Individual
Behaviour,
Personality and
Values
Chapter 2
2-2
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Learning Objectives
2.1 Describe the four factors that directly
influence voluntary individual behaviour
and performance
2.2 Summarise the five types of individual
behaviour in organisations
2.3 Describe personality, the ‘Big Five’
personality dimensions and four MBTI
types, and explain how personality relates
to individual behaviour in organisations
2-3
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Learning Objectives continued
2.4 Summarise the components of resilience
and the Dark Triad
2.5 Summarise Schwartz’s model of individual
values and discuss the conditions under
which values influence behaviour
2.6 Summarise five values commonly studied
across cultures
2.7 Describe three ethical principles and
discuss four factors that influence ethical
behaviour
2-4
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Values, Personality and Self
Pet-Friendly Industries
Employees are happier, more relaxed and more
productive when there are dogs in the house. Recent
research shows that job satisfaction increases when
there are pets at work
2-5
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
MARS Model of Individual
Behaviour
2-6
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Employee Motivation
• Internal forces that affect a person’s
voluntary choice of behaviour:
– Direction
– Intensity
– Persistence
R
BAR
S
M
A
2-7
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Employee Ability
• Natural aptitudes and learned capabilities
required to successfully complete a task
• Competencies: personal characteristics
that lead to superior performance
• Personjob matching
– Selecting
– Developing
– Redesigning
R
BAR
S
M
A
2-8
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Role Perceptions
• Beliefs about what behaviour is required
to achieve the desired results:
– Understanding what tasks to perform
– Understanding relative importance of tasks
– Understanding preferred
behaviours to accomplish tasks
R
BAR
S
M
A
2-9
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Situational Factors
• Environmental conditions beyond the
individual’s short-term control that
constrain or facilitate behaviour
– Time
– People
– Budget
– Work facilities
R
BAR
S
M
A
2-10
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Types of Individual Behaviour
2-11
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Task Performance
• Goal-directed behaviours under the
individual’s control that support
organisational objectives
• Task performance behaviours transform
raw materials into goods and services, or
support and maintain these technical
activities
2-12
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Organisational Citizenship
Behaviours
• Various forms of cooperation and
helpfulness to others that support the
organisation’s social and psychological
context
2-13
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Counterproductive Work
Behaviours
• Voluntary behaviours that have the
potential to directly or indirectly harm the
organisation
2-14
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Joining and Staying with the
Organisation
• Employee retention is essential for all the
other performance-related behaviours to
occur
2-15
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Maintaining Work Attendance
• Presenteeism: attending scheduled work
when one’s capacity to perform is
significantly diminished by illness and
other factors
• Work attendance is related to job
satisfaction and motivation
• Absenteeism is related to dissatisfaction,
organisational policy, norms and the
person’s values and personality
2-16
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Personality in Organisations
• Personality: relatively enduring pattern of
thoughts, emotions and behaviours that
characterise a person, along with the
psychological processes behind those
characteristics
– External traits: observable behaviours
– Internal states: thoughts, values, etc. inferred
from behaviours
– Some variability, adjust to suit the situation
2-17
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Nature versus Nurture of
Personality
• Nature refers to our genetic or hereditary
origins
– Studies of identical twins, particularly those
separated at birth, reveal that heredity has a
very large effect on personality
• Nurture refers to the person’s
socialisation, life experiences and other
forms of interaction with the environment
– Personality is not stable at birth and stabilises
throughout adolescence
2-18
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Five-Factor Personality Model
(CANOE)
2-19
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Five-Factor Personality and
Organisational Behaviour
• The five abstract dimensions represent
most personality traits
• These five personality dimensions are not
independent of each other
• Studies report fairly strong associations
between personality and several
workplace behaviours and outcomes:
– Performance
– Motivation
– Organisational citizenship
2-20
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Myers-Briggs Type Indicator
(MBTI)
• Extroversion versus introversion
– Similar to five-factor dimension
• Sensing versus intuition
– Collecting information through senses versus
through intuition, inspiration or subjective sources
• Thinking versus feeling
– Processing and evaluating information
– Using rational logic versus personal values
• Judging versus perceiving
– Orienting self to the outer world
– Order and structure or flexibility and spontaneity
2-21
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Personality Constellations
• Resilience: the ability to overcome and
learn from adverse experiences in the
workplace
• Self-efficacy: a person’s belief that he or
she can successfully complete a task
• Dark Triad: a constellation of personality
traits that increases the use of influence
tactics and leads to counterproductive
work behaviours
2-22
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Caveats About Personality
Testing in Organisations
• Self-reports are not a valid measure
• Personality is a relatively weak predictor
of a person’s performance
• Personality instruments may unfairly
discriminate against specific groups of
people
• Personality testing might not convey a
favourable image of the company
2-23
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Values in the Workplace
• Stable, evaluative beliefs that guide our
preferences
• Define right or wrong, good or bad
• Value system: hierarchy of values
2-24
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Schwartz’s Values Model
2-25
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Schwartz’s Values Model
• Openness to change:
motivation to pursue
innovative ways
• Conservation: motivation to
preserve the status quo
• Self-enhancement :
motivated by self-interest
