Kpe320 Notes
Kpe320 Notes
Kpe320 Notes
Lecture 1
Understanding organizations
- Personal factors: Things that affect individuals
o Personalities: Everyone has slightly different personalities (intro, extra etc.)
Innumerable amount of sliding scales to describe a person
Understanding personalities can help us to understand how they contribute to the
organization
o Perceptions: Who you think other people are – or other people perception of you
(personality does not necessarily align with perceptions)
What you think you come off as does not necessarily mean others think of you that
way
Gentle reminder… (< Percieves it as passive aggressive)
o Competency: How strong each person’s skills are
o Compatibility: How well each individuals personalities, perceptions and competency align
with one another (Not just select all the most competent people, but select the most
compatible)
Basketball team
Take all superstar players and form a team does not mean that the team will
be good because they do not gel
Need to work together
o Motivation: How motivated you are to perform at your best
Weather, pay, time, etc.
- Interpersonal factors
o Communication: Talking with others (email vs talking face to face: Words are the same, but
impact may be different [different richness])
o Conflict: Absolute. Resolving conflict is best. When there is no conflict there is no innovation
and productivity. (Want to encourage productive conflict)
o Negotiation: Not trying to find a compromise (Nobody gets what they want- only halfway).
Goal is for everyone to feel fulfilled
o Teamwork: Goal is to have teams working effectively together. Division of labor where we
leverage everyone’s skillset, so we get the best outcome
o Politics: Use of power to leverage some sort of advantage
- Macro-Level Factors
o Organizational mission: Company has set objectives and values
o Economic/Financial
Because the economic status of the company is good = more motivation [better
culture, better job security]
Economic status bad = less motivation [worse culture, less job security]
o Technology
More technology influences the culture of the organization
Influences what an organization can and can’t do and how they do it
o Legal/Political
Organizations are heavily influenced by what is or is not legal
Shareholder vs. Stakeholder
- Shareholder: Free market will determine what an organization should and should not be (If they
are on the right track, then the free market will support them and will prosper. If not, then they will
not prosper) – Milton friedman
o The purpose of an organization is to make economic process. As long as you are doing it in a
legal way, where you are deceiving or frauding, then its fair game.
o If what the company is doing is against societal norms, then they will not be profitable
o The free market can vote with their wallets and decide what is and isn’t acceptable
o Only reason something is immoral is if the company does something to deceive you
o Ultimately, if we are open with our practices and the free market will or will not support the
organization (with money) and we by looking at how profitable they are we can determine if
they align with societal norms
o (Letter of the law)
- Stakeholder: Do the most good for the most people
o Must do so that it benefits the lives of employees,
community etc.
o (Spirit of the law)
o Healthcare costs more for poor people than rich. People
who are exposed to the worst conditions, need the most
access to healthcare but have the least amount of money to
pay for it
Leadership styles
- Autocratic: One leader, you tell people what to do
- Democratic: Back and forth dialogue
- Laissez-Faire: You get to decide how you want to do it; it doesn’t matter to me as a leader. Allows
people to try and see what works. Empowers people to develop themselves.
o Veteran team members
o The task is not super clear, give the team a shot on how to do it
- Visionary: Giving the team a framework of what to do (no step by step) – give them a tone on how
to act (give a vision)
o Pro: Gives direction
o Con: Not everyone interprets the vision the same way
- Coaching: Incorporate all different styles
Leadership Styles
Transactional Leadership: Tell you how to do it, less Transformational Leadership: More autonomy,
autonomy, less decision making (STEPS) more decision making (RESULTS)
• Focused on the process • Focused on the outcome
• “How” is important • “Why” is important
• Success comes from following the process • Success comes from achieving the goal,
• Innovation is low regardless of process
• Consistency is high • Innovation is high
• Consistency is low
• High performing organization are more
transformational based
Lecture 2: Perceptions
How we perceive others
- Example
o Both shows the boss at the head of a boardroom table, and directing the
employees
However, the mood of the two meetings are very different
We immediately get a sense that the top photo is more forceful and
aggressive
The bottom photo has more variety in non-verbal information (happier)
- We immediately pick this information up without conscious thought
- Just because we can pick up this information, doesn’t mean we are correct.
