individual differences

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INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

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INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES. Interpersonal Influence and Group Behavior. Organizational Processes. The Individual. THE ORGANIZATION’S ENVIRONMENT. Group behavior and work teams Intergroup conflict and negotiations Organizational power and politics Communication. Skills & Abilities Perception - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

Page 2: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

The IndividualInterpersonal Influence and

Group Behavior

Organizational Processes

•Skills & Abilities•Perception•Personality•Attitudes•Values

Group behavior and work teamsIntergroup conflict and negotiationsOrganizational power and politicsCommunication

LeadershipCommunicationsDecision makingReward SystemJob Design

THE ORGANIZATION’S ENVIRONMENTTHE ORGANIZATION’S ENVIRONMENT

INDIVIDUALBEHAVIOR IN THE

ORGANIZATION

Page 3: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

• First law of human behavior:– “People are different. What one person

considers a golden opportunity another considers a threat.”

• Caveat

Page 4: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

PERCEPTION

• Perception is the process by which individuals make sense of their world.

• The process by which individuals attend to, organize, interpret, and retain information from their environments.

• Perceptual filters– how people experience stimuli– personality, psychology, experience, preferences,

beliefs-based differences

• Objective vs. perceived realities

Page 5: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

Perception

• People perceive the world uniquely• Differences in perceptions can cause

problems – Communication– Conflict– Motivation– Judgment– Decision Making

Page 6: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

Social Perception

How we gather information about the social world--about peoples’ behavior, moods, motives, and traits

Similar to object perception, but• People are more dynamic than objects• We’re trying to figure out intentions,

motives, and causes of behavior

Page 7: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

Attribution

Why did they do that?

– internal causes• traits• skills• abilities

– external causes• situational constraints

Page 8: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

PERCEPTUAL DISTORTIONS

• Selective perception– notice and accept stimuli which are consistent with our values, beliefs,

and expectations

• Closure– tendency to fill in the gaps when information is missing

– we assume that what we don’t know is consistent with what we do know

• Primacy/Recency effects– Disproportionately high weight is given to the first/last information

obtained about a stimulus

• Fundamental attribution error– The tendency to ignore external causes of behavior and to attribute other

people’s actions to internal causes.

Page 9: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

PERCEPTUAL DISTORTIONS

• Stereotyping– A person has beliefs about a class of stimulus objects and

generalizes those beliefs to encounters with members of that class of objects.

• Halo Effects– Generalizing from an overall evaluation of an individual

to specific characteristics and visa versa.

• Expectancy effect– People perceive stimuli in ways that confirm their

expectations– Self fulfilling prophecy

Page 10: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

PERCEPTION IMPLICATIONS:SELF AWARENESS

Page 11: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

Guard against specific biases

• Stereotypes– Be aware that stereotyping can occur with very little

information, remain open to new information– Recognize that stereotypes rarely apply to a specific

individual

• Fundamental attribution error?• Primacy/recency?• Halo?• Expectancy?

Page 12: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

PERCEPTION IMPLICATIONS:OUR EMPLOYEES

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SELF-PERCEPTION

• The same processes and biases lead to both accurate and inaccurate perceptions of ourselves.

• Self-serving bias– attribute successes to ourselves - internal– attribute failures to the environment – external

• Implication for feedback?• Implication of our own self-awareness?

Page 14: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

JENSEN SHOES

• What do you see as the strengths and weaknesses of Brooks and Kravitz performance, interactions, and career management thus far?

• What were Brooks’ assumptions about Kravitz’s abilities, attitudes and motivations? Discuss the accuracy of these assumptions.

• What were Kravitz’ assumptions about Brooks’ abilities, attitudes and motivations? Discuss the accuracy of these assumptions.

• What perceptual biases and distortions occurred and influenced the

interactions between Kravitz and Brooks? • What would Brooks and Kravitz have had to do differently to result

in a more effective working relationship? 1. From their own perspective2. From the other’s perspective

Page 15: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

IMPROVING THE RELATIONSHIP: BROOKS

Page 16: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

IMPROVING THE RELATIONSHIP: KRAVITZ

Page 17: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

Page 18: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

PERSONALITY

Unique set of traits and characteristics that are relatively stable over time and determine a person’s preferences and behavior.

Does personality matter?Implication?

Which dimensions of personality?

Page 19: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

Self Awareness Social Awareness

(Empathy)

Self-Management Relationship Management

(Social Skills)

Recognitionof emotions

Regulationof emotions

Self(Personal Competence)

Other(Social Competence)

Emotional Intelligence

• Ability to detect, express, and manage emotion in oneself and others.

Page 20: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

Emotional Intelligence

• Some suggest that EI is the best predictor of work success

• It’s “learnable”• It’s related to communication, motivation (self and

others), effective leadership

(Hendrie Weisinger, “Emotional Intelligence at Work” (Jossey-Bass, 1998).

Page 21: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

SELF-ESTEEM (SELF CONCEPT)

How we perceive ourselves in terms of our abilities, competencies, and effectivenessGlobal, role-specific, job-based, organization-based

High self esteem is related to higher performance, commitment, loyalty, and longevity.

What can managers do to foster high self esteem?

Page 22: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

FOSTERING SELF-ESTEEM(SELF CONCEPT)

Page 23: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

LOCUS OF CONTROL

The extent to which people believe their actions determine what happens to them in life.InternalExternal

Why is locus of control important?How?

Page 24: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

JUNGS TYPOLOGY

• 16 personality types based on 4 sets of preferences

• Extraversion vs. Introversion

• Sensation vs. Intuition (N)—Perception

• Thinking vs. Feeling—Judgment

• Perception vs. Judgment

Page 25: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

THE “BIG FIVE”:Conscientiousness

The degree to which a person is dependable, organized, thorough, perseverant, honest

Most consistent personality predictor of performance

Also predicts lack of problem behavior

Page 26: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

THE “BIG FIVE”: Agreeableness

The extent to which a person is polite, good natured, flexible, cooperative, trusting.

May predict job performance in jobs…

Page 27: INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES

THE “BIG FIVE”:Neuroticism (Emotional Stability)

The degree to which a person is anxious, depressed, moody, emotionally unstable, temperamental.

May predict job performance in what type of jobs?

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THE “BIG FIVE”: Openness

The degree to which a person is imaginative, curious, flexible, open to change.

May predict job performance where?

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THE “BIG FIVE”: Extraversion

The degree to which a person is sociable, talkative, assertive, active, ambitious.

May predict job performance in what type of jobs?