcement.
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Organization Management
Fixed-interval reinforcement
Provides reinforce-ment on a fixed time schedule.
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Fixed-ratio reinforcement
Provides reinforcement after a fixed number of behaviours.
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Organization Management
Flat organization
An organization with relatively few levels in its hierarchy of authority.
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Organization Management
Flexible reward system
Allows employees to choose the combination of benefits that best suit their needs.
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Organization Management
Flexible work schedules (flextime)
These schedules give employees more personal control over the hours they work each day.
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Organization Management
Flex-time
An alternative work schedule in which arrival and quitting times are flexible.
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Organization Management
Follower-centered leadership
Approaches that try to understand leadership by focusing on follower's needs and how they respond to leaders.
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Organization Management
Force
The effort directed toward a first-level outcome.
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Forcing style
The exact opposite of an accomodating style - a person who is very willing to use their power and authority to settle an argument.
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Organization Management
Formal work groups
Groups that are established by organizations to facilitate the achievement of organizational goals.
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Organization Management
Formalization
The extent to which work roles are highly defined by an organization.
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Organization Management
Framing
Aspects of the presentation of information about a problem that are assumed by decision makers.
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Organization Management
Framing
The tendency for a decision maker to be swayed by whether a decision is pitched as a positive (e.g., gain) or negative (e.g., loss).
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Organization Management
Friendship group
A group that is relatively permanent and informal and draws its benefits from the social relationships among its members.
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Organization Management
Functional departmentation
Employees with closely related skills and responsibilities are assigned to the same department.
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Functional structure
A type of structure in which units and departments are organized based on the activity or function that they perform.
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Organization Management
Fundamental attribution error
The tendency to overemphasize dispositional explanations for behavior at the expense of situational explanations.
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Organization Management
Gainsharing
A group pay incentive plan based on productivity or performance improvements over which the workforce has some control.
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Organization Management
Gatekeepers
People who span organizational boundaries to import new information, translate it for local use, and disseminate it.
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Organization Management
General adaptation syndrome (GAS)
Identifies three stages of response to a stressor: alarm, resistance, and exhaustion.
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Organization Management
General environment
This environment includes the broad set of dimensions and factors within which the organization operates, including politicallegal, sociocultural, technological, economic, and international factors.
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Geographic departmentation
Relatively self-contained units deliver an organization's products or services in a specific geographic territory.
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Geographic-based structure
A type of structure in which product lines, services, and/or functions are organized by location.
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Organization Management
Glass ceiling
A term that refers to the many barriers that can exist to thwart a woman's rise to the top of an organization; one that provides a view of the top, but a ceiling on how far a woman can go.
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Global firm
Firms are considered global if they produce high-quality products that can be sold anywhere across globe, are international in their thinking, and expatriates from around the globe comprise their managerial pool.
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Organization Management
Goal acceptance
The extent to which a person accepts a goal as his or her own.
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Organization Management
Goal commitment
The extent to which a person is personally interested in reaching a goal.
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Organization Management
Goal compatibility
The extent to which the goals of more than one person or group can be achieved at the same time.
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Organization Management
Goal difficulty
The extent to which a goal is challenging and requires effort.
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Goal setting
A motivational technique that uses specific, challenging, and acceptable goals and provides feedback to enhance performance.
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Goal specificity
The clarity and precision of a goal.
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Organization Management
Goal theory
A theory which argues that establishing future performance targets can help motivate employees.
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Organization Management
Goals
The highest-level objective of an organization, project, or program.
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Organization Management
Grapevine
An organization's informal communication network.
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Organization Management
Group
Two or more people who interact with one another such that each person influences and is influenced by the other person.
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Group cohesiveness The degree to which a group is especially attractive to its members.
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Group composition
The degree of similarity or difference among group members in factors important to the group's work.
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Organization Management
Group interview
A technique that uses a (small) number of informants to collect perceptions and opinions.
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Organization Management
Group performance factors
The performance factors are composition, size, norms, and cohesiveness. They affect the success of the group in fulfilling its goals.
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Organization Management
Group polarization
The tendency for a group's average post-discussion attitudes to be more extreme then its average pre-discussion attitudes.
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Organization Management
Group size
The number of members of the group; it affects the number of resources available to perform the task.
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Organization Management
Group think
The capacity for group pressure to damage the mental efficiency, reality testing, and moral judgment of decision-making groups.
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Groupthink
Refers to a situation in which pressures for cohesion and togetherness are so strong as to produce narrowly considered and bad decisions; this can be especially true via conformity pressures in groups.
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Growth need strength The extent to which people desire to achieve higher-order need satisfaction by performing their jobs.
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Organization Management
Growth needs
A category in Maslow's hierarchy of needs. It includes esteem and self-actualization needs.
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Organization Management
Halo effect
The rating of an individual on one trait or characteristic tends to color ratings on other traits or characteristics.
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Organization Management
Hard capacities
The tangible assets and resources of an organization, such as its land, buildings, facilities, personnel, and equipment.
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Organization Management
Harshness
The tendency to perceive the job performance of ratees as especially ineffective.
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Organization Management
Hawthorne effect
A favorable response by subjects in an organizational experiment that is the result of a factor other than the independent variable that is formally being manipulated.
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Organization Management
Hawthorne Studies
Conducted between 1927 and 1932, these studies led to some of the first discoveries of the importance of human behaviour in organizations.
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Hersey and Blanchard model
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Organization Management
Herzberg's two-factor Motivation theory which argues that the factors which cause satisfaction on the job are different than those which cause dissatisfaction. theory
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Organization Management
Heuristics
Decision making shortcuts that everyone develops over time and use to deal with the myriad of daily decisions; can sometimes lead a manager astray, particularly if they are used as shortcuts.
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Organization Management
Hierarchy of needs
Maslow's hierarchy assumes human needs are arranged in a hierarchy of importance.
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Organization Management
Hindsight
The tendency to review a decision-making process to find what was done right or wrong.
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Organization Management
Horizontal communication
Information that flows between departments or functional units, usually as a means of coordinating effort.
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Organization Management
Horizontal job loading
Like vertical loading, this involves combining tasks, but unlike that technique the additional tasks are added without requiring additional skills).
This model of leadership identifies different combinations of leadership presumed to work best with different levels of organizational maturity on the part of followers.
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Human capacities
The knowledge, skills, and attitudes of the members of an organization.
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Organization Management
Human organization
Rensis Likert's organization approach that is based on supportive relationships, participation, and overlapping work groups.
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Organization Management
Human relations approach
Took the view that the best way to improve production was to respect workers and show concern for their needs. Became popular in the 1920s and remained influential through the 1950s.
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Organization Management
Human relations movement
A critique of classical management and bureaucracy that advocated management styles that were more participative and oriented toward employee needs.
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Organization Management
Hybrid departmentation
A structure based on some mixture of functional, product, geographic, or customer departmentation.
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Organization Management
Hygiene factors
The factors in Herzberg's theory that cause dissatisfaction (e.g., working conditions, pay, and coworker relations).
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Organization Management
Hypervigilance
A frantic, superficial pursuit of some satisficing strategy.
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Hypothesis
A formal statement of the expected relationship between two variables.
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Organization Management
Idea champions
People who recognize an innovative idea and guide it to implementation.
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Organization Management
Ideal bureaucracy
Weber's model that is characterized by a hierarchy of authority and a system of rules and procedures designed to create an optimally effective system for large organizations.
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Organization Management
Identification
Conformity to a social norm promoted by perceptions that those who promote the norm are attractive or similar to oneself.
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Organization Management
Idiosyncrasy credits
Social credits earned from regular conformity to group norms that allow occasional deviance from the norms.