- When we look at the photos, we naturally make judgement and interpret the situation, although it may
be wrong. Perception happens at all points in out human interactions
Perceptual errors
- What drives our differing perceptions?
o Attribution theory – Things need to have a cause. Humans believe that there is a cause for
everything. Under informed people lack the ability to see that two things that are seemingly
related are not actually related. This is a problem because these people are blinded, and they
think that it is related when it is not.
o Selective perception: Being influenced by relatively unique attributes that stand out (Person
with confederate flag on their cars — That is such a powerful symbol and makes you ignore
other cues.)
o Priming effect: When we are asked to look at the difference, then we are primed to see all the
differences in the different photos. We weren’t primed to see racial/gender equality so we
didn’t look for that. Whatever we are primed for, that is what we see.
o Contrast effect: Comparing one to another, you can contrast the other. If we were only seen
one photo, we have nothing to compare with, so we have less inferences. What we choose to
compare and contrast to, is important. (i.e. If an introverted person on your team is compared
to a highly extraverted person on the team then the introverted one will seem a lot more cold
than if by themselves)
o Halo effect: AKA anchoring bias. Once we decide that we like someone/something, we show it
favoritism and it is hard to see what is bad about them.
o Projection: Project what you think onto someone else’s words and interpret it that way. You
project your views onto the people around you (good, bad, neutral) and presume that they feel
the same way as you. You typically surround yourself with people who share the same world
views as you do
o Stereotyping: We use stereotypes as a shortcut way to understand someone
- Stereotyping vs Prejudice
o What’s the difference?
Stereotyping: A heuristic; Not positive or negative. Shortcut way of taking pieces of
information and understand it.
Prejudice: Prejudge based on the package we put them in
o Are they inherently bad?
Police carding example: Not inherently bad when you card people in your area, but it is
bad when you add stereotype to it. When you believe that people that are associated
with gangs are involved in gang violence, even if they’re not. It is worse when you add in
racial and gender differences
Job interview example: Spend an hour with employer to share information about
yourself. They take this information that you give them, and they fill in the blanks and
decide if you will be a good fit for the company. As we discussed, this could be an issue
because humans automatically add shortcuts and add their own perceptions.
Sports tryout example: Stereotypes are a large influencer for if they make it or not. The
‘January birthdays’ are more likely to make it than ‘December babies. Which place you
go in line matters. How big and tall you are matters.
- Cognitive Dissonance
o We struggle to accept ideas that are at odds with our current world view
o When we are faced with information that doesn’t fit our world view, we must make a decision.
Accept it and change or world view (we are usually bad at this), OR just reject it and pretend it
doesn’t exist OR convince us that it doesn’t count (Invent another story in your head to reason)
See hillbilly that drives a Prius: You think he’s not driving his own car (truck) and think
he’s driving his wife’s car
Is a pickup truck guy but doesn’t have garage space to hold it so he drives a Prius
OR He just drives a Prius because it is what it is. YOU ARE JUST WRONG
o Crux of interpersonal conflict
Personality types
- The underlying essence of what makes a person that person. Who they really are. Personality does
exist and is fairly stable and predictable.
- We should be able to quantify and measure it then
- Myers – Briggs Type Indicator VERY COMMON!
Extraverted / Introverted: Do you prefer to work with others, or keep to yourself?
Sensing / Intuitive: Whatever my 5 senses tell me, I will go with that (gut feeling) or,
want to think and interpret senses slowly.
Thinking / Feeling: Do you address things more using logic or emotion
Judging / Perceiving: Do we judge the new information and stick with it or are we open
to new information
o One is not better than another
o There can be 16 different combinations
o Must cater information differently to each person
o By far, most widely used in large organizations
o Lots of fun, has some consistency
o Very little scholarly support!
