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Chapter 10: Organizational Attitudes and Behavior

Chapter 10: Organizational Attitudes and Behavior. History of Job Attitudes. Based in history of Job Satisfaction Formal research began in mid-1930’s 1932 I/O textbooks had no mention of job satisfaction or organizational commitment

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Chapter 10: Organizational Attitudes and Behavior

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  1. Chapter 10: Organizational Attitudes and Behavior

  2. History of Job Attitudes • Based in history of Job Satisfaction • Formal research began in mid-1930’s • 1932 I/O textbooks had no mention of job satisfaction or organizational commitment • By 1972 over 3000 articles published specifically exploring worker attitudes • Why interest developed • Methodological breakthroughs • Survey methods • Statistical techniques

  3. Attitudes Defined • Briefly defined, an “attitude” represents a predisposition to respond in a favorable or unfavorable way to persons or objects in one’s environment. • For instance, when we say we “like” something or “dislike” something, we are in effect expressing an attitude toward the person or object.

  4. Attitudes: Three Important Assumptions • Three important assumptions underlie the concept of attitudes: 1) An attitude is a hypothetical construct 2) An attitude is a unidimensionalconstruct 3) Attitudes are believed to be somewhat related to subsequent behavior, although as we’ll see, this relationship can be unclear

  5. Job Attitudes: Three Related Components • The job attitude is the middle component in a belief-evaluation-behavior chain: 1) Beliefs about aspects of the job. “My work has long stretches with nothing to do.” 2) The evaluative component, i.e., the attitude itself. “I am dissatisfied with my job.” 3) Work-related behavioral intentions that follow from the attitude. “I’m intending to quit my job.”

  6. Job Attitudes and Actual Behavior • The belief, attitude, intention sequence is presumably followed by actual behavior. • This traditional model suggests that behaviors (including job performance) are largely influenced by job attitudes. • Recently, this traditional model has been questioned as being too simple and some more comprehensive alternatives have been developed.

  7. Job Attitudes and Behavior Overview • Job Satisfaction • Job Involvement • Organizational Commitment • Organizational Justice • Organizational Citizenship Behaviors • Antisocial Behavior

  8. What is Job Satisfaction? Job Satisfaction: The degree of pleasure an employee derives from his or her job. • 2 levels of Job Satisfaction: • Global Job Satisfaction - Overall Good Feelings • Job Facet Satisfaction - Selected Dimensions • pay • promotions • work tasks • coworkers • supervisors

  9. Antecedents to Job Satisfaction • What causes satisfaction • Environment/Job Features • Skill variety Task identity • Task significance Autonomy • Feedback • Role Variables • Ambiguity Conflict • Work-family conflict • Person variables • Negative affectivity Locus of Control • Gender Age • Culture Genetics • Life satisfaction

  10. How do Americans feel about going to work? • Most Americans like their jobs overall • People are relatively satisfied with the nature of the work itself: • How interesting it is • Having lots of contact with people • People less happy with rewards • Pay • Benefits • Chances for promotion

  11. Why all the fuss? • Cultural interest • Something most of us believe we are entitled to or at least desire from our work • Functional (practical) reasons • Link to important organizational outcomes • Performance • Turnover • Absenteeism • Counterproductive behaviors

  12. Job Satisfaction and Performance • Is a happy worker a productive worker? • Correlations positive and low to moderate • .16 with overall satisfaction in individual studies • .30 with overall satisfaction in meta-analytic studies • .10 with specific facets • Why is the association not larger?

  13. Some Possible Explanations: 1) Research and Measurement Issues: • Is “job performance” defined correctly? • Can you predict specific behaviors from a general attitude toward the job.

