Organizational Behaviour, emerging knowledge and practice for the real world, by S. McShane, M. Von Glinow (fifth edition) – Book summary
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Conflict is the process in which one party perceives that its interest is being opposed or negatively affected by another party. Conflict is based on perception. One party can believe they have a conflict without the other party believing this. Conflict can lead to lower performance, higher stress, dissatisfaction and turnover, less information sharing and coordination, increased organizational politics, wasted resources and weakened team cohesion. There are also benefits of conflict. The optimal conflict perspective states that organizations are most effective when employees experience some levels of conflict but become less effective with high levels of conflict. Conflict can lead to better decision making, make people more responsive to the changing environment and lead to a stronger team cohesion if the conflict is between the team and outside opponents.
There are two types of conflict:
The stronger the level of debate and the more the issue is tied to our self-view, the more likely that task conflict will evolve into relationship conflict. There are three conditions that potentially minimize the level of relationship conflict during task conflict: emotional intelligence and emotional stability (1), cohesive team (2) and supportive team norms (3).
There are different sources of conflicts in organizations:
Pooled interdependence occurs where individuals operate independently except for reliance on a common resource or authority. Reciprocal interdependence refers to high mutual dependence as well as higher centrality.
There are five ways of resolving conflicts:
The best conflict-handling style depends on the situation. Cultural differences influence the preferred conflict-handling style. Men are more likely than women to use the forcing style.
There are structural approaches to conflict management:
Third-party conflict resolution is any attempt by a relatively neutral person to help conflicting parties resolve their differences. This includes three activities. Arbitration is someone that has a high control over the final decision, but low control over the process. Inquisition refers to people who control all discussion about the conflict. Mediation refers to people who have high control over the process, but low control over the final decision. Inquisition is usually the least effective third-party conflict resolution method. The most appropriate third-party intervention depends on the situation.
Negotiation occurs when two or more conflicting parties attempt to resolve their divergent goals by redefining the terms of their interdependence. In the distributive approach, the negotiator believes those involved in the conflict must distribute portions from a fixed pie. In the integrative or mutual gains approach the negotiator believes that the resources at stake are expandable rather than fixed if the parties work creatively together to find a solution. Distributive negotiation is most common when the parties have only one item to resolve (e.g: salary) and integrative negotiation is most common when the parties have more items to resolve.
Negotiators engage in a form of goal setting which includes what they will initially request in the negotiations (initial), what they want to achieve in the best possible situation (target) and what minimum acceptable result they will accept (resistance). The other party also has these three positions and there is an area of potential agreement, between the resistance point and the opponent's resistance point. The initial offer point is each party’s opening offer to the other side. The target point is your realistic goal or expectation for a final agreement. The resistance point is the point beyond which you will make no further concessions. The best alternative to a negotiated settlement (BATNA) is the best outcome you might achieve through some other course of action if you abandon the current negotiation.
There are several aspects of the negotiation process:
The effectiveness of negotiating depends to some extent on the environment in which the negotiation occurs. The three key situational factors are location (1), physical setting (2) and audience (3). There is an advantage to negotiating on the home turf. The physical distance between the parties and formality of the setting can influence their orientation toward each other and the disputed issues. Negotiators tend to act differently when their audience observes the negotiation or has detailed information about the process. Direct surveillance leads to negotiators being more competitive.
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This bundle contains everything you need to know for the second interim exam of Work & Organizational Psychology for the University of Amsterdam. It uses the book "Organizational Behaviour, emerging knowledge and practice for the real world, by S. McShane, M. Von
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