- ‘Big Five’ Personality Model
Extraversion
Agreeableness
Conscientiousness
Emotional Stability
Openness to New Experiences
o Much more scholarly support
o Not quite as fun nor easy to label /compare
o Not used nearly as often
Cultural influencers
- Generational differences
o Baby Boomers (born 1946 – 1964)
o Generation X (born 1965 – 1980)
o Millennials (born 1981 – 1996)
o Generation Z? (born after 1996)
- The conflict that we see between each generation is in part due to the cultural differences between
each generation
- In a student’s experience
o Teachers are all older than us (1-2 generations)
o Peers are all in the same generation
- In the workforce
o Peers are all different generations
o Superiors are all different generations
o Inferiors are all different generations
Hofstede’s Cultural Values
- The cultural difference does influence how we interact with one another
o Power distance
The degree of accepted inequality that exists and is
accepted between people with and without power
I.e. does your boss make you feel valued and
include you to be part of the team? If so, the
power distance is low.
If the coach does not get you involved, then the
power distance is high. For people in high power
distance countries, it is not socially and
culturally acceptable to talk back to your
superiors
o Individualism vs Collectivism
Is everyone in it for themselves or do they care more about the
community
North America: Highly individualistic
White/light pink countries: helping others is seen as
positive
In china, it is seen bad to be individualistic vs. in Canada, it is
seen as bad to be collectivist
o Masculinity vs Femininity
Not about who is more powerful; MORE about what is more
masculine or more feminine
Like does it matter. What is a male pastime vs female pastime
o Uncertainty avoidance
People who are more or less comfortable to uncertainty
Not knowing the exact way to do things
People that are in the darker scale, people like it more
black/white
At the end of meeting, want a set plan
People in the lighter shaded region, they have higher
tolerance
If at the end of a meeting, you are okay with
not knowing which direction to go
o Long vs. short term orientation
Countries that are more short term oriented; more
worried about right now. Plan for today, but be
prepared for the future (when we get there) Blue
on map
Countries that are more long term oriented; more
worried about later down the line. Trade away star
player now for five draft picks in future years. Want a
concrete long term plan More orange on map
Lecture 3: True colours
Understanding personal temperaments
True colours test
- Similar to ‘big 5’ but less focused on scholarly material but more practical application
- Easy to use
o Illustrates how different personalities work in group dynamics
- Predominantly my results leaned towards gold and orange and weak towards blue and green
COLOUR CHARACTERISTICS
Discovering new Being a good Being fun and taking
Esteemed for Being dependable
insights listener risks
Feeling
Stressed by Lack of order Feeling inadequate Restrictions
artificial
Highest virtue is Responsibility Objectivity Loyalty Courage
Key
Being prepared Ingenuity Authenticity Talent and skill
characteristics
On the job Organizer Pragmatist Peacemaker Energizer
High risk taking Social functions Lack of close friends Lack of adventure
High risk taking Social functions Lack of close friends Lack of adventure
Lecture 4: Motivation
Motivation matters
- As an employee / team manager
- As a leader / manager / supervisor
Carrot and sticks
- Idea of motivating farm animals for doing work
- Carrot: Dangle carrot in front of them, if they do good, they get carrot (reward)
- Stick: If they do bad you hit them with a stick (punishment)
Basic framework
- Positive: Carrot / Negative: stick
- Extrinsic: External motivation / Intrinsic: Internal motivation
Money as a motivator
- Does not align with scholarly theory
- Is money positive and intrinsic?
o Base salary: Pay certain amount of money for work; At some point it becomes less rewarding
and it will cost more to keep them motivated
o Paying by piece of work: Pay you only enough to compensate you for the work. Pay you X
amount of money for each contract you do, each project etc.; Can run into upper limit also,
paying people to be as efficient as possible
o Paying commissions and bonuses: Base salary and bonus on top of high performance; Never
enough money to continue to continue to raise compensation, next year want more money. If
they don’t get more, they think they are losing
o Fines and Penalties: Base salary and if you don’t do good, you lose money; Negative and
extrinsic (Punishment; stick analogy)
Process theories
o The relationship between you and the work itself is central to your motivation
o Can be both intrinsic and extrinsic
o Most appropriate in longer-term, more stable relationships
o Highly dependent on trust between organization and employee
- Example 1: Expectancy theory
o “If I do well, I’ll get rewarded”
Promotion; bigger title; more money (?)
o “The reward is proportionate to the effort”
Suggests that people will do things based on the expectation that they will get paid for
how much they work
o “The reward is something of value to me”
Does not always have to be tangible award, an emotional award is good enough
Endless supply of money will only do so much, need the pat on the back as well!
