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Managing conflict and negotiation

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Chapter 11 Managing conflict and negotiation Conflict and Negotiations - Key Concepts Conflict: definition Constructive and Destructive aspects Levels of conflict ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Managing conflict and negotiation


1
Chapter 11
  • Managing conflict and negotiation

2
Conflict and Negotiations - Key Concepts
  • Conflict definition
  • Constructive and Destructive aspects
  • Levels of conflict
  • Stages of conflict
  • Indirect and direct conflict mgmt approaches
  • Conflict styles/behaviors
  • Negotiation
  • Hard soft bargaining, ethical conflict
    behaviors
  • Coping with Criticism

3
Conflict
  • Conflict is____________________
  • Substantive
  • A fundamental disagreement over ends or goals to
    be pursued and the means for their
    accomplishment.
  • Emotional
  • Interpersonal difficulties that arise over
    feelings of anger, mistrust, fear, and
    resentment.

4
Constructive (Functional) Conflict
  • Helps identify issues and underlying problems
  • Acts as a safety valve, releasing tension and
    anger
  • Encourages interaction and involvement
  • Promotes creativity
  • Facilitates problem solving
  • Promotes sharing of information
  • Tests strength of ideas - under fire
  • Adapted from Gary L. Kreps, Organizational
    Communication, 1986, p. 188-189

5
Destructive (Dysfunctional) conflict
  • Results in negative outcomes
  • Decreases work productivity and job satisfaction
  • Increases in absenteeism and turnover
  • A successful leader will be alert to destructive
    conflicts and take action

6
Levels of conflict
Intrapersonal Interpersonal Intra-group Inter-g
roup Organizational
7
Levels of Conflict
  • Intrapersonal Level
  • Involve actual or perceived pressures from
    incompatible goals or expectations within a
    person
  • Ones perceptions differ from others ones
    judgment called into question
  • Approach- Approach Conflict
  • Choices two positive and equally attractive
    alternatives
  • Example two jobs equally positive duties, pay,
    benefits, location

8
Levels of Conflict, cont.
  • Intrapersonal Level
  • Approach- Avoidance Conflict
  • Choice something has both positive and negative
    consequences
  • Example a great job in a lousy location
  • Avoidance Avoidance Conflict
  • Choices two negative and equally unattractive
    alternatives
  • Example two jobs - neither first choice in
    terms of duties, pay, location

9
Levels of Conflict
  • Interpersonal
  • between two or more individuals
  • Intergroup
  • among and between groups
  • Interorganizational
  • related to competition and rivalry that
    characterizes firms operating in the same markets

10
Diagnosing Conflict
  • Vertical conflict between hierarchical levels
  • Supervisor subordinate disagreements over
    resources, goals, deadlines, or performance
  • Horizontal conflict same level (coworkers, line
    - staff, functional units)
  • Goal incompatibilities ambiguities,
  • Perceived resource scarcities
  • Power or value differences or interpersonal
    factors

11
Stages of Conflict
  • Antecedent conditions
  • Perceived and felt conflict
  • Manifest conflict
  • Conflict resolution, management or suppression
  • Conflict aftermath
  • Proposed by Louis Pondy (1967)

12
Desired Outcomes
  • Agreement
  • Fair and equitable
  • Stronger relationships
  • Bridges of trust and goodwill for future
  • Learning
  • Greater self-awareness and creative problem
    solving
  • Dean Tjosvolds cooperative conflict model

13
The Conflict Process
Perceived conflict
Increased performance
  • Antecedent conditions
  • communication
  • structure
  • personal variables

Manifest conflict
Conflict Aftermath
Decreased performance
Felt conflict
  • Conflict-handling
  • Behaviors/styles
  • competition
  • collaboration
  • accommodation
  • avoidance
  • compromise

14
Indirect Conflict Management Approaches
  • Reduce Interdependence
  • Reduce required contact, build buffers, assign
    formal liaison
  • Appeal to common goals
  • Establish a common, overarching goal, ensure
    parties take responsibility
  • Use chain of command
  • Refer problem to more senior employees/managers
  • Redesign the organization
  • Rewrite scripts, rituals