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Organization Management
Ill-structured problem A problem for which the existing and desired states are unclear and the method of getting to the desired state is unknown.
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Impact
Any effect, whether anticipated or unanticipated, positive or negative, brought about by a development intervention. In some cases, ‘impact’ refers to the long-term effects of an intervention on broad development goals.
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Impetus
Providing impetus involves the manager providing a strong incentive for the disputents to reach an agreement on their own.
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Organization Management
Implementation teams
Groups of individuals from various functional groups who are responsible for enacting change in organizations.
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Organization Management
Implicit personality theories
Personal theories that people have about which personality characteristics go together.
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Organization Management
Impression management
A direct and intentional effort by someone to enhance his or her own image in the eyes of others.
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Organization Management
Incentive systems
Plans in which employees can earn additional compensation in return for certain types of performance. incubation A period of less-intense conscious concentration during which a creative person is able to let the knowledge and ideas acquired during preparation mature and develop.
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Independent variable The variable that is manipulated or changed in an experiment.
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Indicator
Quantitative or qualitative factor or variable that provides a simple and reliable means to measure achievement, to reflect the changes connected to an intervention, or to help assess the performance of a development actor.
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Indirect use of evaluation results
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Individual differences The personal attributes that vary from one person to another.
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Organization Management
Individualistic vs. Collective
Individualistic societies stress independence, individual initiative, and privacy. Collective cultures favor interdependence and loyalty to family or clan.
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Inducements
The tangible or intangible rewards organizations provide individuals.
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Inequity
The belief that we are being treated unfairly in relation to others.
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Influence
The ability to affect the perceptions, attitudes, or behaviours of others.
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Influence tactics
Tactics that are used to convert power into actual influence over others.
Conceptual use of evaluation results in decision making. Refers to an intellectual and gradual process in which the decisionmaker is led to a more adequate appreciation of the problems addressed by the policy or program.
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Informal groups
Groups that emerge naturally in response to the common interests of organizational members.
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Organization Management
Information dependence
Reliance on others for information about how to think, feel, and act.
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Information overload The reception of more information than is necessary to make effective decisions.
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Information richness
The potential information-carrying capacity of a communication medium.
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Informational roles
There are three key informational roles: the monitor, the disseminator, and the spokesperson.
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Informationprocessing models
Rational models that focus on evaluating the quality and relative weight of various pieces of information that need to be combined together to reach a decision.
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Organization Management
Initiating structure
The degree to which a leader concentrates on group goal attainment.
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Initiating-structure behaviour
Involves clearly defining the leader-subordinate roles so that subordinates know what is expected of them.
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Innovation
The process of developing and implementing new ideas in an organization.
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Inputs
Anything that people give up, offer, or trade to their organization in exchange for outcomes.
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Inquisitorial intervention
Involves a manager soliciting evidence from the disputents and then making a decision.
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Insight
The stage in the creative process when all the scattered thoughts and ideas that were maturing during incubation come together to produce a breakthrough.
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Institution
A socially sanctioned and maintained set of established practices, norms, behaviors, or relationships (i.e. trade regulations, land tenure, banking systems, and an organization’s staff rules) that persist over time in support of collectively valued purposes. Institutions have both formal and informal rules and enforcement mechanisms that shape the behavior of individuals and organizations in society.
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Institutional learning
The learning that takes place among individuals in different organizations and groups, who are working together to achieve a common end and, in particular, to induce institutional change.
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Instrumentality
The probability that a particular first-level outcome will be followed by a particular second-level outcome.
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Organization Management
Integration
The process of attaining coordination across differentiated departments.
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Integrative negotiation
Win-win negotiation that assumes that mutual problem solving can enlarge the assets to be divided between parties.
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Integrators
Organizational members permanently assigned to facilitate coordination between departments.
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Organization Management
Intention
A component of an attitude that guides an individual's behaviour.
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Interactionalism
Suggests that individuals and situations interact continuously to determine individuals' behaviour.
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Interest groups
Parties or organizations other than direct competitors that have some vested interest in how an organization is managed.
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Interlocking directorates
A condition existing when one person serves on two or more boards of directors.
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Organization Management
Internal attribution
Ascribing/assigning the cause of a person's behavior at work to something about them (e.g, their effort, their innate ability, etc.).
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Internal career
The individual's interpretation of objective work experiences know only from a person's own subjective sense of external events.
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Internal environment
Factors inside an organization that make up the organization’s ‘personality’, and which influence the organization’s cohesiveness and the energy it displays pursuing its goals. Factors that make up the internal environment include: the organization’s culture, performance-related incentive, and rewards systems, the institutional ‘climate’ in general, the history and traditions of the organization, leadership and management style, the existence of a generally recognized and accepted mission statement, and shared norms and values that promote teamwork in the pursuit of the organization’s goals.
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Internalization
Conformity to a social norm prompted by true acceptance of the beliefs, values, and attitudes that underlie the norm.
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International firm
Those firms who have responded to stiff competition domestically by expanding their sales abroad. They may start a production facility overseas and send some of their managers, who report to a global division, to that country.
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Interpersonal conflict A process that occurs when one person, group, or organizational subunit frustrates the goal attainment of another.
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Interpersonal demands
Stressors associated with group pressures, leadership, and personality conflicts.
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Interpersonal roles
There are three important interpersonal roles: the figurehead, the leader, and the liaison.
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Interpersonal skills
The manager uses interpersonal skills to communicate with, understand, and motivate individuals and groups.
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Interrole conflict
Several roles held by a role occupant involve incompatible expectations.
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Intersender role conflict
Two or more role senders provide a role occupant with incompatible expectations.
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Intrapreneurship
An entrepreneurial activity that takes place within the context of a large organization.
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Intrasender role conflict
A single role sender provides incompatible expectations to a role occupant.
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Intrinsic motivation
Motivation that stems from the direct relationship between the worker and the task; it is usually self-applied.
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Intuition
Problem identification and solving based on systematic education and experiences that locate problems within a network of previously acquired information.
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Islamic law
A code-based legal system tied to religious stipulations put forth in the Koran. While not strictly a legal system, the Koran does address business concerns such as the need to honor agreements and to us good faith in interactions.
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Organization Management
Isolate (isolated dyad)
Tend to work alone and to interact and communicate little with others.
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Jargon
Specialized language used by job holders or members of particular occupations or organizations.
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Organization Management
Job analysis
The process of systematically gathering information about specific jobs to use in devel-oping a performance measurement system, to write job or position descriptions, and to develop equitable pay systems. ) job-centred leader behaviour Involves paying close attention to the work of subordinates, ex-plaining work procedures, and demonstrating a strong interest in performance.
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Job characteristics approach
Focuses on the motivational attributes of jobs.
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Job characteristics model
A model of how to put enrichment in practice, which involves -among other things - changing jobs so that they provide more feedback and autonomy to those actually doing the jobs.
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Job characteristics theory
Identifies three critical psychological states: experienced meaningfulness of the work, experienced responsibility for work outcomes, and knowledge of results.
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Job demands-job control model
A model that asserts that jobs promote high stress when they make high demands while offering little control over work decisions.
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Job design
How organizations define and structure jobs.
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Job enlargement
Involves combining multiple tasks once performed by several people into one job. As with rotation, it is designed to increase variety and reduce boredom association with job simplification.
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Job enrichment
The design of jobs to enhance intrinsic motivation and the quality of working life.
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Job hopping
Occurs when an individual makes fewer adjustments within the organization and moves to different organizations to advance his or her career.
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Job redesign
Efforts by firms to redesign how work is done to, among other things, reduce job stress (discussed in Chapter 6 earlier).