- Example 2: Self-Efficacy theory (Not related to expectancy theory)
o “The more confidence I have, the better I do”
People perform based on the level of confidence they have that they will do a good job
The more confidence I have the better I will perform, up to a physical limit
VS.
The less I believe in myself, the worse I will perform
o “I have more confidence if others have confidence in me”
Instilling confidence in people drives intrinsic motivation and provides a positive
motivation (has value)
Can’t use it on its own, but positive self-reinforcement does make a difference
Negative talk is negative and diminished intrinsic motivation
- Example 3: Goal setting theory (Separate from the others)
o “People are motivated to work towards goals”
By setting a goal for a person we are trying to improve will be positive and intrinsic
Better if the person has a hand in setting it for themselves
o “They are more motivated if the goals meet certain criteria…”
o Goal setting theory is used by good leaders
Key criteria
Stakeholder participation
o Come to goal together; leader and worker
If you give them goal: Becomes extrinsic
If you tell them to set themselves: They will always wonder if its
good enough
SMART Goals
Needs theories
o The work itself has little to do with the motivation
o Motivation centers more around the person, not
the work
o Highly intrinsic
o Less interpersonally variable as you might imagine
- Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
o Probably a little too broad and general to be
useful in understanding how motivation impacts
organizations…
- Herzberg’s 2-factor theory
o Maslow may have been on to something with respect to hierarchies…
o Herzberg suggests the hierarchy isn’t as simple as a single pyramid…
Motivation is built on a ‘foundation’ of factors, called hygiene factors
Base pay
Comfort
Security
Positive relationship
Quality supervision
Reasonable conditions
If the hygiene factors are securely in place, you can build on them using motivational
factors
Need the hygiene as a foundation
Beyond that is a different set of factors; motivation (intrinsic)
o Hygiene factors need to be present, but beyond a certain point
increasing them has no impact
If you remove the hygiene factors, no number of motivational factors will make up for it
No matter how many motivational factors there are, if you take away hygiene
then it will all crumble
o Essentially
Hygiene factors need to be present first.
Once they are present, increasing them has limited impact
o Base pay
o Comfort
o Security
o Positive relationship
o Quality supervision
o Reasonable conditions
Once hygiene factors are secure, then you can add motivation factors
The more we add motivation factors, the more they will be motivated to work
hard
o Opportunity for advancement
o Challenge
o Recognition
o Increased responsibility
o Personal achievement
o Connection to higher purpose
Incentive; If hygiene factors are there, increased responsibility will increase
motivation. Need to revisit hygiene factors to ensure balance
If hygiene factors are removed, no number of motivational factors can make up for it
Lecture 5: Leading teams
5 stage model
o Not necessarily sequential (may not start at 1) If you take over a team as a new leader
- Forming
o Team acquaints and establishes ground rules. Formalities are preserved and members are
treated as strangers
o Relatively new team, just getting used to everything, easy going
- Storming
o Members start to communicate their feelings but still view themselves as individuals rather
than part of the team, they resist control by group leaders and show hostility
o Getting to know everyone a little better, seeing biases and perceptions, alliances form
- Norming
o People feel part of the team and realize that they can achieve work if they accept other
viewpoints
o Teams hit their stride, understand how everyone can contribute, and everyone knows their
roles, come up with standard ways of doing things
- Performing
o The team works in an open and trusting atmosphere where flexibility is the key and hierarchy is
of little importance
o Everything is running smooth, know how to function and can anticipate what is needed from us
- Adjourning
o The team conducts an assessment of the year and implements a plan for transitioning roles and
recognizing members contributions
o Done task, recap, replan
o Rare in work-setting
Another way of looking at 5 stage model
- Forming: Everyone is new, on their best behaviour so the performance and effectiveness is pretty high
(Right after soccer tryouts, everyone is on fire, everyone wants to put their skills on display)
- Storming: Performance drops because they are finding their way, their allies, then there are the least
effective teams
- Norming: You have gotten to know everyone and how it all works, normalizing, performance increases
- Performing: Happens before the very end, you perform highest
- BASED ON WHICH PHASE THE TEAM IS IN, YOU CAN CATER TASKS TO THEIR EFFECTIVENESS AND
PERFORMANCE LEVELS ACCORDINGLY
Elements of high performing teams
- Organizational Resources: How we structure the team
o Organizational structure; Manager, sub teams, subordinate etc. What is the hierarchy?
