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  • McShane/Von Glinow OB 5e 2010 The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved1

  • Power and

    Influence in the

    Workplace

    McGraw-Hill/Irwin

    McShane/Von Glinow OB

    5eCopyright 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights

    reserved.

  • Power, Influence & Politics in the RCMP

    Royal Canadian Mounted Police

    (RCMP) human resources director

    Denise Revine and her boss Chief

    Superintendent Fraser Macauley,

    (see photo) had their careers

    derailed when they reported that

    pension funds had been

    misappropriated. A Canadian

    government report concluded the

    RCMP suffered from the absolute

    power exercised by the

    Commissioner.

    10-3

  • The Meaning of Power

    Power is the capacity of a

    person, team, or organization to

    influence others.

    Potential, not actual use

    People have power they dont

    use -- may not know they

    possess

    A perception

    10-4

  • Power and Dependence

    Resource

    desired by

    person B

    Person Bs countervailing

    power over Person A

    Person A Person As control of resource valued

    by Person B

    Person B

    Person As power over Person B

    10-5

  • Model of Power in Organizations

    Contingencies

    of Power

    Power

    over others

    Sources

    of Power

    Legitimate

    Reward

    Coercive

    Expert

    Referent

    10-6

  • Sources of Power

    Agreement that people in

    certain roles can request

    certain behaviors of others

    Based on job descriptions and

    mutual agreement

    Legitimate power range (zone

    of indifference) varies across

    national and org cultures.

    Legitimate

    10-7

  • Sources of Power

    Ability to control the allocation of

    rewards valued by others and to

    remove negative sanctions

    Operates upward as well as

    downward

    Reward

    Legitimate

    10-8

  • Sources of Power

    Ability to apply punishment

    Exists upward as well as

    downward

    Peer pressure is a form of

    coercive power

    Legitimate

    Coercive

    Reward

    10-9

  • Sources of Power

    The capacity to influence

    others by possessing

    knowledge or skills that they

    value

    More employee expert power

    over companies in knowledge

    economy

    Legitimate

    Expert

    Reward

    Coercive

    10-10

  • Sources of Power

    Occurs when others identify

    with, like, or otherwise respect

    the person

    Associated with charismatic

    leadership

    Legitimate

    Referent

    Reward

    Coercive

    Expert

    10-11

  • DeCourcys Trendspotting Power

    Colleen DeCourcy has

    developed a reputation as a

    trendspotter, giving her

    considerable information power

    in the advertising industry. Her

    knowledge of the digital

    landscape, grounded in

    creativity, make her an

    invaluable additional to TBWA,

    says DeCourcys boss.

    10-12

  • Information and Power

    Control over information flow

    Based on legitimate power

    Relates to formal communication

    network

    Coping with uncertainty

    More power to those who can

    help firms cope with uncertainty

    - Prevention

    - Forecasting

    - Absorption

    10-13

  • Power Through Control of Information Flow

    This person has high information control

    These people individually have low information control

    Wheel formation

    All-channels formation

    10-14

  • Contingencies of Power

    Contingencies

    of Power

    Substitutability

    Centrality

    Discretion

    Visibility

    Power

    over others

    Sources

    of Power

    10-15

  • Increasing Nonsubstitutability

    Few/no alternatives to the resource

    Increase nonsubstituability by controlling the

    resource

    exclusive right to perform medical procedures

    control over skilled labor

    exclusive knowledge to repair equipment

    Differentiate resource from others

    10-16

  • Centrality

    Degree and nature of interdependence

    between powerholder and others

    Centrality is a function of:

    How many others are affected by you

    How quickly others are affected by you

    10-17

  • Discretion and Visibility

    Discretion The freedom to exercise judgment

    Rules limit discretion, limit power

    Also a perception acting as if you have discretion

    Visibility Symbols communicate your power source(s)

    - Educational diplomas

    - Clothing etc (stethoscope around neck)

    Salience

    - Location others more aware of your presence

    10-18

  • Social Networking and Power

    Cultivating social relationships with others to

    accomplish ones goals

    Increases power through:

    social capital

    referent power

    visibility and centrality contingencies

    10-19

  • Influencing Others

    Influence -- any behavior that attempts to alter

    someones attitudes or behavior

    Applies one or more power bases

    Process through which people achieve

    organizational objectives

    Operates up, down, and across the organizational

    hierarchy

    10-20

  • Assertiveness Actively applying legitimate and coercive power (vocal authority)

    Reminding, confronting, checking, threatening

    Silent

    Authority Following requests without overt influence

    Based on legitimate power, role modeling

    Common in high power distance cultures

    more

    Types of Influence

    10-21

  • Coalition

    Formation

    Group forms to gain more power than individuals alone

    1. Pools resources/power

    2. Legitimizes the issue

    3. Power through social identity

    more

    Types of Influence (cont)

    Information

    Control Manipulating others access to information

    Withholding, filtering, re-arranging information

    10-22

  • Upward

    Appeal Appealing to higher authority

    Includes appealing to firms goals

    Alliance or perceived alliance with higher status person

    more

    Types of Influence (cont)

    Persuasion Logic, facts, emotional appeals

    Depends on persuader, message content, message medium, audience

    10-23

  • Types of Influence (cont)

    Exchange Promising or reminding of past benefits in exchange for compliance

    Includes negotiation and networking

    Ingratiation/

    Impress. Mgt. increaseliking by, or perceived similarity to

    the target person

    10-24

  • Consequences of Influence Tactics

    people oppose the behavior desired by the influencer

    motivated by external sources (rewards) to implement request

    identify with and highly motivated to implement request

    Resistance Compliance Commitment

    10-25

  • Consequences of Influence Tactics

    Resistance Compliance Commitment

    Persuasion

    Ingratiation &impression mgt

    Exchange

    Soft Influence Tactics

    Hard Influence Tactics

    Silent authority

    Upward appeal

    Coalition formation

    Information control

    Assertiveness

    10-26

  • Contingencies of Influence Tactics

    Soft tactics generally more acceptable than

    hard tactics

    Appropriate influence tactic depends on:

    Influencers power base

    Organizational position

    Cultural values and expectations

    10-27

  • Organizational Politics

    Behaviors that others perceive as self-

    serving tactics for personal gain at the

    expense of other people and possibly

    the organization.

    10-28

  • Conditions

    Supporting

    Organizational

    Politics

    Scarce

    Resources

    Complex and

    Ambiguous

    Decisions

    Tolerance of Politics

    OrganizationalChange

    Conditions for Organizational Politics

    10-29

  • Minimizing Political Behaviour

    1. Introduce clear rules for scarce resources

    2. Effective organizational change practices

    3. Suppress norms that support or tolerate

    self-serving behavior

    4. Leaders role model organizational

    citizenship

    5. Give employees more control over their

    work

    6. Keep employees informed10-30

  • Power and

    Influence in the

    Workplace

    10-31

    McGraw-Hill/Irwin

    McShane/Von Glinow OB

    5eCopyright 2010 by The McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights

    reserved.