15
Conflict Styles/Behaviors (from K Thomas, 1976
and Rahim, 1985)
Dominating (competing)
Integrating (collaborating)
High (Assertive)
Compromising (Sharing)
Concern for Self
Avoiding (neglecting)
Obliging (accommodating)
Low (Unassertive)
Low (Uncooperative)
High (Cooperative)
Concern for Others
16
Direct Conflict Management Techniques
  • Lose-lose
  • Avoidance
  • Sidestep, postpone, withdraw
  • Accommodation
  • Play down differences and highlight similarities
    yield, obey or sacrifice to other
  • Compromise
  • Split the difference, exchange concessions, seek
    the middle-ground

17
Direct Conflict Management Techniques
  • Win-lose
  • Competition
  • one party achieves its desires at the expense and
    to the exclusion of the other partys desires
  • Stand for your rights defend your position -
    which you believe is correct

18
Direct Conflict Management Techniques
  • Win-win
  • Collaboration
  • Achieve each others goals
  • Acceptable by both parties
  • Establishes a process whereby all parties
    involved feel a responsibility to be open and
    honest about facts and feelings
  • Explore the disagreement to learn from each other
  • Results in problem solving or situation
    improvement

19
Negotiation
  • Process of making joint decisions when the
    parties involved have different preferences
  • Successful negotiations
  • Substantive goals
  • Concerned with outcomes relative to the content
    issues at hand
  • Relational goals
  • Concerned with outcomes relating to how well
    people involved in the negotiation, and any
    constituencies they may represent, are able to
    work with one another once the process is
    concluded

20
Distributive Negotiating
  • Hard Bargaining
  • When each party holds out to get its own way
  • Leads to competition
  • Soft Bargaining
  • When one party is willing to make concessions to
    the other to end the impasse
  • Leads to accommodation

21
Staking Out the Bargaining Zone
Party As aspiration range
Party Bs aspiration range
Settlement range
Party As target point
Party Bs target point
Party Bs resistance point
Party As resistance point
22
Integrative Negotiating
  • Principled negotiations
  • Negotiations based on the merits of the
    situation
  • Foundations for gaining integrative agreements
  • Be willing to trust the other
  • Be willing to share information
  • Be willing to ask concrete questions

23
Ethical Conflict Behaviors
  • Argue the specific issue at hand
  • Focus on interests not positions
  • Avoid dirty fighting (character attacks, slander,
    overly aggressive tactics)
  • Separate the problem from the people
  • Construct a reasonable argument
  • Be open to alternate perspectives
  • Avoid premature judgments
  • Listen actively and evaluate fairly
  • Judge using objective criteria
  • Adapted from Kreps, 1986, Organizational
    Communication, p.189. And Schermerhorn

24
Coping with Criticism
  • Based on work by Ronald Adler and Gregg Walker
    (OSU)
  • osu.orst.edu/instruct/comm440-540/ criticism.htm

25
Constructive Criticism
  • The generation of evaluative comments
  • Can promote constructive growth in individuals
    and relationships

26
Guidelines for the Critic
  • Understand why you are offering criticism
  • Try to understand the other person
  • Describe the behavior, not the person
  • Focus on specifics and the here and now, not
    generalities or the past
  • Emphasize your feelings
  • Invite a collaborative discussion to solve the
    problem
  • Allow the other person to make decisions

27
When Criticized ...
  • Recognize and welcome the value of constructive
    criticism
  • Listen actively, with an open mind
  • Paraphrase what the other is saying
  • Try to understand the others perspective
  • Work hard to avoid becoming defensive
  • Maintain your own power and authority to make
    decisions
  • Communicate clearly how you feel and think
  • Insist on valid criticism

28
Ask for Specifics
  • Ask for specifics
  • What is the specific behavior (s) that bothers
    this person?
  • In what circumstances does the objectionable
    behavior occur?
  • Does this criticism also involve others?

29
Ask About Consequences ..
  • Ask about the consequences of your behavior
  • What need of theirs is not being met?
  • What negative consequences have occurred as a
    result of this behavior?

30
Resolution
  • Make sure you understand the original complaint
    or problem
  • Take time and make the effort to hear out the
    other person completely
  • Ask how s/he would suggest the issue be resolved
  • Provide feedback on your point of view and how
    you plan to proceed only after completing the
    previous 3 steps
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