o Leadership: What leadership style, existence of leadership?
o Role definition and clarity: Who does what? Does everyone contribute to everything?
o Task definition and clarity: What is the specific task?
Want more role and task clarity when it is a specialized task (Carpentry)
Need less when it is simple task
o Trust and support: Relationships
- Team Composition: Who makes up the team
o Personality blends: Mixes of personalities. Find personality based on personality tests
o Skills: Diversity of skills is more important than everyone being very good at one skill
o Team size: Small teams may be more effective than one big team
5 teams of 5 with 5 separate managers reporting to supervisor
1 team of 25 reporting to one manager
o Appropriate diversity: Mix of personalities is good, can be challenging to manage but can pull
the best in each part of the diverse team
- Work Design: How we structure work
o Appropriate direction / instruction: Clear details (transactional), Guideline approach
(transformational)
Certain tasks need details other do not
Novel: Something new, something people don’t really know; Let people learn
themselves
Procedural: Building a car needs more transactional approach
o Autonomy: Level of autonomy has to do with how the team is structured
o Task significance: Performing insignificant tasks over and over will decrease motivation
Sometimes you just have to get the work done, might be boring
Task variety: Important to vary tasks to keep motivation up (Rotate tasks)
- Team Processes: Purpose of the work
o Shared purpose: Team vision
o SMART goals (individual, team, organization): Goals keep people motivated
o Linking tasks and goals
o Accountability: More motivated when your actions come back to bite you or not
o Conflict management: Avoiding conflict is not the goal, it is working around the conflict
Link between elements of high performing teams and motivation
- Hygiene factors: Organizational resources and team composition
o Way that the team is structured
o Need to be done well enough but still needs fine-tuning
o Once we have the right people in place, we don’t need to worry anymore
o IF THE HYGIENE FACTORS FALL APPART, YOU CANNOT BUILD ON THE MOTIVATIONAL
FACTORS
- Motivational factor: Work design and team process
Leading teams
- Transactional vs transformational leadership
Transactional Leadership: Tell you how to do it, less Transformational Leadership: More autonomy,
autonomy, less decision making (STEPS) more decision making (RESULTS)
• Focused on the process • Focused on the outcome
• “How” is important • “Why” is important
• Success comes from following the process • Success comes from achieving the goal,
• Innovation is low regardless of process
• Consistency is high • Innovation is high
• BETTER FOR NOVICE • Consistency is low
• High performing organization are more
transformational based
• BETTER FOR SEASONED VETERANS
- Dual axis concept of motivation and transactional vs. transformational
o Transactional is more extrinsic
(Leading them through process,
‘he told me to…’
o Transformational is more intrinsic
because they understand and
believe in the process. No step by
step guideline
Less shared
More shared
Politics in Organizations
- Politics: Actions and activities that are outside one’s formal role in the organization that aim to
influence the distribution of power within the organization.
- Common political tactics
o Information management
Control the information so you can control the message
Selectively sharing pieces of information and withholding others
Does immigration lead to more crime?
