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Example: Groupthink
The mode of thinking that persons engage in when concurrence seeking becomes so dominant in a cohesive in-group that it tends to override realistic appraisal of alternative courses of action.
Example: Groupthink
Symptoms of groupthink:– An illusion of invulnerability;– Collective construction of rationalizations that permit
group members to ignore warnings or other other forms of negative feedback;
– Unquestioning belief in the morality of the in-group;– Strong, negative stereotyped views about the leaders
of enemy groups;– Rapid application of pressure against group members
who express even momentary doubts about virtually any illusions the group shares;
Example: Groupthink
Symptoms of groupthink (contd.):– Careful, conscious, personal avoidance of deviation
from what appears to be a group consensus;– Shared illusions of unanimity of opinion; And.– Establishment of mind guards – people who “protect”
the leader and fellow members from adverse information that might break the complacency they shared about the effectiveness and morality of past decisions.
Example: Groupthink
Incidents of groupthink at the federal level:– The 1941 failure to prepare for the Japanese attack on Pearl
Harbor.– The 1950 decision during the Korean War to send General
Douglas McArthur to the Yalu River.– The 1961 decisions to allow an American-sponsored invasion of
Cuba by expatriate Cubans trained by the CIA to overthrow the government of Fidel Castro.
– The 1965 decision to introduce American ground troops into Vietnam.
– The 2001 failure to anticipate the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon.
– The 2003 decision to invade Iraq.
Organizational Behavior
The study of organizational behavior comprises those aspects of behavioral sciences that focus on the understanding of human behavior in organizations.
Classic model: authoritarian and militaristic.
Organizational Behavior: Major Themes
McGregor’s humanistic model. Group dynamics. Organization development. The impact of personality on organizational
behavior. The impact of bureaucratic structure on
organizational behavior. Motivation. The future of organizations.
Organizational Behavior
Douglas McGregor’s (1960) humanistic model:– Organizations are created to serve human ends;– Organizations and people need each other
(organizations need ideas, energy, and talent; people need careers, salaries, and work opportunities);
– When the fit between the needs of the individual and the organization is poor, one or both will suffer (exploitation by one or the other or both).
– A good fit between individuals and organizations benefits both because people gain meaningful satisfying work.
Organizational Behavior
When confronted with change, classical model assumes no concern for workers.
By contrast, modern behaviorists assume that organization will:– Minimize fear of change by inclusion of many in
decision-making process;– Minimize negative impacts of change on vulnerable
workers;– Coopt formal and informal leaders; and– Find alternatives for those workers for whom change is
negative.
Organizational Behavior
Group dynamics– Organizations involve the development of formal and
informal work groups built around specializations.– Groups develop norms (shared beliefs, values, and
assumptions) and expect conformity through reward and punishment.
– Norms generate organizational stability, but can lead to overconformity.
– When a group becomes institutionalized, the norms become the basis for a cohesive group and an organizational subculture.
Organizational Behavior
Group dynamics (contd.).– Group dynamics is the subfield of organizational
behavior concerned with the nature of groups, how they develop, and how they interrelate with individuals and other groups.
– Primary groups (face-to-face interaction)• Formal (task-oriented).
• Informal (socially-defined). Critical to the functioning of the organization.
Organizational Behavior
Organization development.– All organizations need constant change and
renovation.– O.D. is planned organizational change.– O.D. is not a philosophy, but a strategy for
increasing organizational effectiveness.– Art, not science.– Large scale, not incremental.
Organizational Behavior
The impact of personality.– Personality can impact performance
(Hippocrates’ four humors, 500 BC).• Sanguine (optimistic and energetic).• Melancholic (moody and withdrawn).• Choleric (irritable and impulsive).• Phlegmatic (calm and slow).
– Mismatches are commonplace in organizations.
The Impact of Bureaucratic Structure on Behavior
Each organization has structures that define the unique ways that labor is divided, how specialized roles and functions are coordinated, how information flows among people and groups, and how the system of controls (task measurement, evaluation, and change) is to work.
Structure is only one of the forces that affect behavior. Others include peer group pressure, group norms, social and technical aspects of work tasks, and internal and external cultures.
The Impact of Bureaucratic Structure on Behavior
The structures of a bureaucracy are inherently conservative. Common complaint is slowness of response.
But slowness reflects legal mandates. As government increased in size, bureaucratic
organizations provided an ideal structural model. Allowed control from the top.
But, also stifled initiative.
