HBO - Module 1 Lesson 1
HBO - Module 1 Lesson 1
Module 1 – Lesson 1
o people as organizations,
o people as resources,
o and people as people.
• The managerial context of OB can be viewed from the perspective of basic management
functions, critical management skills, and overall human resource management.
• Management functions
o Planning
▪ Determining an organization’s desired future position and the best means of
getting there
o Organizing
▪ Designing jobs, grouping jobs into units, and establishing patterns of
authority between jobs and units
o Leading
▪ Getting the organization’s members to work together toward the
organization’s
goals
o Controlling
▪ Monitoring and correcting the actions of the organization and its members
to keep them directed toward their goals
• Resources used by managers
o Human
o Financial
o Physical
o Information
• Technical skills
o Skills necessary to accomplish specific tasks within the organization
• Interpersonal skills
o Ability to effectively communicate with, understand, and motivate individuals and
group
• Conceptual skills
o Ability to think in the abstract
• Diagnostic skills
o Ability to understand cause-and-effect relationships and to recognize the
o optimal solutions to problems
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• HR managers select new employees, develop rewards and incentives to motivate and
retain employees and create programs for training and developing employees.
• Competitive advantage
o An organization’s edge over rivals in attracting customers and defending itself against
competition
o There are many sources of competitive advantage including having the best-made or
cheapest product, providing the best customer service, being more convenient to buy
from, having shorter product development times, and having a well-known brand
name.
o Because it is an organization’s people who are responsible for gaining and keeping any
competitive advantage, effective management is critical to business success.
o To have a competitive advantage a company must ultimately be able to give customers
superior value for their money (a combination of quality, service, and acceptable
price)—either a better product that is worth a premium price or a good product at a
lower price can be a source of competitive advantage.
• Sources of competitive advantage
o Innovation
o Distribution
o Speed
o Convenience
o First to market
o Cost
o Services
o Quality
o Branding
• Cost Leadership
o Striving to be the lowest-cost producer for a particular level of product quality.
o Emphasizes operational excellence:
▪ maximizing the efficiency of the manufacturing or product development
process to minimize costs.
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• System
o A set of interrelated elements that function as a whole
o The framework for systems study consists of inputs, transformation, outputs, and
feedback.
o Various inputs are transformed into different outputs, with important feedback
from the environment.
▪ An organizational system receives four kinds of input from its
environment
➢ material,
➢ human,
➢ financial,
➢ and informational.
▪ These inputs are combined and transformed and then returned to the
environment in the form of products or services, profits or losses,
employee behaviors, and additional information.
▪ If managers do not understand these interrelations, they may tend to
ignore their environment or overlook important interrelationships within
their organizations
• Value of the systems perspective
o Underscores the importance of an organization’s environment
o Conceptualizes the flow and interaction of various elements of the organization itself
as they work together to transform inputs into outputs.
• Managers’ goals
o Enhance behaviors and attitudes
o Promote citizenship
o Minimize dysfunctional behaviors
o Drive strategic execution
• Individual behaviors
o Productivity
▪ Narrow measure of efficiency: number of products or services created per
unit of input
o Performance
▪ Broader concept made up of all work-related behaviors
▪ Individuals, not groups, have attitudes.
▪ But groups or teams can also have unique outcomes that individuals do not
share.
▪ Managers need to assess both common and unique outcomes when
considering the individual and group levels.
▪ Contrary to what many managers believe, however, high levels of job
satisfaction do not necessarily lead to higher levels of performance.
o Commitment
▪ The degree to which an employee considers himself or herself a true member
of the organization, overlooks minor sources of dissatisfaction, and intends to
stay with the organization
▪ A person with a high level of commitment sees himself as a true member of
the organization whereas one who has low level of commitment sees
himself as outsider.
• Organizational citizenship
o Behavior of individuals that makes a positive overall contribution to the organization
o Encompasses all factors outside the strict requirements of the job
o The determinant of organizational citizenship behaviors is likely to be a complex
mosaic of individual, social, and organizational variables.
o Although the study of organizational citizenship is still in its infancy, preliminary
research suggests that it may play a powerful role in organizational effectiveness.
o Examples:
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