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Organization Management
Job rotation
The practice of shifting workers to different jobs at periodic intervals.
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Job satisfaction
A collection of attitudes that workers have about their jobs.
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Job sharing
An alternative work schedule in which two part-time employees divide the work of a full time job.
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Job specialization
Advocated by scientific management, it can help improve efficiency but it can also promote monotony and boredom.
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Joint evaluation
An evaluation undertaken by two or more parties to achieve a mutual objective. There are various degrees of ‘jointness’ depending on the extent to which individual partners cooperate in the evaluation process, merge their evaluation resources, and combine their evaluation reporting. Joint evaluation can help overcome attribution problems in assessing the effectiveness of programs and strategies, the complementarities of efforts supported by different partners, the quality of aid coordination, etc.
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Organization Management
Key informant interview
Key informants are those ‘who know’, and are not necessarily representative of a population. They are chosen for their knowledge or distinctive viewpoint. The key informant interview method forms part of focused interview techniques (as distinct from sample survey interviewing) and is governed by the need to identify a wide range of different viewpoints.
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Laboratory experiment
Creating an artifical setting, similar to a real work situation to allow control over amost every possible factor in that setting.
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Organization Management
Lateral communication
Communication that flows relatively freely between people of relatively equal power in organizations.
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Organization Management
Leader punishment behavior
The leader's use of reprimands or unfavorable task assignments and the active withholding of rewards.
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Organization Management
Leader reward behavior
The leader's provision of subordinates with compliments, tangible benefits, and deserved special treatment.
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Organization Management
Leader substitutes theory
A approach which examines how various situational factors can either substitute for leadership (making leader behavior unnecessary) or neutralize the impact of leader behavior.
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Organization Management
Leader-centered leadership
Approaches that try to understand leadership by focusing on the leader's traits, skills, and behaviors.
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Organization Management
Leader-member exchange (LMX) model
This model of leadership stresses that leaders develop unique working relationships with each of their subordinates.
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Leader-member exchange theory
Explains leadership in terms of the relationship that develops between leaders and subordinates over time.
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Leadership
The capacity to assess and interpret needs and opportunities, to establish direction, to influence and align others towards a common aim, motivating and committing them to action, and making them responsible for their performance.
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Leadership Grid
Evaluates leader behaviour along two dimensions—concern for production and concern for people—and suggests that effective leadership styles include high levels of both behaviours.
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Organization Management
Leadership substitutes
Individual, task, and organizational characteristics that tend to outweigh the leader's ability to affect subordinates' satisfaction and performance.
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Leading
The process of getting the organization's members to work together toward the organization's goals.
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Learning
A relatively permanent change in behaviour or behavioural potential resulting from direct or indirect experience.
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Learning organization
A firm which values continuous learning and is consistently looking to adapt and change with its environment.
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Least Preferred CoWorker (LPC)
A current or past co-worker with whom a leader has had a difficult time accomplishing a task.
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Organization Management
Legitimate power
Power derived from a person's position or job in an organization.
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Leniency
The tendency to perceive the job performance of ratees as especially good.
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Organization Management
Liaison role
The assignment of a person to help achieve coordination between his or her department and another department.
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Organization Management
Life change
Any meaningful change in a person's personal or work situation; too many life changes can lead to health problems.
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Life trauma
Any upheaval in an individual's life that alters his or her attitudes, emotions, or behaviours.
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Linking role
A position for a person or group that serves to coordinate the activities of two or more organizational groups.
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Locus of control
A set of beliefs about whether one's behavior is controlled mainly by internal or external forces.
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Logic model
A simplified chain of relationships that portrays the logic and assumptions underlying a program or intervention and how it intends to achieve its expected results. It states the logic of the program, identifies the assumptions on which it is based, and outlines the logical connections between (a) the activities undertaken, (b) the outputs to be produced, (c) the immediate or short-term outcomes that are expected, and 9d) the ultimate or long-term impacts the program is designed to achieve.
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LPC theory of leadership
Suggests that a leader's effectiveness depends on the situation.
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Lump sum bonus
Merit pay that is awarded in a single payment and not built into base pay.
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Machiavellianism
A personality trait. People who possess this trait act to gain power and to control the behaviour of others.
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Machine bureaucracy
This structure is typical of large, well-established organizations. It features a high degree of specialization and formalization. Within this structure, decision making is usually concentrated at the top.
Management
The classical view emphasizes the management functions of planning, organizing, commanding, coordinating, and controlling—‘getting the work done by the best means available’. More recently, the enabling role of managers has been emphasized, ‘to create the conditions under which the work will be done, and done well’. In the context of agricultural research, management involves defining research goals, strategies, and priorities; formulating research programs; determining responsibilities; allocating resources; leading, motivating, and supervising staff members; and maintaining relations with stakeholders.
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Management by Objectives (MBO)
An elaborate, systematic, ongoing program to facilitate goal establishment, goal accomplishment, and employee development.
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Management teams
Consists of managers from various areas; they coordinate work teams.
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Masculinity
The extent to which the domi-nant values in a society emphasize aggressiveness and the acquisition of money and material goods, rather than concern for people, relationships among people, and the overall quality of life.
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Maslow's hierarchy of A five-level hierarchical need theory of motivation that specifies that the lowest-level unsatisfied need has the greatest motivating potential. needs
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Mastery stage
Individuals develop a stronger attachment to their organizations and lose some career flexibility, and performance may vary.
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Matrix departmentation
Employees remain members of a functional department while also reporting to a product or project manager.
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Matrix design
Combines two different designs to gain the benefits of each. Typically in this design, a product or project departmentalization scheme and a functional structure are combined.
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Matrix structure
A hybrid approach to organizing which typically crosses a functional approach with a product- or service-based design, often resulting in employees having two bosses.
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Maximization
The choice of the decision alternative with the greatest expected value.
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McClelland's theory of needs
A nonhierarchical need theory of motivation that outlines the conditions under which certain needs result in particular patterns of motivation.
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Mechanistic structures
Organizational structures characterized by tallness, specialization, centralization, and formalization.
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Mediation
Involves the manager assisting the disputants in the resolution of their conflict by controlling the manner in which they interact, but without forcing a solution.
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Medium
The channel or path through which the message is transmitted.
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Mentor
An older and more senior person in the organization who gives a junior person special attention, such as giving advice and creating opportunities.
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Merit pay plans
Systems that attempt to link pay to performance on white-collar jobs.
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Michigan leadership studies
These studiesdefined job-centred and employee-centred leadership as opposite ends of a single leadership dimension.
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Mission statement
An explicit statement of company philosophy that provides yet another way to communicate culture.
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Modeling
The process of imitating the behavior of others.
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Monitoring
Monitoring involves continuous, systematic observation and checking on activities and their results. The purpose is to ensure that activities are proceeding according to plan, to provide a record of how inputs are used, and to warn of deviations from initial goals and expected outcomes.
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Motivating factors
The factors in Herzberg's theory that cause satisfaction (e.g., need for achievement, challenge, and recognition)
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Motivation
The extent to which persistent effort is directed toward a goal.
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Motivation and productivity stage
A stage of group development in which members cooperate, help each other, and work toward accomplishing tasks.
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Motivation factors
These factors are intrinsic to work itself. They include things such as achievement and recognition.
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Motive
A factor that determines a person's choice of one course of behaviour from among several possibilities.
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Multicultural organization
An organization in which employees of mixed backgrounds, experiences, and cultures can contribute and achieve their full potential for the benefit of both themselves and the organization.
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Multicultural orientation
One in which em-ployees of mixed backgrounds, experiences, and cultures can contribute and achieve their fullest potential for the benefit of themselves and the organization.
