Lecture Notes - Conflict Mgt. - 2
Lecture Notes - Conflict Mgt. - 2
Lecture Notes - Conflict Mgt. - 2
After studying this chapter, students should be able to understand the following:
A. Conflict
B. Negotiation
CHAPTER OVERVIEW
This lecture takes an in-depth look at conflict management and negotiation, key aspects
of contemporary organizational behavior. After examining the two views of conflict, the
consequences of conflict, and the types and levels of conflict, the chapter discusses
culture and conflict, conflict management styles, organizational sources of conflict, and
conflict management strategies. The chapter goes on to explore negotiation.
Conflict
Conflict is the process in which one party perceives that its interests are being opposed
or negatively affected by another party. Conflict is a process in which people disagree
over significant issues, thereby creating friction between parties. Conflict can exist when
people have opposing interests, perceptions, and feelings; when those involved
recognize the existence of differing points of view; when the disagreement is ongoing;
and when opponents try to prevent each other from accomplishing their goals. Although
conflict can be destructive, it can also be beneficial when used as a source of renewal
and creativity. Competition, rivalry between individuals or groups over an outcome that
both seek, is not the same as conflict. In competition, there must be a winner and a
loser; with conflict, people can cooperate so that no one wins or loses.
Organizational conflict occurs when a stakeholder group pursues its interests at the
expense of other stakeholders. Given the different goals of stakeholders, organizational
conflict is inevitable. Conflict is associated with negative images, such as unions getting
angry and violent, but some conflict can improve effectiveness. When conflict passes a
certain point, it hurts an organization.
Types of Conflict
a. The obliging style of conflict management is based on low concern for self, high
concern for others, and focusing on the needs of others while satisfying or ignoring
personal needs. This works best when issues are unimportant, knowledge is limited,
there is long-term give and take, and the managing the conflict has no power.
b. The avoiding style is based on low concern for self and others and a focus on
suppressing, setting aside, and ignoring the issues. This is appropriate when the
conflict is too strong and parties need to cool off.
c. The integrative style shows high concern for self and for others and focuses on
collaboration, openness, and exchange of information. This is used when issues are
complex, when commitment is needed, when dealing with strategic issues, and when
long term solutions are required.
d. The dominating style shows high concern for self, low concern for others, and
focuses on advancing own goals at any cost. This is used when time is short, issues are
trivial, all solutions are unpopular, and an issue is important to the party resolving the
conflict.
e. The compromising style shows moderate concern for self and others and focuses
on achieving a reasonable middle ground where all parties win. This is used when goals
are clearly incompatible, parties have equal power, and a quick solution is needed.
B. Negotiation
Negotiation Process
It is the process used by two or more parties to reach a mutually agreeable
arrangement to exchange goods and services. Managers need negotiating skills to be
effective in today's global, diverse, dynamic, team oriented business environment.
Culture significantly affects the negotiation process. Negotiators from masculine
cultures emphasize assertiveness and independence, which can cause them to see
negotiation as a competition and spur them to win at all costs. Negotiators from cultures
comfortable with uncertainty will take a creative, problem-solving approach, while those
from high uncertainty-avoidance cultures will emphasize bureaucratic rules and
procedures. Power-distance, individuality-collectivism, high or low context, emotion, and
time-orientation dimensions also affect negotiation.
Beyond a certain point, conflict hurts the organization and causes decline. Managers
spend time bargaining, rather than making decisions. An organization in decline cannot
afford to spend time on decision-making, because it needs a quick response to recover
its position. Group’s battle for their interests, no agreement is reached, and the
o Negotiation Strategies
There are four negotiating strategies based on the importance of the substantive
outcome and the importance of the relationship outcome. These four strategies are
trusting collaboration, firm competition, open subordination, and active avoidance.
Trusting collaboration is a win-win strategy most appropriate when both the substantive
task outcome and the relationship outcome are important. Firm competition is used
when the substantive task outcome is important but the relationship outcome is not.
