CH 6
CH 6
CH 6
Intergroup conflict in
Organizations
A Contemporary Perspective on Intergroup
Conflict
• Consider the statement “any and all conflict is
bad and thus should be eliminated”
• conflict is neither inherently good nor bad, but
it is inevitable.
• conflict can have negative consequences
because it requires time and resources to deal
with it and because it diverts energy that
could more constructively be applied
elsewhere.
• Too little conflict, on the other hand, can also
be negative in that such a state can lead to
apathy and lethargy and provide little or no
impetus for change and innovation
• Some conflict situations produce nothing
positive.
• Other conflict situations, however, may be
beneficial if they are used as instruments for
change or innovation.
• Thus, in dealing with conflict the critical issue
is not so much the conflict itself but how it is
managed.
functional vs dysfunctional conflict
• functional conflict is a confrontation
between groups that enhances and
benefits the organization’s performance
• Dysfunctional conflict is a confrontation
or interaction between groups that
harms the organization or hinders the
achievement of organizational goals.
Functional Conflict
• For example, two departments in a hospital may be in conflict
over the most efficient and adaptive method of delivering
health care to low income rural families.
• The two departments agree on the goal but not on the means
to achieve it.
• Whatever the outcome, low-income rural families probably will
end up with better medical care once the conflict is settled.
• Without this type of conflict in organizations, there would be
little commitment to change, and most groups likely would
become stagnant.
• Functional conflict can lead to increased awareness of
problems that need to be addressed, result in broader and
more productive searches for solutions, and generally
facilitate positive change, adaptation, and innovation.
Dysfunctional Conflict
• Management must seek to eliminate dysfunctional
conflict.
• Beneficial conflicts can often turn into harmful ones.
• In most cases, the point at which functional conflict
becomes dysfunctional is impossible to identify
precisely.
• The same level of stress and conflict that creates a
healthy and positive movement toward goals in one
group may prove extremely disruptive and dysfunctional
in another group (or at a different time for the same
group).
• A group’s tolerance for stress and conflict
can also depend on the type of
organization it serves.
• Auto manufacturers, professional sports
teams, and police and fire departments
would have different points where
functional conflict becomes dysfunctional
than would organizations such as
universities, research and development
firms, and utility companies.
• A recent research study analyzed how an
initial conflict between different groups at a
community hospital in the Midwest escalated
into a full-blown “war.”
• The conflict began when physicians perceived
that the hospital administration (i.e., the CEO
and her administrative team) was ignoring or
blocking recommendations that could improve
the quality of patient care at the hospital.
• The physicians wanted to maintain control
over decisions that could affect their patients.
• The administration responded to this perceived
attack from the physicians by withholding even
more support for the physicians’
recommendations.
• The physicians responded by launching a
campaign to remove the CEO from her position.
• These retaliations and countermoves escalated,
ultimately costing the administrative and
medical groups countless hours of time, energy,
and stress that could have been better spent on
improving the quality of care for patients.
Relationship between Intergroup Conflict
and Organizational Performance
What Causes Intergroup Conflict?
• Every group comes into at least partial
conflict with every other group with which
it interacts.
• This tendency is known as “the law of
inter-organizational conflict.”
• In this section we examine three of the
more important factors that contribute to
group conflict: work interdependence, goal
differences, and perceptual differences.
Work Interdependence
• Work interdependence occurs when two or
more organizational groups must depend on one
another to complete their tasks.
• The conflict potential in such situations ranges
from relatively low to very high, depending on
the nature of the interdependence.
• Three distinct types of interdependence among
groups have been identified: pooled, sequential,
and reciprocal.
Pooled interdependence
• Interdependence that requires no interaction
between groups because each group, in effect,
performs separately.
• However, the pooled performances of all the
groups determine how successful the
organization is.
• For example, the staff of a Xerox sales office in
one region may have no interaction with its peers
in another region.
• Similarly, two Dick’s Sporting Goods or Starbucks
stores will have little or no interaction.
• In both cases, however, the groups are
interdependent because the performance of
each must be adequate if the total
organization is to thrive.
• The conflict potential in pooled
interdependence is relatively low, and
management can rely on standard rules and
procedures developed at the main office for
coordination.
Sequential interdependence
Exhibit 11.3
• An internal focus represents the extent to which a group is
intent upon addressing its own concerns in a conflict situation.
• An external focus reflects the extent to which a group is intent
on addressing the concerns of the other group (or groups)
involved in the conflict.
• From this perspective, internal and external foci are not
opposite ends of the same dimension.
• Rather, they are two separate dimensions.
• Varying degrees of focus on these two dimensions lead to five
approaches to resolving intergroup conflict.
• Depending upon the nature and conditions of the conflict,
each of these five approaches can represent an effective
approach for conflict-resolution management.
• We will examine each of these approaches separately.
• Use a dominating approach on important issues where you are
certain you are right and where the benefit of a resolution
outweighs the drawback of possible negative feelings by the
dominated group.
• Use an accommodating approach in disputes that are of far
greater importance to the other group than they are to your
group.
• Use a problem-solving approach when both groups are willing to
invest time and effort to reach a resolution that maximizes
everyone’s outcome.
• Use an avoiding approach primarily as a temporary step to buy
more time.
• Use a compromising approach as a middle ground. It is a good
backup approach when other approaches (mainly dominating
and problem solving) fail to resolve the issue.