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Multinational firm
Firm who operate extensively in other countries and closely coordinate effort across subsidiaries in those countries. They tend to rely more on foreign nationals for their managerial talent.
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Mum effect
The tendency to avoid communicating unfavorable news to others.
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Mutual acceptance stage
A stage of group development that is characterized by members sharing information about themselves and getting to know each other.
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Narcissistic leaders
Fundamentally insecure and self-absorbed individuals who often pursue a
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Need
Anything an individual requires or wants.
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Need for achievement
A strong desire to perform challenging tasks well.
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Need for affiliation
A strong desire to establish and maintain friendly, compatible interpersonal relationships.
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Need for power
A strong desire to influence others, making a significant impact or impression.
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Need theories
Motivation theories that specify the kinds of needs people have and the conditions under which they will be motivated to satisfy these needs in a way that contributes to performance.
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Needs assessment
A decision-aiding tool for planning and resource allocation. Involves the gathering and analyzing of information on the organization, its environment, its capacity needs and problems, and possible solutions.
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Negative affectivity
People who possess this trait are generally downbeat and pessimistic. They see things in a negative way and seem to be in a bad mood.
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Negative emotionality
This is characterized by moodiness and insecurity; those who have little negative emotionality are better able to withstand stress.
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Negative reinforcement
The removal of a stimulus that in turn increases or maintains the probability of some behavior.
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Negotiation
A decision-making process among interdependent parties who do not share identical preferences.
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Network organization Liaisons between specialist organizations that rely strongly on market mechanisms for coordination.
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Networking
Establishing good relations with key organizational members and/or outsiders in order to accomplish one's goals.
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Neutralizers of leadership
Factors in the work setting that reduce a leader's opportunity to exercise influence.
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Noise
Any disturbance in the communication process that interferes with or distorts communication.
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Nominal group technique
A structured group decision-making technique in which ideas are generated without group interaction and then systematically evaluated by the group.
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Nonprogrammed decision
A decision that recurs infrequently and for which there is no previously established decision rule.
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Nonverbal communication
The transmission of messages by some medium other than speech or writing.
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Norm
A standard against which the appropriateness of a behaviour is measured.
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Normative commitment
Commitment based on ideology or a feeling of obligation to an organization.
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Norms
Collective expectations that members of social units have regarding the behavior of each other.
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Objective
An expression of an effect that a program is expected to achieve if completed successfully and according to plan. Objectives are often viewed as a hierarchy, beginning with strategic goals, purposes, outputs, and activities.
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Observational research
Research that examines the natural activities of people in an organizational setting by listening to what they say and watching what they do.
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Occupation
A group of jobs that are similar with respect to the type of tasks and training involved.
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Ohio State leadership These studies defined leader consideration and initiating-structure behaviours as independent dimensions of leadership. studies
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One-shot culture
A culture comprised of a slow feedback/high risk combination. People who can tolerate uncertainly for long periods and is careful/detailed oriented.
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Open door policy
The opportunity for employees to communicate directly with a manager without going through the chain of command.
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Open systems
Systems that take inputs from the external environment, transform some of them, and send them back into the environment as outputs.
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Openness
The capacity to entertain new ideas and to change as a result of new information.
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Operating environment
The context or environment in which an organization operates, including the economic, technical, socio-cultural, institutional, legal, and political factors that influence behavior and performance.
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Operational capacities
The capacities that an organization needs to carry out its day-to-day activities.
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Operational management
Management concerned with mobilizing, coordinating, and guiding an organization’s staff and using its physical and financial resources to achieve defined objectives. Establishing a coherent set of rules (institutions) that guide behavior in the pursuit of organizational goals.
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Optimism
The extent to which a person sees life in relatively positive or negative terms.
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Organic structures
Organizational structures characterized by flatness, low specialization, low formalization, and decentralization.
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Organization
Formal structures with designated roles and purposes. Entities composed of people who act collectively in pursuit of shared objectives. These organizations and individuals pursue their interests within an institutional structure defined by formal rules (constitutions, laws, regulations, contracts) and informal rules (ethics, trust, religious precepts, and other implicit codes of conduct). Organizations, in turn, have internal rules (i.e. institutions) to deal with personnel, budgets, procurement, and reporting procedures, which constrain the behavior of their members.
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Organization chart
A diagram showing all people, positions, reporting relationships, and lines of formal communication in the organization.
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Organization culture
The set of values that helps the organization's employees understand which actions are considered acceptable and which unacceptable.
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Organization development
The process of planned change and improvement of the organization through the application of knowledge of the behavioural sciences.
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Organization structure
The system of task, reporting, and authority relationships within which the organization does its work.
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Organizational assessment framework
A theoretical construct that aids in the diagnosis of an organization’s current state, to measure changes over time or to find ways to solve specific problems. This study employs a framework developed by the IDRC and Universalia that includes four analytical dimensions: the external operating environment, the internal environment, organizational capacity, and performance.
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Organizational behavior
The attitudes and behaviors of individuals and groups in organizations.
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Organizational The systematic use of learning principles to influence organizational behavior. behavior modification
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Organizational capacities
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Organizational An ongoing process by which an organization increases its ability to formulate and achieve relevant objectives. It involves capacity development strengthening both its operational and adaptive capacities.
The organization’s potential to perform. Its ability to define and realize goals effectively, efficiently, and in a relevant and sustainable manner.
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Organizational change
Alteration or variation in the character or performance of an organization. Such changes lie along a continuum from incremental change to fundamental, large-scale change or transformational change. While incremental change is less complex than fundamental change, both types involve three basic stages referred to as ‘unfreezing’, ‘moving’, and ‘freezing’. Fundamental or large-scale change refers to lasting change in the character of an organization that significantly alters its performance.
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Organizational citizenship
The extent to which an individual's behaviour makes a positive overall contribution to the organization.
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Organizational citizenship behavior
Voluntary, information behavior that contributes to organizational effectiveness.
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Organizational commitment
An attitude that reflects the strength of the linkage between an employee and an organization.
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A pattern of shared basic assumptions that an organization develops as it solves its problems of external adaptation and
Organization Management
Organizational culture internal integration, has worked well enough to be considered valid and, therefore, to be taught to new members as the correct
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Organizational development (OD)
A planned, ongoing effort to change organizations to be more effective and more human.
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Organizational downsizing
A popular trend aimed at reducing the size of corporate staff and middle management to reduce costs.
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Organizational environment
This environment includes all elements that lie outside the boundaries of the organization: for example, people, other organizations, economic factors, objects, and events.
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Organizational goals
Statements describing the external direction of success, ultimate achievement, or desired improvement in organizational performance.
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Organizational learning
An organization’s capacity for accumulating knowledge from its own experiences, disseminating that knowledge to members throughout the organization (and not to a single individual or group within it), reflecting on it and using it as a basis on which to build planning and programming activities, to adapt and to cope with change. A learning organization is one that facilitates the learning of all its members and continuously transforms itself.
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Organizational modification
The application of reinforcement theory to people in organizational settings. organizational politics The activities carried out by people to acquire, enhance, and use power and other resources to obtain their desired outcome.
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way to perceive, think, and feel in relation to these problems.
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Organizational performance
The ability of an organization to meet its goals and achieve its overall mission. Typical indicators for evaluating organizational performance are effectiveness, efficiency, relevance, and sustainability.
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Organizational politics
The pursuit of self-interest in an organization, whether or not this self-interest corresponds to organizational goals.
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Organizational processes
Activities or work that have to be accomplished to create outputs that internal or external customers value.