Open subordination is applied when the task outcome is not important but the
relationship outcome is. Active avoidance is useful when neither the task outcome nor
the relationship outcome is important. When two parties are unable to come to
agreement during negotiations, they may bring in a third party to help resolve the
differences. Conciliation and consultation focus on improving interpersonal relations to
foster constructive discussion of issues. Mediation considers both interpersonal and
substantive issues and relies on formal evaluation of positions plus persuasion to bring
about a non-binding solution. Arbitration, a legally binding process in which the
arbitrator imposes a solution, can be used when all other methods have failed and the
conflict must be urgently resolved.
KEY TERMS
Conflict Conflict is the process in which one party perceives that its interests are being
opposed or negatively affected by another party.
Task conflict Conflicts over content and goals of the work
Relationship conflict Conflict based on interpersonal relationships
Process conflict Conflict over how work get done
Vertical conflict It occurs between groups at different levels of the organization.
After studying this chapter, students should be able to understand the following:
A. Power
B. Politics In Organizations
C. Power and Politics in Context
CHAPTER OVERVIEW
This chapter explores how managers use power and organizational politics.
Organizations today use power and politics differently than in the past, given the
uncertain environment and the shift to flatter hierarchies, team structures, and employee
empowerment. This chapter opens with a look at power, including the individual and
organizational sources, the effect of culture and gender, corruption of power, and
potential benefits of empowerment. Next, the chapter examines politics.
A. Power
Power, the ability of one person to influence another, is not limited to managers.
Employees at all levels and outsiders such as customers have the ability to influence
the actions and attitudes of other people. Someone need not have power to influence
another person—and those with influence may not have power. Also, power is not the
same as authority. Authority is the power vested in a particular position, such as the
power of the security director.
Organizational sources of power, which derive from the structure, depend on strategic
contingencies— elements that are essential to the performance and effectiveness of the
organization, department, or team.
The three strategic contingencies that are sources of organizational power are: coping
with uncertainty; centrality in the resource network; and dependency and substitutability.
Organizations can prevent corruption of power by pushing for more contact between
managers and employees; reducing employees' dependence on managers; and
creating an open, performance-centered organizational culture and structure.
One of the most visible ways managers and organizations can encourage the ethical
use of power is by modeling and rewarding ethical behavior. In addition, they can
establish appropriate policies and procedures to identify and stop unethical use of
power and create an organizational culture that values high ethical standards for the
use of power.
B. Politics In Organizations
Organizational politics are activities that allow people in organizations to achieve goals
without going through formal channels. Whether political activities help or hurt the
organization depends on whether the person's goals are consistent with the
Political Tactics
Political tactics are activities that fall outside the standardized, formal processes of the
organization. Four types of political tactics are building relationships, controlling
resources, image management, and blame and ingratiation.
Building Relationship
People develop relationships through coalitions, alliances, networks, and supportive
managerial linkages. Coalitions are relationships formed over specific issues; alliances
are general agreements of support among different individuals and groups; and
networks are broad, loose support systems. Relationship building can either help or
harm the organization.
a. Controlling Resources
Controlling resources and decisions, another type of political tactic, involves developing
expertise, becoming indispensable, and influencing decision criteria. Like relationship
building, controlling resources and decisions can either help or harm the organization.
b. Image Management
Image management means remaining visible and presenting oneself in the best light
within the organization. It also means knowing when to avoid association with people
who are considered deviants.
KEY TERMS
Power Ability of a person to influence another.
Authority Power vested in a particular position.
Expert Power Based on personal expertise and knowledge in a certain area. Others
comply because they believe in the power holder's knowledge.
Legitimate Power Based on a person holding a formal position. Others comply
because they believe in the legitimacy of the power holder.
Reward Power Based on a person's access to rewards. Others comply because of the
desire to receive rewards.
Organizational Politics Activities that allow people in organizations to achieve goals
without going through formal channels.