The Impact of Bureaucratic Structure on Behavior
Bureaucratic dysfunctions.– Inherently dysfunctional and and pathological over the long run.– Blind conformance and double binds.
• Catch-22.• There was only one catch and that was Catch-22, which specified
that a concern for one's safety in the face of dangers that were real and immediate was the process of a rational mind. Orr was crazy and could be grounded. All he had to do was ask; and as soon as he did, he would no longer be crazy and would have to fly more missions. Orr would be crazy to fly more missions and sane if he didn't, but if he was sane he had to fly them. If he flew them he was crazy and didn't have to; but if he didn't want to he was sane and had to. Yossarian was moved very deeply by the absolute simplicity of this clause of Catch-22 and let out a respectful whistle. "That's some catch, that Catch-22," he [Yossarian] observed. "It's the best there is," Doc Daneeka agreed (Joseph Heller, Catch-22).
The Impact of Bureaucratic Structure on Behavior
Bureaucratic dysfunctions.– Depersonalized relations.– Power derived from position. – Advantages of bureaucracy.
• Order, predictability, stability, professionalism, consistency.
– Disadvantages of bureaucracy.• Rule-bound, over-procedural, protection of
authority and influence.
The Impact of Bureaucratic Structure on Behavior
Bureaucratic impersonality.– Three virtues.
• Increases organizational effectiveness by ensuring distance from critical decisions.
• Reduces personal and emotional considerations in decisions.
• Even-handed rule application.
– Vices.• May sacrifice substantive justice for procedural
justice.
The Impact of Bureaucratic Structure on Behavior
Bureaucrat bashing.– Focus: alleged incompetence and secular humanism.– Reality: Satisfactory treatment the norm rather than
the exception.– Reality: Public performance not inferior to private
performance.– Reality: American bureaucratic performance vastly
superior to performance in other countries.
Motivation
Hawthorne experiments – Workplaces are predominantly social institutions. Direct challenge to economic models of motivation.
Maslow’s needs hierarchy.
Motivation
Motivation – hygiene theory.– Herzberg, Mauser, Snyderman.– Determinants of job satisfaction.
• Achievement, recognition, work itself, responsibility, and advancement (Job content - motivations). Internal
– Determinants of job dissatisfaction.• Company policy and administration, supervision,
salary, interpersonal relations, and working conditions (job environment – hygiene). External.
Motivation
Toward a democratic environment.– A more participatory management style.– Three stratagems for a more democratic
working environment.• Symbolic.
• Management-initiated.
• Management-union initiated.
Motivation
Douglas McGregor.– Theory X.
• The average human being has an inherent dislike for work.
• Most people must be coerced or threatened with punishment to get them to put forth adequate effort.
• People prefer to be directed and wish to avoid responsibility.
• RESULT – Hierarchy and military organization.
Motivation
Douglas McGregor.– Theory Y.
• The expenditure of physical and mental effort in work is as natural as play or rest.
• A person will exercise self-direction and self-control in the service of objectives to which he is committed.
• Avoidance of responsibility, lack of ambition, and emphasis on security are generally consequences of experience, not inherent human characteristics.
• The capacity to exercise a relatively high degree of imagination, ingenuity, and creativity in the solution of organizational problems is widely, not narrowly, distributed in the population.
Motivation
Assumptions about behavior can be self-fulfilling prophecies.
However, public organizations have difficulty developing coherent philosophies because of conflicting goals and objectives.
The Future of Organizations
Postbureaucratic organizations.– Bennis – Temporary society (adaptive
organizations).– Toffler – Adhocracy.– However, hierarch still dominates, still serves
a purpose in bringing order out of chaos.
The Future of Organizations
Postmodernism.– What is really changing organizations is
postmodernism: increasing complexity and unpredictability.
– Primary source: information technology.• Instant access to information eliminates the need
for multiple levels of hierarchy.
– Power arising from technology – Technocracy.
The Future of Organizations
Themes of postmodernism.
MODERNIST POST-MODERNISThierarchy anarchydesign chancecentering dispersalreason and rational science can find us the answerers not possible, live with the incomprehensibleworld is logical, orderly not so, world is disorderlyobjective truths via science not so, are multiple interpretations
seriousness, depth, austere autonomy
superficiality, playfully embrace commerce, commodity, fashion, style (eg., playful reference to past architectural styles, juxtapose them
DIFFERENCES BETWEEN MODERNISM AND POST-MODERNISM