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MGT 305: EXAM 1

Management
Involves coordinating and overseeing the work activities of others so that their activities are completely efficiently and effectively
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Efficiency
The ends Doing things right, or getting the most output from the least amount of inputs
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Effectiveness
The ends Doing the right things, or doing those work activities that will result in achieving goals
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First Line Managers
Manage the work of non-managerial employees Ex: supervisors, district managers, office managers
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Middle Managers
Manage the work of first-line managers Ex: regional manager, store manager
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Top Managers
Responsible for making organizational-wide decisions Ex: Vice president, president
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Management Functions
Henry Fayol Planning Organization Leading Controlling
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Planning
Setting goals, establishing strategies, developing plans to integrate/coordinate activities
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Organizing
Arranging and structuring work to accomplish goals
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Leading
Working with and through people to accomplish goals
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Controlling
Monitoring, comparing, and correcting work performance
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Managerial Roles
Interpersonal Informational Decisional
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Interpersonal Roles
Involve people and other duties Ex: leader, liaison, figurehead
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Informational Roles
Collecting, receiving, information Ex: monitor, disseminator, spokesperson
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Decisional Roles
Revolve around making choices Ex: entrepreneur, negotiator
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Managerial Skills
Technical Interpersonal Conceptual/Decisional
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Technical Skills
Job-specific knowledge and techniques Front line managers
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Interpersonal Skills
Ability to work well with other people individually and in a group Middle managers
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Conceptual/Decisional Skills
Ability to think and to conceptualize about abstract and complex situations Top managers
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Sustainability
Company's ability to achieve its business goals and increase long-term shareholder value by integrating economic, environmental, and social opportunities into business strategies
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Universality of Management
Management is needed in all types and sizes
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Organizational Behavior
Actions of people at work
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Goals of organizational behavior
To explain, predict, and influence
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3 Areas of organizational behavior
Individual Group Organizational
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Goals of organizational behavior
Employee productivity Absenteeism Turnover Organizational citizen behavior Workplace misbehavior
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Employee productivity
A performance measure of both efficiency and effectiveness
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Absenteeism
The failure to show up for work
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Turnover
The voluntary and involuntary permanent withdrawal from an organization
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Organizational citizen behavior
Discretionary behavior that is not part of an employee’s formal job requirements but which promotes the effective functioning of the organization Ex: bringing cookies to work
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Workplace misbehavior
Fraud, stealing
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Key psychological factors influencing behaviors
Attitudes, personality, perception, learning
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Attitude
Evaluative statements, either favorable or unfavorable, concerning objects, people, or events
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Components of Attitudes
Cognitive Affective Behavioral
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Cognitive
Made up of the beliefs, opinions, knowledge, or information held by a person 'Discrimination is wrong"
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Affective
The emotion/feeling part "I don't like a person who discriminates"
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Behavioral
Refers to an intention to behave in a certain way toward someone or something "I don't want to work with someone who discriminates"
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Key attitudes
Job satisfaction Job involvement Organizational commitment
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Job satisfaction
General attitude towards one's job
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Job Involvement
The degree to which an employee identifies with his/her job, actively participates in it, and considers his/her job to be important to self-worth
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Organizational Commitment
The degree to which an employee identifies with a particular organization and its goals and wishes to maintain membership in that organization
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Employee engagement
When employees are connected to, satisfied with, and enthusiastic about their jobs
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Cognitive Dissonance
Any incompatibility or inconsistency between attitudes or between behavior and attitudes
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Personality
Unique combination of emotional, thought, and behavioral patterns that affect how a person reacts to situations and interacts with others
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Myers Briggs
Most widely used personality assessment Continuums Extraversion v introversion Sensing v intuition Thinking v feeling Judging v perceiving
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Big Five
OCEAN Openness to experience Conscientiousness Extroversion Agreeableness Emotional stability/neuroticism
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Locus of control
OCEAN Belief that life is controlled by oneself (internals), not by outsiders (externals)
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Machiavellianism
Tendency to manipulate and maintain emotional distance in search of personal gain Pragmatic, ends justifies means
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Self Esteem
Extent to which an individual likes themselves
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Self Monitoring
A personality trait that measures the ability to adjust behavior to external situational factors
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Risk Propensity
Make a decision with little information
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Type A
Desire achievement in minimum time Impatient Create own deadlines
