0% found this document useful (0 votes)
37 views

05 Perception and Decision Making

This chapter discusses perception and individual decision making. It covers topics like attribution theory, biases in perception and judgment of others, shortcuts people use like stereotyping, and decision making models. The key points are: - Perception influences how people interpret their environment and make judgments about others and events. Biases and errors can affect these perceptions. - When judging others, people tend to overestimate internal factors and underestimate external influences on behavior. They also are more likely to attribute their own successes to internal causes and failures to external causes. - Common shortcuts used in judging others include stereotyping, selective perception, and the halo effect. These shortcuts can influence decisions. - Decision making is impacted by perception

Uploaded by

Rony
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
37 views

05 Perception and Decision Making

This chapter discusses perception and individual decision making. It covers topics like attribution theory, biases in perception and judgment of others, shortcuts people use like stereotyping, and decision making models. The key points are: - Perception influences how people interpret their environment and make judgments about others and events. Biases and errors can affect these perceptions. - When judging others, people tend to overestimate internal factors and underestimate external influences on behavior. They also are more likely to attribute their own successes to internal causes and failures to external causes. - Common shortcuts used in judging others include stereotyping, selective perception, and the halo effect. These shortcuts can influence decisions. - Decision making is impacted by perception

Uploaded by

Rony
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 20

Chapter 5: Perception and Individual

Decision Making

5-1
Chapter Objectives
• Upon completion of this chapter you will be able to:
– Demonstrate the importance of interpersonal skills in the
workplace.
– Describe the manager’s functions, roles, and skills.
– Define organizational behavior (OB).
– Show the value to OB of systematic study.
– Identify the major behavioral science disciplines that contribute to
OB.
– Demonstrate why there are few absolutes in OB.
– Identify the challenges and opportunities managers have in
applying OB concepts.
– Compare the three levels of analysis in this book’s OB model.

5-2
What is Perception?
• A process by which individuals organize and interpret
their sensory impressions in order to give meaning to
their environment.
• People’s behavior is based on their perception of
what reality is, not on reality itself.
• The world as it is perceived is the world that is
behaviorally important.
• For factors that influence perception – see Exhibit 5-
1
5-3
Attribution Theory: Judging Others
• Our perception and judgment of others are significantly
influenced by our assumptions of the other people’s
internal states.
– When individuals observe behavior, they attempt to determine
whether it is internally or externally caused.
• Internal causes are under that person’s control.
• External causes are not – person forced to act in that way.
• Causation judged through:
– Distinctiveness
• Shows different behaviors in different situations.
– Consensus
• Response is the same as others to same situation.
– Consistency
• Responds in the same way over time.

5-4
Errors and Biases in Attributions
• Fundamental Attribution Error
– The tendency to underestimate the influence of external
factors and overestimate the influence of internal factors
when making judgments about the behavior of others
– We blame people first, not the situation
• Self-Serving Bias
– The tendency for individuals to attribute their own
successes to internal factors while putting the blame for
failures on external factors
– It is “our” success but “their” failure

5-5
Frequently Used Shortcuts in Judging Others

• Selective Perception
– People selectively interpret what they see on the basis of
their interests, background, experience, and attitudes.
• Halo Effect
– Drawing a general impression about an individual on the
basis of a single characteristic
• Contrast Effects
– Evaluation of a person’s characteristics that are affected
by comparisons with other people recently encountered
who rank higher or lower on the same characteristics

5-6
Another Shortcut: Stereotyping
Judging someone on the basis of one’s
perception of the group to which that person
belongs – a prevalent and often useful, if not
always accurate, generalization

•Profiling
– A form of stereotyping in which members of a
group are singled out for intense scrutiny based on
a single, often racial, trait.

5-7
Specific Shortcut Applications in
Organizations
• Employment Interviews
– Perceptual biases of raters affect the accuracy of interviewers’
judgments of applicants.
– Formed in a single glance – 1/10 of a second!
• Performance Expectations
– Self-fulfilling prophecy (Pygmalion effect): The lower or higher
performance of employees reflects preconceived leader
expectations about employee capabilities.
• Performance Evaluations
– Appraisals are often the subjective (judgmental) perceptions of
appraisers of another employee’s job performance.
– Critical impact on employees.