• Self-transcendence :
motivation to promote
welfare of others and
nature
2-26
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Values and Behaviour
• Habitual behaviour is usually consistent
with values, but conscious behaviour less
so because values are abstract constructs
• Decisions and behaviour are linked to
values when:
– We are mindful of our values
– We have logical reasons to apply values in
that situation
– The situation does not interfere
2-27
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Value Congruence
• Where two or more entities have similar
value systems
• Problems with incongruence
– Incompatible decisions
– Lower satisfaction and loyalty
– Higher stress and turnover
• Benefits of incongruence
– Constructive conflict, better decision making
– Avoids ‘corporate cults’
2-28
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Values Across Cultures:
Individualism and Collectivism
• Degree that people value duty to their
group (collectivism) versus independence
and person’s uniqueness (individualism)
• Previously considered opposites, but
unrelated, i.e. possible to value high
individualism and high collectivism
2-29
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Values Across Cultures
• Power distance: the degree to which
people in a culture accept unequal
distribution of power in a society
• Uncertainty avoidance: the degree to
which people tolerate ambiguity
• Achievement-nurturing orientation reflects
a competitive versus cooperative view of
relations with other people
2-30
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Five Cross-Cultural Values in
Selected Countries
2-31
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Ethical Values and Behaviour
• Ethics refers to the study of moral
principles or values that determine
whether actions are right or wrong and
outcomes are good or bad
• Honesty/ethics is the most important
characteristic that employees look for in a
leader
2-32
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Utilitarianism
Individual
rights
Greatest good for the greatest number
of people
Fundamental entitlements
in society
Distributive
justice
People who are similar should receive
similar benefits
Three Ethical Principles
2-33
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Influences on Ethical Conduct
• Moral intensity
– Degree that issue demands ethical principles
• Ethical sensitivity
– Ability to recognise the presence and
determine the relative importance of an
ethical issue
• Situational influences
– Competitive pressures and other conditions
affect ethical behaviour
2-34
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Supporting Ethical Behaviour
• Ethical code of conduct
• Ethics training
• Ethics hotlines
• Ethical leadership and culture
2-35
Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd
McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e
Summary
• Individual behaviour is influenced by
motivation, ability, role perceptions and
situational factors (MARS)
• There are five main types of workplace
behaviour: task performance; organisational
citizenship; counterproductive work
behaviours; joining and staying with the
organisation; and maintaining work
attendance
• Personality, resilience, values and ethics
contribute to all of the above
Individual
Behaviour,
Personality and
Values
Chapter 2

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Individual Behaviour, Personality and Values

  • 2. 2-2 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Learning Objectives 2.1 Describe the four factors that directly influence voluntary individual behaviour and performance 2.2 Summarise the five types of individual behaviour in organisations 2.3 Describe personality, the ‘Big Five’ personality dimensions and four MBTI types, and explain how personality relates to individual behaviour in organisations
  • 3. 2-3 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Learning Objectives continued 2.4 Summarise the components of resilience and the Dark Triad 2.5 Summarise Schwartz’s model of individual values and discuss the conditions under which values influence behaviour 2.6 Summarise five values commonly studied across cultures 2.7 Describe three ethical principles and discuss four factors that influence ethical behaviour
  • 4. 2-4 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Values, Personality and Self Pet-Friendly Industries Employees are happier, more relaxed and more productive when there are dogs in the house. Recent research shows that job satisfaction increases when there are pets at work
  • 5. 2-5 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e MARS Model of Individual Behaviour
  • 6. 2-6 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Employee Motivation • Internal forces that affect a person’s voluntary choice of behaviour: – Direction – Intensity – Persistence R BAR S M A
  • 7. 2-7 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Employee Ability • Natural aptitudes and learned capabilities required to successfully complete a task • Competencies: personal characteristics that lead to superior performance • Personjob matching – Selecting – Developing – Redesigning R BAR S M A
  • 8. 2-8 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Role Perceptions • Beliefs about what behaviour is required to achieve the desired results: – Understanding what tasks to perform – Understanding relative importance of tasks – Understanding preferred behaviours to accomplish tasks R BAR S M A
  • 9. 2-9 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Situational Factors • Environmental conditions beyond the individual’s short-term control that constrain or facilitate behaviour – Time – People – Budget – Work facilities R BAR S M A
  • 10. 2-10 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Types of Individual Behaviour
  • 11. 2-11 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Task Performance • Goal-directed behaviours under the individual’s control that support organisational objectives • Task performance behaviours transform raw materials into goods and services, or support and maintain these technical activities
  • 12. 2-12 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Organisational Citizenship Behaviours • Various forms of cooperation and helpfulness to others that support the organisation’s social and psychological context
  • 13. 2-13 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Counterproductive Work Behaviours • Voluntary behaviours that have the potential to directly or indirectly harm the organisation
  • 14. 2-14 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Joining and Staying with the Organisation • Employee retention is essential for all the other performance-related behaviours to occur