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Proactive Personality
People who identify opportunities, show initiative, take action, and persevere until meaningful change occurs
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Resilience
An individual's ability to overcome challenges and turn them into opportunities
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Emotions
Intense feelings that are directed at someone or something
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Emotional Intelligence (EI)
Self awareness Self management Self motivation Empathy Social Skills
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Self awareness
Aware of what you are feeling
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Self management
Ability to manage own emotions and impulses
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Self motivation
Ability to persist in the face of setbacks and failures
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Empathy
Ability to sense and understand how others are feeling
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Social Skills
Ability to handle the emotions of others
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Perception
How we organize and interpret information from our senses in order to give meaning to our environment
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Attribution Theory
Used to explain how we judge people differently depending on what meaning we attribute to a given behavior
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Fundamental Attribution Error
The tendency to underestimate the influence of external factors and overestimate the influence of internal factors when making judgments about the behaviors of others
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Self-serving bias
The tendency of individuals to attribute their success to internal factors while blaming personal factors on external factors "Teacher gave me a D"
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Assumed Similarity
The assumption that others are like oneself
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Stereotyping
Judging a person on the basis of one's perception of a group to which he or she belongs
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Halo Effect
General impression of an individual based on a single characteristic
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Learning
Relatively permanent change in behavior that occurs as a result of experience
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Social Learning Theory
People can learn through observation and direct experience
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Operant Conditioning
Behavior is a function of its consequence Reward - behavior will be repeated Punishment - behavior might not be repeated
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Shaping behavior
Process of guiding learning in graduated steps using reinforcement or lack of reinforcement
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Motivation
Internal state of being When a person’s efforts are energized, directed, and sustained toward attaining a goal
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Elements of Motivation
Energy Direction Persistence
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Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
Self actualization Esteem Social Safety Physiological Each level must be substantially satisfied before the next need becomes dominant
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Herzberg's Two Factor Theory
Motivation-hygiene - Claims that intrinsic factors are related to job satisfaction and motivation, whereas extrinsic factors are associated with job dissatisfaction
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Hygiene factors
Factors that eliminate job dissatisfaction but don't motivate
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Motivators
Factors that increase job satisfaction and motivation
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Three-Needs Theory
Says 3 acquired (non-innate) needs are major motives in work Achievement Power Affiliation
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McGregor's Theory
X - The assumption that employees dislike work, are lazy, avoid responsibility, and must be coerced to perform Y - The assumption that employees are creative, enjoy work, seek responsibility, and can exercise self-direction
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Goal-Setting Theory
The proposition that specific goals increase performance and that difficult goals, when accepted, result in higher performance than do easy goals
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SMART Goals
Specific Measurable Attainable Relevant Timely (deadline)
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Self Efficacy
An individual's belief that he or she is capable of performing a task
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Reinforcement Theory
Behavior is a function of its consequences
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Job Design Theory
Way tasks are combined to complete jobs
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Job Enlargement
The horizontal expansion of a job that occurs as a result of increasing job scope
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Job Enrichment
The vertical expansion of a job that occurs as a result of additional planning and evaluation of responsibilities
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Job Characteristics Model (JCM)
A framework for analyzing and designing jobs that identifies 5 primary core job dimensions, their interrelationships, and their impact on outcomes Skill variety Task identity Task significance Autonomy Feedback
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Skill variety
The degree to which a job requires a variety of activities so that an employee can use a number of different skills and talents
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Task identity
The degree to which a job requires completion of a whole and identifiable piece of work
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Task significance
The degree to which a job has a substantial impact on the lives or work of other people
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Autonomy
The degree to which a job provides substantial freedom, independence, and discretion to the individual in scheduling work and determining the procedures to be used in carrying it out
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Feedback
The degree to which carrying out work activities required by a job results in the individual’s reception of direct and clear information about his or her performance effectiveness
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Equity Theory
Employee compares his or her job's input-output ratio with that of relevant others and then corrects an inequity
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Referents
The persons, systems, or selves against which individuals compare themselves to assess equity
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Distributive justice
Perceived fairness of the amount and allocation of rewards among individuals
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Procedural justice
Perceived fairness of the process used to determine the distribution of rewards
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Interactional justice
Playing favorites
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