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Organizational selfassessment
The assessment of an organization by those who are working in the organization. As with any organizational assessment, a self-assessment focuses on overall impact and performance, or specific aspects thereof.
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Organizational socialization
The process through which employees learn about the firm's culture and pass their knowledge and understanding on to others.
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Organizational stressors
Factors in the workplace that can cause stress.
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Organizational structure
The manner in which an organization divides its labor into specific tasks and achieves coordination among these tasks.
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Organizational technology
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Statements describing the principles the organization wants to express as it moves in the direction described in its goals. Values that an organization regards highly and holds as its ideal. Ethical standards that guide how work is done. Values can Organizational values include such things as fairness, respect, commitment, and embracing diversity. Managers are expected to serve as role models for values.
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Organizations
Social inventions for accomplishing common goals through group effort.
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Organizing
The process of designing jobs, group-ing jobs into units, and establishing patterns of authority between jobs and units.
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Orientation phase
The first few weeks or months on the job when it is particularly important to communication cultural values to new employees.
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Other-enhancing tactics
Indirect methods of influencing others' perceptions by boosting their self-image (e.g., flattery, opinion agreement).
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Other-focused image Behaviors designed to make polish someone else's image in the hopes of getting what you want (e.g., flattering or praising management tactics your boss).
The mechanical and intellectual processes that transform inputs into outputs.
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Outcome
An immediate effect or short-term consequence of an action.
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Output
The direct results of an intervention, a ‘deliverable’ for which management is responsible.
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Overdetermination
Occurs because numerous organizational systems are in place to ensure that employees and systems behave as expected to maintain stability.
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Ownership
Right over, and responsibility for, a process or activity. When local players own a project, and they adopt it as their own even if outside organizations are involved.
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Paralanguage
Reference to qualities about one's speech that carry information about the communication (e.g., speed, loudness, tenseness of one's voice).
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Participant observation.
Observational research in which the researcher becomes a functioning member of the organizational unit being studied.
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Participation
The process of giving employees a voice in making decisions about their own work.
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Participative leadership
Involving subordinates in making work-related decisions.
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Participatory evaluation
A process of self-assessment, collective knowledge production, and cooperative action in which stakeholders in a development process participate substantially in the identification of evaluation issues, the formulation of evaluation questions, the design of the evaluation, the collection and analysis of data, and the actions taken as a result of the findings.
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Partner
The individual and/or organization with which one collaborates to achieve mutually agreed upon objectives.
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Partnership
Negotiated relationships that exist between two or more entities that have voluntarily entered into a legal or moral contract.
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Path-Goal Theory
Robert House's theory concerned with the situations under which various leader behaviors (directive, supportive, participative, achievement-oriented) are most effective.
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Perception
The process of interpreting out senses to provide order and meaning to the environment.
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Perceptual defense
The tendency for the perceptual system to defend the perceiver against unpleasant emotions.
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Perfect rationality
A decision strategy that is completely informed, perfectly logical, and oriented toward economic gain.
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Performance
The extent to which an organizational member contributes to achieving the objectives of the organization.
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Performance appraisal (performance measurement)
See performance measurement.
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Performance behaviours
The total set of work-related behaviours that the organization expects the individual to display.
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Performance causes An assumption that high job performance leads to high job satisfaction. satisfaction hypothesis
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Performance measurement (performance appraisal)
The process by which someone (1) evaluates an employee's work behaviors by measurement and comparison with previously established standards, (2) documents results, and (3) communicates the results to the employees.
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Performance plan
An understanding between an employee and a manager concerning what and how a job is to be done such that both parties know what is expected and how success is defined and measured.
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Performance-toThe individual's perception of the probability that performance will lead to certain outcomes. outcome expectancy
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Perquisites
Special privileges awarded to selected members of an organization, usually top managers. personality The relatively stable set of psychological attributes that distinguish one person from another.
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Persistence culture
A business that involves relatively low risk but rapid feedback. The culture encourages people who have energy and show perseverance.
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Personal constructs
A very general belief about what other people are like (e.g, untrustworthy) that has wide effect on our perceptions of others behavior.
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Personal identification
One way that charismatic leaders can influence subordinate self-worth. Taps subordinates' needs to have someone to look up to and may involve giving leaders unquestioned loyalty.
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Personal power
Resides in the person, regardless of the position he or she fills.
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Personality
The relatively stable set of psychological characteristics that influences the way an individual interacts with his or her environment.
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Person-job fit
The extent to which the contributions made by the individual match the inducements offered by the organization.
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Person-role conflict
Role demands call for behavior that is incompatible with the personality or skills of a role occupant.
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Physical demands
Stressors associated with the job's physical setting, such as the adequacy of temperature and lighting, and the physical requirements the job makes on the employee.
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Physical resources
The land, facilities, vehicles, and equipment used by organizations to carry out their activities.
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Piecerate
A pay system in which individual workers are paid a certain sum of money for each unit of production completed.
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Planning
The process through which goals and objectives are set, partners identified, inputs determined, activities specified and scheduled, and monitoring and evaluation mechanisms defined, so that expected outputs and outcomes might be achieved in a timely manner.
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Policy
Similar to a script in that a policy can be a less than completely rational decision making method. Involves the use of a preexisting set of decision steps for any problem that presents itself.
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Political risk
Refers to the many different actions of people, subgroups, and whole countries that have the potential to affect the financial status of a firm.
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Pooled interdependence
A condition in which organizational subunits are dependent upon the pooled resources generated by other subunits but are otherwise fairly independent.
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Position power
Power managers hold due to their role in the organization. May include a manager's network of contacts, legitimate authority and control over information, rewards, punishments, and the work environment.
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Positive affectivity
People who possess this trait are upbeat and optimistic. They have an overall sense of well-being and see things in a positive light.
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Positive reinforcement
The application or addition of a stimulus that increases or maintains the probability of some behavior.
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Power
The potential ability of a person or group to exercise control over another person or group.
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Power
The capacity to influence others who are in a state of dependence.
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Power distance
The extent to which an unequal distribution of power is accepted by society members.
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Practical approach
The approach to decision making that combines the steps of the rational approach with the conditions in the behavioural approach to create a more realistic process for making decisions in organizations.
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PRAM model
This model guides the negotiator through the four steps of planning for agreement, building relationships, reaching agreement, and maintaining relationships.
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Preferred focus
The tendency to concentrate on the technical/rational side of decision making or on the people/issues side.
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Prejudices
Judgments about others that reinforce the belief that some groups are superior toothers and can lead to exaggerating the worth of one group while diminishing the worth of others.
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Preparation
It is usually the first stage in the creative process. It involves education and formal training.
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Primacy effect
The tendency for a perceiver to rely on early cues or first impressions.
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Primary needs
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Proactive ingratiation Involves the use of impression management tactics such as expressing agreement and offering praise. strategies
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Problem clarity
The need for structure in making decisions vs. a tendency to have greater acceptance for ambiguity or vagueness in making decision.
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Problem.
A perceived gap between an existing state and a desired state.
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Problem-solving teams
Temporary teams established to attack specific problems in the work-place.
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Procedural fairness
Fairness that occurs when the process used to determine work outcomes is seen as reasonable.
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Procedural justice
The extent to which the dynamics of an organization's decision making processes are judged to be fair by those most affected by them.
The basic physical requirements necessary to sustain life. problem solving A form of decision making in which the issue is unique and alternatives must be developed and evaluated without the aid of a programmed decision rule.
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Process consultation
Involves interviewing people and observing work group processes to uncover interpersonal stumbling blocks and related problems. A change agent will then provide feedback aimed at improving the work process.
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Process culture
Characterized by slow feedback/low risk combination. A culture that promotes a major concern with the process of running an organization more than specific outcomes.
