Management of Organizational Behaviour
Management of Organizational Behaviour
Course Content
Course: Management of Organizational Behaviour
(for B.Tech final year students)
Course Outline
Group Dynamics and Team Development: Types of Groups and their attributes; Quality
Circles and their role in Total Quality Management (TQM).
Leadership & Influence Strategies - The Classical Theories of leadership: Iowa, Ohio and
Michigan Leadership studies. Trait theory of leadership; Group and Exchange theory of
leadership; Charishmatic and Transformational leadership theories; Indian Researches on
Leadership and Influence strategies.
Books:
1.
Jewell, L.N., & Siegall, M. (1990). Contemporary Industrial/Organizational
Psychology. West Publishing Company, USA.
2.
Katz, D., & Kahn, R.L. (1966). The Social Psychology of Organizations. New York:
Wiley
3.
4.
Hellriegel, D., Slocum, J.W., & Woodman, R.W. (2001). Organizational Behavior.
Thomson Asia Pte Ltd., Singapore.
5.
Luthans, F. (1995). Organizational Behaviour. McGraw-Hill, Inc. New Delhi, New York
6.
Sekarn, U. (1996). Organizational Behaviour: Text and Cases. Tata McGraw Hill, New
Delhi
7.
Blanchard, K.H. & Hersey, P. (1993). Management of Organizational Behavior: Utilizing
Human Resources. Prentice-Hall India.
Reference Books:
3. Sinha, J.B.P. (1990). Work Culture in Indian Context. Sage, New Delhi.
Whats Management?
Whats Management as an academic
discipline?
Misconceptions & Myths?
What is Management?
The process of coordinating work activities so that they are
completed efficiently and effectively with and through
people.
Efficiency doing things right (means)
Effectiveness doing right things (ends)
PLANNING
CONTROLLING
ORGANIZING
LEADING
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Functional Plans:
IDENTIFYING MISSION:
[A] Defines the basic purpose(s) of an organization: why
organization exists.
ORGANIZING
Grouping activities, assigning activities, and providing the
authority necessary to carry out activities.
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Mathematics/Statistics
DM Models
Computer Science / IT
MIS/ERP DSS
Law
Legal System
Commerce /Accounting
Book writing
Ethics
Finance
Philosophy
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What is an Organization??
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Economic
Political
Cultural
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The paradigm of doing business will shift from making a product to providing a service.
Work itself will be redefined: constant learning, more high-order thinking, less nine-to-five.
How will these trends affect the nature of managerial work in the future? First, managerial jobs will be changed.
Managers will need to develop substantive expertisea specialty in, say, finance, marketing, or computer systems,
etc. Managers must also possess skills at coordinating a team of specialists. Second, managerial jobs will be
renamed. Rather than being called managers or facilitators or coaches or mentors, people in these jobs will likely be
called coordinators. Third, tomorrows manager-replacements will have to excel at striking all kinds of deals.
Fourth, these new coordinators must be able to make others feel that they care.
This enrichment module is adapted from: Kiechel III, W. How we will work in the year 2000. Fortune, May 17, 1993, 38-41, 44,46 48,52.
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Business Games
Simulation Exercises
Case Study Method
Emphasis on real life examples
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Theory of Bureaucracy
Max Weber, 1947
1.
The regular activities required for the purpose of the organization are
distributed in a fixed way as official duties
2.
3.
4.
5.
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Hawthorne Studies
Mayo wanted to find out what effect
fatigue and monotony had on job
productivity and how to control them
through such variables as rest
breaks, work hours, temperatures
and humidity.
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Mayos Experiment
Five women assembled telephone relays, one supplied the parts.
Made frequent changes in working conditions with their consent.
Records were kept of relays made, temperature and humidity of rooms,
medical and personal histories, eating and sleeping habits, and bits of
conversation on the job.
No one supervised the girls.
They were told to work as they felt and at a comfortable pace.
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Results
Researchers found that output rates werent directly related
to the physical conditions of the work.
Output went up when:
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Results Cont.
Output slightly fell when six five minute pauses were added.
It remained the same when they were dismissed at 4:00 p.m. instead of
4:30 p.m.
Mayo believes what actually happened was that six individuals
became a team and the team gave itself wholeheartedly and
spontaneously to cooperation in the experiment. The consequence was
that they felt themselves to be participating freely and without
afterthought, and were happy in the knowledge that they were working
without coercion from above or limitations from below.
Conclusions
Work is a group activity.
Social world for an adult is primarily patterned about
work.
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Self-Actualization
Esteem
Belongingness
Safety
Physiological
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Importation of Energy
The Throughput
The Output
Systems as Cycles of Events
Negative Entropy
Information Input, Negative feedback, and the coding
process
7. The Steady State and Dynamic Homeostatis
8. Differentiation
9. Integration and Coordination
10. Equifinality
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