Organizational Behavior: Robbins & Judge
Organizational Behavior: Robbins & Judge
Organizational Behavior: Robbins & Judge
Organizational Behavior
13th Edition
Bob Stretch
Southwestern College
© 2009 Prentice-Hall Inc. All rights reserved. 1-1
Chapter Learning Objectives
• After studying this chapter you should be able to:
– Demonstrate the importance of interpersonal skills in the
workplace.
– Describe the manager’s functions, roles, and skills.
– Define organizational behavior (OB).
– Show the value to OB of systematic study.
– Identify the major behavioral science disciplines that
contribute to OB.
– Demonstrate why there are few absolutes in OB.
– Identify the challenges and opportunities managers have in
applying OB concepts.
– Compare the three levels of analysis in this book’s OB
model.
© 2009 Prentice-Hall Inc. All rights reserved. 1-2
The Importance of Interpersonal Skills
• Understanding OB helps determine manager
effectiveness
– Technical and quantitative skills important
– But leadership and communication skills are
CRITICAL
• Organizational benefits of skilled managers
– Lower turnover of quality employees
– Higher quality applications for recruitment
– Better financial performance
– Contributions to OB:
– Group dynamics – Formal organization theory
– Work teams – Organizational technology
– Communication – Organizational change
– Power – Organizational culture
– Conflict
– Intergroup behavior
© 2009 Prentice-Hall Inc. All rights reserved. 1-16
Four Contributing Disciplines
• Anthropology
The study of societies to learn about human
beings and their activities.
– Unit of Analysis:
-- Organizational System -- Group
– Contributions to OB:
– Organizational culture – Comparative values
– Organizational environment – Comparative attitudes
– Cross-cultural analysis
X → Y → Predictive Ability