Individual Behavior and Learning - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 32
About This Presentation
Title:

Individual Behavior and Learning

Description:

When EMC was about to dramatically expand its work force, an executive team at ... Emotional dissonance. Varied display norms across cultures. Organizational. BEHAVIOR ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:32
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 33
Provided by: Steve1427
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Individual Behavior and Learning


1
Individual Behaviorand Learning
2
C H A P T E R
T W O
2
Assessing Competencies at EMC
  • When EMC was about to dramatically expand its
    work force, an executive team at the enterprise
    storage products firm developed an Employee
    Success Profile. This list of generic
    competencies represented the traits of successful
    employees, such as goal-orientation and
    integrity.

Courtesy of EMC Corp.
3
Model of Individual Behavior
Individual Behavior and Performance
4
Influences on individual behavior
  • Abilities physical, intellectual and emotional
  • Attitudes
  • Values
  • Culture and gender
  • Learning styles

5
Model of Attitudes and Behavior
Feelings
Attitude
6
Job Satisfaction and Behavior
  • Satisfaction reduces turnover, absenteeism
  • Weak association with job performance
  • General attitude with specific behaviors
  • Performance affects satisfaction through rewards
  • Satisfaction affects org. citizenship
  • Satisfaction increases customer satisfaction
  • Affects moods, positive behaviors
  • Less turnover, more consistent service

7
Hiring for Attitude at Four Seasons
  • Four Seasons Hotels and Resorts hires for
    attitude, trains for skills. Applicants must
    have emotions compatible with the job and possess
    the emotional intelligence needed to serve guests
    effectively.

Courtesy of Four Seasons Hotels Resorts.
8
Emotional Labor
  • Effort, planning and control needed to express
    organizationally desired emotions during
    interpersonal transactions
  • Problems with emotional labor
  • True emotions leak out
  • Emotional dissonance
  • Varied display norms across cultures

9
Emotional Intelligence
Self- Awareness
Emotional Intelligence
Self- Regulation
Social Skill
Self- Motivation
Empathy
10
Values at Work
  • Stable, long-lasting beliefs about what is
    important
  • Generalized conceptions of the world
  • Terminal vs. instrument values
  • Include cross-cultural, ethical, and
    organizational culture values

11
Values
  • Belief in and acceptance of organizational goals
  • Centrality of paid work
  • People vs Task orientation
  • Measures of success

12
Managing diversity
  • Managing differences
  • Managing attitudes towards differences

13
Achievement-Nurturing
Achievement
Japan
  • The degree that people value assertiveness,
    competitiveness, and materialism (achievement)
    versus relationships and well-being of others
    (nurturing)

United States
France
Sweden
Nurturing
14
Power Distance
High Power Distance
Mexico
  • The degree that people accept an unequal
    distribution of power in society

France
Japan
United States
Germany
Low Power Distance
15
Uncertainty Avoidance
High U. A.
Japan
  • The degree that people tolerate ambiguity (low)
    or feel threatened by ambiguity and uncertainty
    (high uncertainty avoidance).

Germany
United States
HongKong
Low U. A.
16
Long/Short-Term Orientation
Long-Term Orientation
China
  • The degree that people value thrift, savings, and
    persistence (long-term) versus past and present
    issues (short-term).

Japan
Netherlands
United States
Russia
Short-Term Orientation
17
Attitudes towards differences
  • Fear of the unknown
  • Ethnocentrism
  • Stereotyping

18
Gender
  • Collectivist
  • importance of relationships
  • nurturing
  • emotional labour
  • Measures of success
  • status
  • balance
  • personal growth

19
Individual differences influence Work-Related
Behaviors
  • Vocational choice
  • Joining the organization
  • Remaining with the organization
  • Maintaining work attendance
  • Performing required job duties
  • Exhibiting organizational citizenship

20
Job Satisfaction Model
Outcomes/inputsof others
AmountExpected
Job satisfaction Job dissatisfaction Inequity
feelings
Pastexperience
Perceived amountreceived
21
Behavior Modification
  • We operate on the environment
  • alter behavior to maximize positive and minimize
    adverse consequences.
  • Operant versus respondent behaviors
  • Law of effect
  • likelihood that an operant behavior will be
    repeated depends on its consequences

22
A-B-Cs of OB Modification
Example
23
Contingencies of Reinforcement
Consequence is Introduced
Consequence is Removed
No Consequence
Behavior Increases/ Maintained
Positive reinforcement
Negative reinforcement
Punishment
Extinction
Punishment
Behavior Decreases
24
Schedules of Reinforcement
  • Continuous reinforcement
  • Fixed interval
  • Variable interval
  • Fixed ratio
  • Variable ratio

25
OB Modification Limitations
  • Cant reinforce nonobservable behavior
  • Reinforcer tends to wear off
  • Variable ratio schedule is a form of gambling
  • Ethical concerns about perceived manipulation

26
Definition of Learning
  • A relatively permanent change in behavior (or
    behavior tendency) that occurs as a result of a
    persons interaction with the environment.

27
Learning through Feedback
  • Any information about consequences of our
    behavior
  • Clarifies role perceptions
  • Corrective feedback improves ability
  • Positive feedback motivates future behavior

28
Multi-Source (360 Degree) Feedback
Evaluated Employee
29
Giving Feedback Effectively
Specific
Effective Feedback
Frequent
Relevant
Timely
Credible
30
Social Learning Theory
  • Behavioral modeling
  • Observing and modeling behavior of others
  • Learning behavior consequences
  • Observing consequences that others experience
  • Self-reinforcement
  • Reinforcing our own behavior with consequences
    within our control

31
Learning at International Forest Products
  • At International Forest Products Ltd., employees
    receive hands-on, just-in-time learning from
    coworkers on the job site, not just in the
    classroom.

Courtesy of International Forest Products Ltd.
32
Learning Through Experience
  • Benefits of experiential learning
  • Helps acquire tacit knowledge/skills
  • Allows implicit learning
  • Practicing experiential learning
  • Reward experimentation
  • Recognize mistakes as part of learning
  • Action learning -- investigating a real problem
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com