  14. Some Possible Explanations: 2) “Moderator” Effects: • Sat-performance relationship is highly complex (Katzell, Thompson & Guzzo, 1992) • For example, the relationship may be limited by constraints on performance (e.g., group norms for performance, environmental variables such as the speed of an assembly line) 3) Dispositional Effects: • Some research has found a substantial amount of the variability in job satisfaction may relate to “trait affect”

  15. Job Satisfaction and Turnover • Negative relationship • Moderate level = -.40 • Unlike satisfaction, turnover is well thought out • Why not higher • People leave jobs for lots of reasons • Better opportunities • Health reasons • More interesting work

  16. Job Satisfaction and Absenteeism • Absenteeism costs organizations in lost time and productivity • General satisfaction with absenteeism • Low negative correlation • r = -.25 • Facets of job satisfaction (e.g., Career future, Supervision, Financial rewards) with absenteeism • Correlate better (moderate to high) • range - .46 to -.60 • Why so low? • Not all absenteeism due to satisfaction • Company policies, Personal work habits, Ability to attend (illness, transportation, etc)

  17. Job Satisfaction Positive Affectivity Interpretation of job circumstances Job Satisfaction Objective job circumstance Brief (1998)

  18. Job Satisfaction: Is It Genetic? • People have stable traits that predispose them to be satisfied or dissatisfied (positive vs negative affectivity) • Happy people are happy workers • Emotions • There is evidence that as much as 30% of the variability in job satisfaction is due to genetics

  19. Specific Tools to Assess Satisfaction • Job Descriptive Index (JDI) • Measure of 5 facets of job satisfaction • Pay, promotions, coworkers, supervisors, work itself • 9 to 18 items on each facet • Pros • Extremely easy to use with all types of respondents • Most commonly used measure of job satisfaction • Normative data available from hundreds/thousands of studies • No racial differences in assessment • Cons • Shouldn’t sum across facets • Is there more to job satisfaction than just the 5 facets?

  20. YOUR PAY AND PROMOTIONS What are YOUR PAY AND PROMOTION OPPORTUNITIES like? Circle YES if the item describes your PAY AND PROMOTIONS, NO if the item does not describe your PAY AND PROMOTIONS, and ? if you cannot decide. Choose a response for each item. Pay UNDERPAID......................................................... Yes ? No INCOME ADEQUATE FOR NORMAL EXPENSES........ Yes ? No BARELY LIVE ON INCOME.................................... Yes ? No INCOME PROVIDES LUXURIES.............................. Yes ? No BAD.................................................................... Yes ? No HIGHLY PAID....................................................... Yes ? No Promotions GOOD OPPORTUNITY FOR ADVANCEMENT.............. Yes ? No PROMOTION ON ABILITY........................................ Yes ? No DEAD-END JOB........................................................Yes ? No GOOD CHANCE FOR PROMOTION............................ Yes ? No UNFAIR PROMOTION POLICY................................... Yes ? No INFREQUENT PROMOTIONS......................................Yes ? No

  21. Specific Tools to Assess Satisfaction • Minnesota Satisfaction Survey • 2 forms (Long form (100 items) & Short form (20 items) • Assesses 20 facets • Uses a 5-point scale • Good measure of General satisfaction and Intrinsic vs. extrinsic satisfaction • Pros • Reliable, valid measure of job satisfaction • Cons • Very long • Are there really 20 different facets and/or is it meaningful to have info on each of them

  22. Specific Tools to Assess Satisfaction • Job In General Scale (JIG) • Developed as a global measure of job satisfaction • Similar to JDI • Pros • Quick and easy to use • Cons • Doesn’t give information regarding specific factors

  23. YOUR JOB IN GENERAL What is your JOB like MOST OF THE TIME? Choose YES if the item describes your JOB, NO if it does not describe your JOB, and ? if you cannot decide.

  24. There’s More to it than just General Job Satisfaction Other commonly measured job attitudes include: • Attitudes toward specific job features • Job Involvement • Organizational Commitment • Organizational Justice • Organizational Citizenship Behaviors

  25. Job Involvement Job Involvement: The degree to which a person identifies psychologically with his or her work and the importance of work to one’s self-image

  26. Organizational Commitment • Organizational Commitment: The degree to which an employee feels a sense of allegiance to his or her employee • 3 components (Allen and Meyer, 1990): • Affective • Continuance • Normative • Commitment can be to different focal points (e.g., job, organization, occupation).

