Title: Understanding Behavior, Human Relations, and Performance
1Understanding Behavior, Human Relations, and
Performance
2Learning Objectives
- Explain why human relations skills are important.
- Discuss the goal of human relations.
- Describe the relationship between performance at
the individual - and group levels and organizational performance.
- Describe the relationship among behavior, human
- relations, and organizational performance.
3Learning Objectives
- Identify your personal low and high human
relations ability/skill levels. - Identify five personal human relations goals for
the course. - Explain nine guidelines for effective human
relations. - Briefly describe the history of the study of
human relations. - State some of the trends and challenges in the
field of human relations.
4Why Human Relation Skills Are Important
- People are the organizations most valuable
resource. - Single biggest reason for career success and
failure. - Time spent in resolving employee clashes.
- Important factor in global competition.
- Affects productivity.
- Managers work with people.
- Relates to everyday interactions with people,
regardless of the position held.
5The Goal of Human Relations
- Is to create a win-win situation by satisfying
- employee needs while achieving organizational
- objectives.
- Human relations interactions among people.
- Win-win situation when the organization
- and the employees get what they want.
- Total person approach realizes that the
- organization employs the whole person, not
- just his or her job skills.
6The Goal of Human Relations
- Organization A group of people working to
- achieve an objective.
- Organizational behavior The collective
- behavior of the organizations individuals and
- groups.
- Performance the extent to which expectations or
- objectives have been met.
- Systems affect all people in the organization
are - affected by at least one other person, and each
- person affects the whole group/organization.
7Levels of Behavior
Example level 3 Org. behavior
8Relationship Among Individual, Group, and
Organizational Performance
Organization
Organization
Individual
9Human Relation GuidelinesDeveloping Human
Relations Skills
- Be optimistic.
- Be positive. (dont complain nor criticize)
- Be genuinely interested in people.
- Smile and develop a sense of humor.
- Call people by name. (preferred name vs. hey you)
- Listen to people.
- Help others.
- Think before you act. (think about consequences)
- Create win-win situations.
- (what you want vs. what others want)
10Human RelationsPast, Present, and Future (I)
- Frederick Taylor the Father of Scientific
Management - late 1800s and early 1900s
- focused on production, not people
- assumed workers acted rationally and were
motivated only by money - Robert Owen the real father of personnel
administration - 1800
- understood the need to improve the work
environment - instituted reforms in his workers employment
conditions
11Human RelationsPast, Present, and Future (II)
- Elton Mayo and the Hawthorne studies
- mid-1920s to the early 1930s
- the father of human relations
- conducted research at Western Electric Hawthorne
Plant near Chicago, which resulted in several
unexpected discoveries, including - The Hawthorne effect refers to an increase in
performance due to special attention given to
employees, rather than tangible changes in the
work.
12Human RelationsPast, Present, and Future (II)
- Employees have many needs beyond those satisfied
by money. - Internal work groups have powerful influence.
- Supervisor-employee human relations affects the
quality and quantity of employee output. - Many employee needs are satisfied off the job.
- Employee relations affect employee performance.
13Human RelationsPast, Present, and Future (III)
- 1930s and 1940s
- Unions forced management to recognize employee
needs and research continued. - 1960s
- Theory X developed by Douglas Macgregor (covered
in chapter 3), while Eric Berne introduced
Transactional Analysis (covered in chapter 8).
14Human RelationsPast, Present, and Future (III)
- 1970s
- Human relations began to be called organizational
behavior. Americans began to look to their
competition for ways to increase performance. - 1980s
- William Ouichi developed Theory Z
- Theory Z integrates common business practices in
the United States and Japan into one
middle-ground framework appropriate for use in
the United States.
15Human Relations Past, Present, and Future (IV)
- 1980s
- Peters and Waterman researched the
characteristics of successful organizations - They have a bias for action.
- They are close to the customer.
- They use autonomy and entrepreneurship.
- They attain high productivity through people.
- They are hands-on and value-driven.
- They stick to the knitting and do not diversify
greatly. - They use a simple organizational form with a lean
staff. - They have simultaneous loose-tight properties.
16Human Relations Past, Present, and Future (IV)
- 1990s
- Worker involvement dominates human resource
issues. - Peter Lawler predicts
- Greater levels of participation at the lowest
levels of the organization. - More input into management decisions by employee.
17Trends and Challenges
- The Changing Work Force Diversity
- Minorities
- Aging
- Gender and work-family issues
- External Environmental Forces
- Globalization
- Productivity, quality, and teams
- Innovation and speed
- Technology
- Internet revolution and e-business
- The virtual office
18Understanding Behavior, Human Relations, and
Performance