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Process losses
Group performance difficulties stemming from the problems of motivating and coordinating larger groups.
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Process management
Management of resources and internal processes that support research and development programs. These include staffing, human resource development, fund raising, financial management, and management of facilities.
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Process theories of motivation
Theories that explain the processes by which employee behavior can be aroused and then directed.
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Process use of evaluation
Individual changes in thinking and behavior, and program or organizational changes in procedures and cultures that occur among those involved in evaluation as a result of the learning that occurs during the evaluation process.
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Product departmentation
Departments are formed on the basis of a particular product, product line, or service.
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Product development Combinations of work and problem-solving teams that create new designs for products or services that will satisfy customer needs. teams
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Product-based structure
A type of structure in which all the jobs needed to produce and sell a product or service are grouped together in the same unit.
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Productivity
An indicator of how much an organization is creating relative to its inputs.
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Professional bureaucracy
This structure is characterized by horizontal specialization, by area of professional expertise. It features little formalization and decentralized decision making.
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Profit sharing
The return of some company profit to employees in the form of a cash bonus or a retirement supplement.
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Program
A standardized way of solving a problem.
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Program management
Management concerned directly with the production and delivery of services for clients or target groups. Program management skills and procedures include project cycle management, program formulation, and technical reviews, for example.
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Programmed decision A decision that recurs often enough for a decision rule to be developed.
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Projection
The tendency for perceivers to attribute their own undesirable ideas, feelings, and motives to others.
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Psychological contract
A person's set of expectations regarding what he or she will contribute to the organization and what the organization, in return, will provide the individual.
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Punctuated equilibrium model
A model of group development that describes how groups with deadlines are affected by their first meetings and crucial midpoint transitions.
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Punishment
The application of an aversive stimulus following some behavior designed to decrease the probability of that behavior.
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Quality
The total set of features and characteristics of a product or service that determine its ability to satisfy stated or implied needs.
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Quality circles
Small groups of employees from the same work area who regularly meet to discuss and recommend solutions to workplace problems.
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Quality of worklife
The extent to which workers can satisfy important personal needs through their experiences in the organization.
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Rational decisionmaking approach
A systematic, step-by-step process for making decisions.
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Rational-economic models
A set of decision making approaches, often that use aids and are quantitative in form, that try to maximize the use of information and/or possible choices.
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Rationalization
Attributing socially acceptable motives to one's actions.
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Reaction formation
Expressing oneself in a manner that is directly opposite to the way one truly feels.
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Realistic job previews The provision of a balanced, realistic picture of the positive and negative aspects of a job to job applicants.
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Reality shock
An unsettling experience caused by the disparity between unrealistic expectations and the reality that people confront in their first job.
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Receiver
The individual, group, or organization that perceives the encoded symbols and may or may not decode them to try to understand the intended message.
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Reciprocal interdependence
A condition in which organizational subunits must engage in considerable interplay and mutual feedback to accomplish a task.
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Reengineering
The radical redesign of organizational processes to achieve major improvements in factors such as time, cost, quality, or service.
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Referent power
Power derived from being well liked by others.
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Refreezing
The condition that exists when newly developed behaviors, attitudes, or structures become an enduring part of the organization.
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Regency effect
The tendency for a perceiver to rely on recent cues or last impressions.
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Regression to the mean
A heuristic that says humans fail to realize that the best predictor of behavior is the mean performance; unusual performance (positive or negative) is likely to move back toward the mean performance.
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Reinforcement
The consequences of behaviour.
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Reinforcement
The process by which stimuli strengthen behaviors.
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Reinforcement discrimination
The process of recognizing differences between behaviour and reinforcement in different settings.
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Reinforcement generalization
The process through which a person extends recognition of similar or identical behaviour-reinforcement relationships to different settings.
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Organization Management
Reinforcement theory
A motivation theory which argues that by linking consequences to
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Organization Management
Relationship-oriented Leadership behavior focused on maintaining or improving relations with subordinates (e.g., developing, recognizing, and otherwise supporting subordinates). behavior
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Relevance
Refers to importance and practical utility. In organizational assessment, it refers to the degree of congruence between (a) the objectives and activities of an organization, and (b) the needs and expectations of key stakeholders.
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Reliability
An index of the consistency of a research subject's responses.
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Organization Management
Representativeness heuristic
A heuristic that leads us to choose options that have the appearance of being correct, but often fail to take into account the appropriate probability of option occurring.
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Repression
The prevention of threatening ideas from becoming conscious.
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Research design
The set of procedures used to test the predicted relationships among natural phenomena.
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Resistance
Overt or convert failure by organizational members to support a change effort.
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Resource dependence
The dependency of organizations upon environmental inputs such as capital, raw materials, and human resources.
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Responsibility
An obligation to do something with the expectation of achieving some act or output.
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Restriction of productivity
The artificial limitation of work output that can occur under wage incentive plans.
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Result
The output, outcome, or impact (intended or unintended, positive and/or negative) of a development intervention.
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Review of documents Systematic review of an organization’s documents to obtain information for an evaluation.
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Reward power
Power derived from the ability to provide positive outcomes and prevent negative outcomes.
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Reward system
A system that consists of all organizational components, including people, pro-cesses, rules and procedures, and decisionmaking activities, involved in allocating compensation and benefits to employees in exchange for their contributions to the organization.
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Rights of passage
A set of rituals and ceremonies and other activities used over and over again at special times to emphasize key organizational values.
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Risk propensity
The degree to which a person is willing to take chances and make risky decisions.
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Risky shift
The tendency for groups to make riskier decisions than the average risk initially advocated by their individual members.
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Role
A set of expected behaviours associated with a particular position in a group or organization.
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Role ambiguity
Lack of clarity of job goals or methods.
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Role conflict
A condition of being faced with incompatible role expectations.
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Role demands
Stressors associated with the role a person is expected to play.
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Role overload
The requirement for too many tasks to be performed in too short of a time period.
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Roles
Positions in groups that have a set of expected behaviors attached to them.
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Rumor
An unverified belief that is in general circulation.
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Sandbagging
Behaviors designed to project a weaker or more negative image than is actually the case. The goal is often to lull opponents into a false sense of security (i.e., so they let down their guard or exert less effort).
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Organization Management
Satisfaction causes performance hypothesis
An assumption that high job satisfaction leads to high job performance.
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Organization Management
Satisficing
Establishing an adequate level of acceptability for a solution to a problem and then screening solutions until one that exceeds this level is found.
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Organization Management
Scapegoating
Trying to shift the blame for a problem or failure away from yourself (e.g., onto others or factors in the situation).
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Scientific Management
Frederick Taylor's system for using research to determine the optimum degree of specialization and standardization of work tasks.
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Scientific research
The systemic investigation of hypothesised propositions about the relationships among natural phenomena.
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Script
A reference to a type of non-rational decision making that doesn't make use of existing data, but instead is based on a commonly understood sequence of behavior.
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Secondary needs
The requirements learned from the environment or culture in which the individual lives.
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Selective perception
The process of screening out information with which we are uncomfortable or that contradicts our beliefs.
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Organization Management
Self-assessment (workshop)
A workshop process organized to assess an organization’s needs, capacities, a capacity development initiative, or the organization’s performance, and involving the organization’s management and staff and perhaps external stakeholders.
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Self-efficacy
A person's beliefs about his or her capabilities to perform a task.
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Self-enhancing tactics
Direct attempts to influence the perceptions of others via self promotion (e.g., name dropping) and image control.
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Self-esteem
The degree to which a person has a positive self-evaluation.