  27. Organizational Commitment Organizational Commitment has been related to many different job outcomes

  28. Think of a time you’ve been unfairly treated at work • Were you ever treated rudely or disrespectfully? • Were you up for a promotion / raise / job, and didn’t get it when you thought you should have? • Why was it unfair? How did you know? • How did you react? Did you take action? Why or why not?

  29. Organizational Justice • Organizational Justice: The overarching theoretical concept pertaining to the fair treatment of people in organizations. • Three types: • Distributive (equity, equality, need) • Procedural • Interactional (interpersonal, informational)

  30. Organizational Justice: Distributive Justice Distributive Justice: The fairness with which the outcomes or results are distributed among members of an organization. • Rules for allocating resources • Equity – resources are distributed to employees with respect to their abilities or contributions • Equality – resources are distributed so each person gets the same outcome, regardless of their contributions • Need – resources are distributed to the person who needs them more

  31. Organizational Justice: Procedural Justice Procedural Justice: The fairness by which means are used to achieve results in an organization. • What are some things that lead to a procedure being seen as fair? • ‘Voice’ – getting a say in things • Consistency • Bias Suppression • Accuracy • Correctability • Representativeness • Ethicality

  32. Organizational Justice: Interactional Justice Interactional Justice: The fairness with which people are treated within an organization and the timeliness, completeness, and accuracy of the information received in an organization. • Interpersonal component – treating people with dignity and respect; refraining from improper remarks or comments • Informational component – providing adequate explanations for decisions

  33. Organizational Justice: Relationships • Justice Perceptions in organizations have been found to be related to: • Job Satisfaction • Organizational Commitment • Job Performance • Withdrawal Behaviors • Counterproductive behaviors • Self-perceptions

  34. Organizational Citizenship Behaviors Organizational Citizenship Behaviors: The contributions that employees make to overall welfare of the organization that go beyond required duties of their job. Also referred to as “extra-role behavior,” “pro-social behavior,” and “contextual performance.” • 5 Dimensions of Citizenship Behaviors: • Altruism • Conscientiousness • Courtesy • Sportsmanship • Civic virtue

  35. Organizational Citizenship Behaviors Why do people perform citizenship behaviors? Disposition: Agreeableness Conscientiousness Situations: Fairness I/O Across Cultures Research (Lam, Hui & Law, 1999) found that more employees in Hong Kong and Japan regarded some facets of OCBs as part of their job than employees from USA and Austria

  36. Psychological Contract Psychological Contract: The implied exchange relationship that exists between an employee and the organization. Transactional Relational Antisocial behaviors Violence Threats Negligence Negativism Indifferent social behaviors Compliance Prosocial Behaviors Conscientiousness Sportsmanship Courtesy Civic virtue Altruism Commitment Alienation

  37. Psychological Contract: Violations of the Psychological Contract The psychological contract is violated when one party in a relationship perceives another as failing to fulfill promised obligations. Pattern of responses to psychological contract: Voice Silence Retreat Destruction Exit

  38. Downsizing • Downsizing is a deliberate organizational decision to reduce the workforce that is intended to improve organizational performance. • The individuals most affected by downsizing are those who lose their jobs. • The “surviving” employees are also affected by downsizing. • Teams and groups are impacted by downsizing.

  39. Downsizing: Contingent workers • Many organizations are using temporary or contingent workers. • Contingent workers perform tasks for a specific time period. • Contingent workers usually are: • staffed through an agency • paid less • receive few benefits • younger, female and minorities

  40. Mergers and Acquisitions Merger: The joining or combining of two organizations of approximately equal status and power. Acquisition: The process by which one organization acquires or subsumes the resources of a second organization. • Usually organizations are more concerned about strategic fit (shared business strategies, financial goals) than organizational fit (culture and match between workforce).

  41. Antisocial Behavior at Work Antisocial Behavior: Any behavior that brings harm or is intended to bring harm to an organization or its members. Examples: insults, threats, lying, theft, sabotage, physical violence, workplace homicide.

  42. Antisocial Behavior at Work: Violence in the Workplace Perceived Injustice Physical Violence • Perpetrators often see them selves as the victims of workplace injustice. • Perpetrators usually want more from the organization in terms of personal identity and purpose than the organization can provide.

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