There is an objective answer
But you wouldn’t know it because of the news networks
If you skew and bias the message, it will change the way that people react to the
message
o Personal attacks
Attack particular person to influence others’ perception of them and gain political power
that way
o Building bases of support
Cognitive dissonance: suck at holding two opposing viewpoints at the same time
Getting people to join your party that strongly agree with one of your positions
and get them to support you on all other points
Autism and tax cut example
o If you both agree on autism but one agree on tax cut and other does not,
the leader that mentioned autism in the beginning will get your backing
about tax cut
Getting others’ beliefs to align with yours
o Impression management
Taking the same information and broadcasting a different impression so that others join
in and strengthen the political agenda
o Coalitions / alliances
Sub-category of bases of support
Others don’t have to have the same beliefs as you but it helps both your interests
You can hate each other but join an alliance because you hate someone else
more
An enemy of my enemy is my friend
o Creating obligations
The coalition between parties can result in the creation of obligations of one party cant
get anything done without the other
Canadian politic example
Liberal party has minority seats so they cannot do anything without NDP
NDP has the least seats so they cannot do anything without liberals
So they make obligations: if NDP helps liberals for one thing then the liberals
have to help NDP for something else
Influence
Influential tactics
- Rational persuasion
o People are already aligned ideologically or intellectually
o Present rational information to students is more influential than to employees
Students go to school to learn so they are more open
- Inspiration
o Share a message that resonates with people and make them believe that they can change
things
- Consultation
o Consult with stakeholders even if you know what they will say or have no intention of using
their opinion
o Consultation is important because it makes them feel included and make you better influence
people and broadening your power base
- Personal appeal
o Not exchange of one for another
o You should do this for me because we are friends; I am only doing this for you because we are
close friends
o By using this influential tactic as a personal favor, implies an exchange (I owe you one), doing so
will diminish your own power base
- Exchange
o I scratch your back you scratch my back
o Power bases are pooled/exchanged to get things done (Liberal and NDP)
Empowerment
- Power bases are temporary and contingent
o Not set in stone, they are temporary
Legitimacy, coercive and reward, expert and referent power
o Power can go away; The only thing that will remain is expert and referent power
If you treat someone poorly, the expert and referent power will be diminished
“Lasting power arrives by foot but leaves on horseback”
Takes a long time to build a power base, but can leave quickly
- Empowerment is more sustained and resilient
o Growing your power base
o Candle example
Can use your candle to light someone else’s flame without diminishing your flame
Growing others’ flame will do you no harm will only increase your power
It enhances your ability to use your power to influence without diminishing the base
- It’s nice to be important, but it’s more important to be nice
- Earning power is hard; keeping it is harder
- Use your power to empower, not hold others down
- Sharing your power does NOT diminish it. It enhances it.
Lewins Model
- Well managed change doesn’t just ‘happen’.
- There is a process that is followed.
- Lewin’s Model helps us understand the basic process that good change management follows
Unfreezing: Humans are normally set in their ways. If we want to change something, we need to deliberately
agree that there is a preferred process in place and break it up. If we don’t acknowledge that there is a set
process, and declaring that we need change, change will not be successful. Pause the old way, agree to move
towards change
Changing: Most people who do not employ a deliberate model of change start here. No one is prepared for
change and it just happens. Not successful. Go thru the process of change.
Refreezing: Need to declare that change is over, and there is no more change. Cement the change to avoid
backslide (old way of doing things).
It’s okay that people are against you, you just need to know what to do
- Create high level vision
o Explain what the vision looks like
o Different stakeholders needed to see different vision, but emphasize how this change will help
them
Engaging and enabling the organization
- Communicate the vision
o Different members need different message
o Need to ensure that the different people that need to hear your message can hear it
- Empower action
o Transactional vs transformational leadership
o More effective to empower employees to do things themselves
- Create quick wins
o Along the process, it takes a long time
o To avoid change fatigue, creating quick wins (can see some positive outcomes) helps with
morale, buy-in, can see and feel the change
o Taking a road that will see early quick wins will motivate employees
Implementing and sustaining for change
- Build on the change
o Solidify change and go all the way with it before we call it finished
- Make it stick
o Refreeze or else there will be backslide and chaos