  • 15. 2-15 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Maintaining Work Attendance • Presenteeism: attending scheduled work when one’s capacity to perform is significantly diminished by illness and other factors • Work attendance is related to job satisfaction and motivation • Absenteeism is related to dissatisfaction, organisational policy, norms and the person’s values and personality
  • 16. 2-16 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Personality in Organisations • Personality: relatively enduring pattern of thoughts, emotions and behaviours that characterise a person, along with the psychological processes behind those characteristics – External traits: observable behaviours – Internal states: thoughts, values, etc. inferred from behaviours – Some variability, adjust to suit the situation
  • 17. 2-17 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Nature versus Nurture of Personality • Nature refers to our genetic or hereditary origins – Studies of identical twins, particularly those separated at birth, reveal that heredity has a very large effect on personality • Nurture refers to the person’s socialisation, life experiences and other forms of interaction with the environment – Personality is not stable at birth and stabilises throughout adolescence
  • 18. 2-18 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Five-Factor Personality Model (CANOE)
  • 19. 2-19 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Five-Factor Personality and Organisational Behaviour • The five abstract dimensions represent most personality traits • These five personality dimensions are not independent of each other • Studies report fairly strong associations between personality and several workplace behaviours and outcomes: – Performance – Motivation – Organisational citizenship
  • 20. 2-20 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) • Extroversion versus introversion – Similar to five-factor dimension • Sensing versus intuition – Collecting information through senses versus through intuition, inspiration or subjective sources • Thinking versus feeling – Processing and evaluating information – Using rational logic versus personal values • Judging versus perceiving – Orienting self to the outer world – Order and structure or flexibility and spontaneity
  • 21. 2-21 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Personality Constellations • Resilience: the ability to overcome and learn from adverse experiences in the workplace • Self-efficacy: a person’s belief that he or she can successfully complete a task • Dark Triad: a constellation of personality traits that increases the use of influence tactics and leads to counterproductive work behaviours
  • 22. 2-22 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Caveats About Personality Testing in Organisations • Self-reports are not a valid measure • Personality is a relatively weak predictor of a person’s performance • Personality instruments may unfairly discriminate against specific groups of people • Personality testing might not convey a favourable image of the company
  • 23. 2-23 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Values in the Workplace • Stable, evaluative beliefs that guide our preferences • Define right or wrong, good or bad • Value system: hierarchy of values
  • 24. 2-24 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Schwartz’s Values Model
  • 25. 2-25 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Schwartz’s Values Model • Openness to change: motivation to pursue innovative ways • Conservation: motivation to preserve the status quo • Self-enhancement : motivated by self-interest • Self-transcendence : motivation to promote welfare of others and nature
  • 26. 2-26 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Values and Behaviour • Habitual behaviour is usually consistent with values, but conscious behaviour less so because values are abstract constructs • Decisions and behaviour are linked to values when: – We are mindful of our values – We have logical reasons to apply values in that situation – The situation does not interfere
  • 27. 2-27 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Value Congruence • Where two or more entities have similar value systems • Problems with incongruence – Incompatible decisions – Lower satisfaction and loyalty – Higher stress and turnover • Benefits of incongruence – Constructive conflict, better decision making – Avoids ‘corporate cults’
  • 28. 2-28 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Values Across Cultures: Individualism and Collectivism • Degree that people value duty to their group (collectivism) versus independence and person’s uniqueness (individualism) • Previously considered opposites, but unrelated, i.e. possible to value high individualism and high collectivism
  • 29. 2-29 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Values Across Cultures • Power distance: the degree to which people in a culture accept unequal distribution of power in a society • Uncertainty avoidance: the degree to which people tolerate ambiguity • Achievement-nurturing orientation reflects a competitive versus cooperative view of relations with other people
  • 30. 2-30 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Five Cross-Cultural Values in Selected Countries
  • 31. 2-31 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Ethical Values and Behaviour • Ethics refers to the study of moral principles or values that determine whether actions are right or wrong and outcomes are good or bad • Honesty/ethics is the most important characteristic that employees look for in a leader
  • 32. 2-32 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Utilitarianism Individual rights Greatest good for the greatest number of people Fundamental entitlements in society Distributive justice People who are similar should receive similar benefits Three Ethical Principles
  • 33. 2-33 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Influences on Ethical Conduct • Moral intensity – Degree that issue demands ethical principles • Ethical sensitivity – Ability to recognise the presence and determine the relative importance of an ethical issue • Situational influences – Competitive pressures and other conditions affect ethical behaviour
  • 34. 2-34 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Supporting Ethical Behaviour • Ethical code of conduct • Ethics training • Ethics hotlines • Ethical leadership and culture
  • 35. 2-35 Copyright © 2013 McGraw-Hill Australia Pty Ltd McShane, Olekalns, Travaglione, Organisational Behaviour, 4e Summary • Individual behaviour is influenced by motivation, ability, role perceptions and situational factors (MARS) • There are five main types of workplace behaviour: task performance; organisational citizenship; counterproductive work behaviours; joining and staying with the organisation; and maintaining work attendance • Personality, resilience, values and ethics contribute to all of the above