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13-1©2005 Prentice Hall 13: Power, Politics, Conflict, and Negotiation Chapter 13: Power, Politics, Conflict, and Negotiation Understanding And Managing Organizational Behavior 4th Edition JENNIFER GEORGE & GARETH JONES
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13-2 ©2005 Prentice Hall Opening Case: A Power Struggle at Gucci Domenico De Sole (CEO) hired Tom Ford as head designer in1990 Conflict over who should lead company in 2004 –Tom and Dom OR –Serge Weinberg – head of parent company PPR Tom and Dom left in March 2004
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13-3 ©2005 Prentice Hall The Nature of Power and Politics Power –Principal means of directing and controlling organizational goals and activities –Ability to get others to do something they might not otherwise do Organizational politics –Activities designed to increase power
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13-4 ©2005 Prentice Hall The Good Side of Power Improve decision making quality Promote change Encourage cooperation Promote new organizational goals
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13-5 ©2005 Prentice Hall Figure 13.1 Sources of Individual Power Formal power –Legitimate power –Reward power –Coercive power –Information power Informal power –Expert power –Referent power –Charismatic power
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13-6 ©2005 Prentice Hall Figure 13.2 Sources of Functional and Divisional Power Ability to control uncertain contingencies Irreplaceability Centrality Ability to control and generate resources
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13-7 ©2005 Prentice Hall Tactics for Increasing Individual Power Tapping the sources of functional and divisional power Recognizing who has power Controlling the agenda Bringing in an outside expert Building coalitions and alliances
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13-8 ©2005 Prentice Hall Factors of Relative Power Sources of power Consequences of power Symbols of power Personal reputations Representational indicators
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13-9 ©2005 Prentice Hall What is Organizational Conflict? Self-interested struggle that arises when the goal-directed behavior of one person or group blocks the goal-directed behavior of another person or group
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13-10 ©2005 Prentice Hall Sources of Conflict Differentiation –Differences in functional orientations –Status inconsistencies Task relationships –Overlapping authority –Task interdependencies –Incompatible evaluation systems Scarcity of resources
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13-11 ©2005 Prentice Hall Figure 13.5 Pondy’s Model of Organizational Conflict Stage 1 – Latent conflict Stage 2 – Perceived conflict Stage 3 – Felt conflict Stage 4 – Manifest conflict Stage 5 – Conflict aftermath
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13-12 ©2005 Prentice Hall Forms of Manifest Conflict Open aggression Violence Infighting Sabotage Physical intimidation Lack of cooperation
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13-13 ©2005 Prentice Hall Negotiation Initial offer Counteroffers Concession Compromise
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13-14 ©2005 Prentice Hall Individual-Level Conflict Management Manager meets with employees in conflict. All understand facts of conflict Manager summarizes dispute in written form Manager discusses facts in report with each employee separately and works out a common solution Manager gets commitment to resolving dispute
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13-15 ©2005 Prentice Hall Group-Level Conflict Management Compromise Collaboration Accommodation Avoidance Competition
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13-16 ©2005 Prentice Hall Promoting Compromise Emphasize common goals Focus on the problem, not the people Focus on interests, not demands Create opportunities for joint gain Focus on what is fair
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13-17 ©2005 Prentice Hall Union-Management Negotiations Distributive bargaining Attitudinal structuring
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