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Self-focused image management tactics
Behaviors designed to make yourself look good or to create a more favorable image of yourself with other people (e.g., boasting, working hard when the boss is around, etc.)
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Self-leadership
A follower-centered approach to leadership which argues that employees should look inward for motivation and initiative.
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Self-managed work teams
Work groups that have the opportunity to do challenging work under reduced supervision.
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Self-management
The use of learning principles to manage one's own behavior.
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Self-monitoring
The extend to which people observe and regulate how they appear and behave in social settings and relationships.
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Self-reactions
Comparisons of alternatives with internalized moral standards.
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Self-serving attributions
A bias effect in attributions whereby people tend to take credit (internal attribution) for success and to make external attributions for failure.
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Self-serving bias
The tendency to take credit for successful outcomes and to deny responsibility for failures.
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Semantics
The study of language forms.
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Sensitivity training
An interpersonal approach for promoting change that involves developing a greater understanding of oneself and one's interactions with other people.
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Sequential interdependence
A condition in which organizational subunits are dependent upon the resources generated by units that precede them in a sequence of work.
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Short-term orientation People with a short-term orientation focus on past or present; people with a long-term orientation focus on the future.
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Similar-to-me effect
A rater gives more favorable evaluations to people who are similar to the rater in terms of background or attitudes.
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Simple structure
This structure is typical of relatively small or new organizations. It features little specialization or formalization. Within this structure, power and decision making are concentrated in the chief executive.
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Situational attributions
Explanations for behavior based on an actor's external situation or environment.
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Organization Management
Situational leadership
A leadership model which argues that effective leadership involves matching the right combination of task-oriented and relationship-oriented behavior to the maturity level of subordinates.
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Organization Management
Situation-centered leadership
Approaches that try to understand leadership by focusing on how situational variables may impact leader effectiveness.
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Skill benchmarking
The process of identifying required competency levels for key jobs in an industry.
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Skill variety
The opportunity to do a variety of job activities using various skills and talents.
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Organization Management
Skilled based pay
A system in which people are paid according to the number of job skills they have acquired.
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Organization Management
Social capital
The institutions, norms, relationships, and networks that enable collective action and shape the quantity and quality of a society’s social interactions.
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Social identification
Often the most positive way that charismatic leaders can influence subordinate self-worth. Involves linking subordinates' work to the good of a larger social entity.
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Social learning
Occurs when people observe the behaviours of others, recognize their consequences, and alter their own behaviour as a result.
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Organization Management
Social loafing
The tendency of individuals to withhold physical or intellectual effort when performing a group task.
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Organization Management
Social network
A group of one's peers, subordinates, and senior people who provide general information about what is going on in the organization, specific advice on how to accomplish job assignments, and feedback about the consequences of different career strategies.
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Organization Management
Social responsibility
An organization's social re-sponsibility is its obligation to protect or contribute to the social environment in which it functions.
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Social-emotional leader
A leader who is concerned with reducing tension, patching up disagreements, settling arguments, and maintaining morale.
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Socialization
The process by which people learn the norms and roles that are necessary to function in a group or organization.
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Sociotechnical systems approach
An approach to organization design that views the organization as an open system structured to integrate the technical and social subsystems into a single management system.
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Organization Management
Soft capacities
The human and organizational capacities, or social capital of the organization, including such things as management knowledge and skills, and organizational systems and procedures (such as management information systems, and procedures for planning and evaluation.).
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Source
The individual, group, or organization interested in communicating something to another party.
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Spacing
A nonverbal behavior that refers to the typical amounts of space between people as they interact and converse.
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Organization Management
Span of control
The number of subordinates supervised by a superior.
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Stakeholders
Any group within or outside an organization that has a direct or indirect stake in the organization’s performance or its evaluation. Stakeholders can be people who conduct, participate in, fund, or manage a program, or who may otherwise affect or be affected by decisions about the program or the evaluation.
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Status
The rank, social position, or prestige accorded to group members.
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Stereotyping
The tendency to generalize about people in a social category and ignore variation among them.
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Organization Management
Strategic alliances
Actively cooperative relationships between legally separate organizations.
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Strategic contingencies
Critical factors affecting organizational effectiveness that are controlled by a key subunit.
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Strategic management
Development and implementation of effective strategies to set and achieve an organization’s objectives. Strategic management involves five sets of tasks, (a) developing a strategic vision and mission, (b) setting objectives, (c) crafting a strategy, (d) implementing the strategy, and (e) evaluating performance and initiating corrective adjustment.
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Strategic planning
A process by which a future vision is developed for an organization, taking into account its political and legal circumstances, its strengths and weaknesses, and the threats and opportunities facing it. It articulates the organization’s sense of mission and maps out future directions to be taken, given the organization’s current state and resources.
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Strategic values
The basic belief about an organization's environment that shape its strategy.
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Strategy
A planned course of action undertaken with the aim of achieving the goals and objectives of an organization. The overall strategy of an organization is often known as organizational strategy, but strategy may also be developed for any aspect of an organization’s activities, as, for example, environmental strategy or marketing strategy.
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Stress
A psychological reaction to the demands inherent in a stressor that has the potential to make a person feel tense or anxious.
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Stress reactions
Behavioral, psychological, and physiological consequences of stress.
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Stressors
Environmental events or conditions that have the potential to induce stress.
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Stretch targets
Goals which are virtually unattainable. Often designed to encourage 'doing it different' rather than 'doing what we already do better.'
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Strong culture
An organizational culture with intense and pervasive beliefs, values, and assumptions.
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Structural change
A systemwide organization development involving a major restructuring of the organization or instituting programs such as quality of work life.
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Structural imperatives The three structural imperatives—environment, technology, and size—are the primary determinants of organization structure.
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Subcultures
Smaller cultures that develop within a larger organizational culture that are based on differences in training, occupation, or departmental goals.
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Organization Management
Suboptimizing
Knowingly accepting less than the best possible outcome to avoid unintended negative effects on other aspects of the organization.
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Substitutes for leadership
Factors in the work setting that can take the place of active leadership, making it unnecessary or redundant.
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Subunit power
The degree of power held by various organizational subunits, such as departments.
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Suggestion systems
Programs designed to enhance upward communication by soliciting ideas for improved work operations from employees.
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Sunk costs
Permanent losses of resources incurred as the result of a decision.
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Superleadership
Occurs when a leader gradually and purposefully turns over power, responsibility, and control to a self-managing work group.
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Superordinate goals
Attractive outcomes that can be achieved only by collaboration.
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Surface value
The objective meaning or worth of a reward to an employee.
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Survey
The collection of data from a population for the purpose of analysis of a particular issue. In a ‘sample survey’, data is collected from a sample of the population.
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Survey feedback
The collection of data from organizational members and the provision of feedback about the results.
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Survey methods
Involve the administration of a questionnaire (e.g., by computer, in paper and pencil form, or interview). Usually designed to assess problems and improve information flow throughout the organization.
Sustainability
The ability of an organization to secure and manage sufficient resources to enable it to fulfill its mission effectively and consistently over time without excessive dependence on a single funding source. Ideally, sustainable organizations have (a) the ability to scan the environment, adapt to it, and seize opportunities it offers, (b) strong leadership and management, (c) the ability to attract and retain qualified staff, (d) the ability to provide relevant benefits and services for maximum impact in communities, (e) the skills to demonstrate and communicate this impact to leverage further resources, (f) community support and involvement, and (g) commitment to building sustainable (not dependent) communities.
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Symbolic use of evaluation results
Refers to situations where evaluation results are accepted on paper or in public pronouncements, but go no further. Many evaluations are symbolic in that they are carried out simply to comply with administrative directives or to present an image of ‘modernity’.
