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What-Is-Organizational-Behaviour
Managers require to improve their interpersonal skills, or people, to be successful in their work. Organisational behaviour (OB) examines the influence that people, groups, and structure have on an organisation's actions and uses that information to make it more effective for organisations. Specifically, OB focuses on improving productivity; reducing absenteeism, turnover, and deviant behaviour in the workplace; and increasing the behaviour of organisational citizenship, and job satisfaction.
Certain generalisations offer useful insights into human behaviour, but others are incorrect. Organisational conduct uses systematic research to improve behavioural forecasts over intuition alone. Yet because individuals are special, we need to look at OB within a contingency context, using situational variables to clarify the relationships between cause and effect.
Organisational behaviour offers unique ways to improve people skills for a manager. It lets managers see the importance of diversity and activities in the workplace that will need to be improved in various countries. It can enhance the efficiency and productivity of workers by teaching managers how to motivate their teams, plan and execute change strategies, enhance customer support and help staff resolve conflicts between work and life. It gives ideas to help administrators tackle persistent shortages of labour. In an environment of temporariness, it will help executives cope and learn how to promote creativity. OB may also assist administrators in developing an ethically safe work climate.
Learning Outcome of this unit
By the end of this unit, you should be able to:
- Demonstrate the importance of interpersonal skills in the workplace.
- Define organisational behaviour (OB);
- Show the value to OB of systematic study;
- Identify the major behavioural science disciplines that contribute to OB;
- Demonstrate why there are few absolutes in OB; and
- Identify the challenges and opportunities managers have in applying OB concepts.