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Symbolic value
The symbolic and personal meaning or worth of a reward to an employee. system A set of interrelated elements functioning as a whole.
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Tall organization
An organization with relatively many levels in its hierarchy of authority.
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Task demands
Stressors associated with the specific job a person performs.
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Task environment
This environment includes specific organizations, groups, and individuals that influence the organization.
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Task forces
Temporary groups set up to solve coordination problems across several departments.
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Task group
A relatively temporary, formal group established to do a specific task.
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Task identity
The extent to which a job involves doing a complete piece of work, from beginning to end.
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Task leader
A leader who is concerned with accomplishing a task by organizing others, planning strategy, and dividing labor.
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Task significance
The impact that a job has on other people.
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Task-oriented behavior
Leadership behavior focused on the task itself or getting the job done (e.g., telling subordinates how to perform certain tasks).
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Team
A small number of people with complementary skills who are committed to a common purpose, common performance goals, and an approach for which they hold themselves mutually accountable.
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Team building
An effort to increase the effectiveness of work teams by improving interpersonal processes, goal clarification, and role clarification.
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Team-building techniques
Group-level efforts designed to illustrate the value of teams as well as build cohesion and a common sense of purpose among team members.
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Technical (task) subsystem
The means by which inputs are transformed into outputs.
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Technical skills
The skills necessary to accomplish specific tasks within the organization.
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Technological interdependence
The extent to which organizational subunits depend on each other for resources, raw materials, or information.
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Technological routineness
The extent to which exceptions and problems affect the task of converting inputs into outputs.
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Technology
The activities, equipment, and knowledge necessary to turn organizational inputs into desired outputs.
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Telecommuting
A work arrangement in which employees spend part of their time working off-site.
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Terms of reference
Written document presenting the purpose and scope of the evaluation, the methods to be used, the standard against which performance is to be assessed or analyses are to be conducted, the resources and time allocated, and reporting requirements. Two other expressions sometimes used with the same meaning are ‘scope of work’ and ‘evaluation mandate’.
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Theory of career anchors
Five distinct patterns of self-perceived talents, motives, needs, and values that evolve as one faces early work experiences: technical/functional competence, managerial competence, security, autonomy, and creativity.
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Theory of career types
John Holland's theory identifying six distinct patterns of career orientation: conventional, artistic, realistic, social, enterprising, and investigative.
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Organization Management
Theory X and Theory Two concepts developed by prominent human relations writer Douglas McGregor. Theory X takes a negative and pessimistic view of workers, and Theory Y a morepositive and optimistic perspective. McGregor advocated the adoption of Theory Y. Y
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Third-party conflict resolution
Occurs when a manager atttemps to resolve a dispute between individuals or groups of employees.
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Tiered wage system
An approach to paying workers based on their hiring date. In their simplest form, two wage classifications exist, with workers hired after a particular date being paid much less than those already on the payroll.
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Total quality management (TQM)
A systematic attempt to achieve continuous improvement in the quality of an organization's products and/or services.
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Trait approach
This approach to leadership attempted to identify stable and enduring character traits that differentiated effective leaders from nonleaders.
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Traits
Individual characteristics such as physical attributes, intellectual ability, and personality.
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Transformation leadership
Providing followers with a new vision that instills true commitment.
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Transition management
The process of systematically planning, organizing, and implementing change.
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Transmission
The process through which the symbols that represent the message are sent to the receiver.
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Trial stage (socialization stage)
Steps in career when individuals explore jobs and performance begins to improve.
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Triangulation
A process of using multiple data sources, data collection methods, evaluators, or theories to study an issue from different perspectives, validate research findings, help eliminate bias, and detect errors or anomalies in results.
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Turnover
The percentage of employees who leave the firm during a specified time interval (usually a one year period)
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Type A
People who are extremely competitive, highly committed to work, and have a strong sense of time urgency.
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Type B
People who are less competitive, less committed to work, and have a weaker sense of time urgency.
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Type Z
This type of firm is committed to retaining employees, evaluates workers' performance based on both qualitative and quantitative information, emphasizes broad career paths, exercises control through informal, implicit mechanisms, requires that decision making occur in groups and be based on full information sharing and consensus, expects individuals to take responsibility for decisions, and emphasizes concern for people.
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Organization Management
Uncertainty avoidance
The extent to which people are uncomfortable with uncertain and ambiguous situations.
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Unconflicted adherence
Continuing with current activities if doing so does not entail serious risks.
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Unconflicted change
Making changes in present activities if doing so presents no serious risks.
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Organization Management
Unfreezing
The recognition that some current state of affairs is unsatisfactory.
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Unit of analysis
The class of elemental units that constitute the population and the units selected for measurement, or the class of elemental units to which measurements are generalized. In an evaluation of an organizational capacity development effort, the unit of analysis might correspond to the individual, group, project team, department, network, partnership, or other organizational unit.
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Organization Management
Universal approach
An organization design in which prescriptions and propositions are designed to work in any circumstances.
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Upward communication
Information that flows from the bottom of the organization toward the top.
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Organization Management
Utility
The extent to which an evaluation informs relevant audiences and is beneficial for their work.
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Organization Management
Utilization-focused evaluation
Evaluation done for and with specific, intended primary users for specific, intended uses.
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Valence
The expected value of work outcomes; the extent to which they are attractive or unattractive.
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Validation
The process by which the soundness of causal relationships or the generalization of findings are established.
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Validity
An index of the extent to which a measure truly reflects what it is supposed to measure.
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Values
A broad tendency to prefer certain states of affairs over others.
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Variable interval schedule
A partial reinforcement schedule in which some variable time period occurs between a reinforced response and the chance for the next reinforcement.
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Variable ratio schedule
A partial reinforcement schedule in which some variable number of responses must be made between a reinforced response and the availability of the next reinforcement.
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Variable-interval reinforcement
Varies the amount of time between reinforcements.
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Variable-ratio reinforcement
Varies the number of behaviours between reinforcements.
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Verbal communication
A reference to the many different ways you can get across your message orally (meetings, phone calls, conversation).
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Verification
The final step in the creative pro-cess, which involves determining the validity or truthfulness of the insight. (3) The feedback portion of communication in which the receiver sends a message to the source indicating receipt of the message and the degree to which he or she understood the message.
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Vertical integration
The strategy of formally taking control of sources of organizational supply and distribution.
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Vertical job loading
Combining various job tasks together which involve increasing the skill set of an employee (as opposed to enlargement where
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Organization Management
Vigilant information processing
Involves thoroughly investigating all possible alternatives, weighing their costs and benefits before making a decision, and developing contingency plans.
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Virtual organization
A temporary alliance between two or more organizations that band together to undertake a specific venture.
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Virtual team
A group of physically dispersed people who work as a team via alternative communication modes (e.g., video conferencing, email, etc.).
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Vroom-Yetton-Jago
This model of leadership at-tempts to prescribe how much participation subordinates should be allowed in making decisions.
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Wage incentive plans Various systems that link pay to performance on production jobs.
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Well-structured problem
A problem for which the existing state is clear, the desired state is clear and how to get from one state to another is fairly obvious.
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Wheel network
In this type of a network, information flows between the person at the end of each spoke and the person in the middle.
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Organization Management
Work teams
These include all the people working in an area, are relatively permanent, and do the daily work, making decisions regarding how the work of the team is done.
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Workforce diversity
Differences among recruits and employees in characteristics such as gender, race, age, religion, cultural background, physical ability, and sexual orientation.
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Work-life relationships
The interrelationships between a person's work life and personal life.
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Workplace behaviour The pattern of actions by the members of an organization that directly or indirectly influences organizational effectiveness.
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