5-8
Perceptions and Individual Decision Making

• Problem
– A perceived discrepancy between the current state of affairs
and a desired state
• Decisions
– Choices made from among alternatives developed from data
• Perception Linkage:
– All elements of problem identification and the decision
making process are influenced by perception.
• Problems must be recognized
• Data must be selected and evaluated

5-9
Decision-Making Models in Organizations
• Rational Decision-Making
– The “perfect world” model: assumes complete information, all
options known, and maximum payoff
– Six-step decision-making process are define the problem, identify
the decision criteria, allocate weights to the criteria, develop the
alternatives, evaluate the alternatives, select the best alternatives
• Bounded Reality
– The “real world” model: seeks satisfactory and sufficient solutions
from limited data and alternatives
• Intuition
– A non-conscious process created from distilled experience that
results in quick decisions
• Relies on holistic associations
• Affectively charged – engaging the emotions
See Exhibit 5-3

5-10
Common Biases and Errors in Decision-
Making
• Overconfidence Bias
– Believing too much in our own ability to make good decisions –
especially when outside of own expertise
• Anchoring Bias
– Using early, first received information as the basis for making
subsequent judgments
• Confirmation Bias
– Selecting and using only facts that support our decision
• Availability Bias
– Emphasizing information that is most readily at hand
• Recent
• Vivid

5-11
More Common Decision-Making Errors
• Escalation of Commitment
– Increasing commitment to a decision in spite of evidence
that it is wrong – especially if responsible for the decision!
• Randomness Error
– Creating meaning out of random events - superstitions
• Winner’s Curse
– Highest bidder pays too much due to value overestimation
– Likelihood increases with the number of people in auction
• Hindsight Bias
– After an outcome is already known, believing it could have
been accurately predicted beforehand

5-12
Individual Differences in Decision-Making
• Personality
– Conscientiousness may effect escalation of
commitment
• Achievement strivers are likely to increase commitment
• Dutiful people are less likely to have this bias
– Self-Esteem
• High self-esteem people are susceptible to self-serving bias
 Gender
• Women analyze decisions more than men – rumination
• Women are twice as likely to develop depression
• Differences develop early

5-13
Organizational Constraints
• Performance Evaluation
– Managerial evaluation criteria influence actions
• Reward Systems
– Managers will make the decision with the greatest personal
payoff for them
• Formal Regulations
– Limit the alternative choices of decision makers
• System-imposed Time Constraints
– Restrict ability to gather or evaluate information
• Historical Precedents
– Past decisions influence current decisions

5-14
Ethics in Decision Making
• Ethical Decision Criteria
– Utilitarianism
• Decisions made based solely on the outcome
• Seeking the greatest good for the greatest number
• Dominant method for businesspeople
– Rights
• Decisions consistent with fundamental liberties and privileges
• Respecting and protecting basic rights of individuals such as
whistleblowers
– Justice
• Imposing and enforcing rules fairly and impartially
• Equitable distribution of benefits and costs

5-15
Ethical Decision-Making Criteria Assessed

• Utilitarianism
– Pro: Promotes efficiency and productivity
– Con: Can ignore individual rights, especially minorities
• Rights
– Pro: Protects individuals from harm, preserves rights
– Con: Creates an overly legalistic work environment
• Justice
– Pro: Protects the interests of weaker members
– Con: Encourages a sense of entitlement

5-16
Improving Creativity in Decision Making

• Creativity
– The ability to produce novel and useful ideas
• Who has the greatest creative potential?
– Those who score high in Openness to Experience
– People who are intelligent, independent, self-
confident, risk-taking, have an internal locus-of-
control, tolerant of ambiguity, low need for
structure, and who persevere in the face of
frustration

5-17
The Three-Component Model of Creativity

Proposition that individual creativity results


from a mixture of three components
• Expertise
– This is the foundation
• Creative-Thinking Skills
– The personality characteristics associated with
creativity
• Intrinsic Task Motivation
– The desire to do the job because of its characteristics
See Exhibit 5-4

5-18
Global Implications
• Attributions
– There are cultural differences in the ways people attribute cause to
observed behavior
• Decision-Making
– No research on the topic: assumption of “no difference”
– Based on our awareness of cultural differences in traits that affect
decision making, this assumption is suspect
• Ethics
– No global ethical standards exist
– Asian countries tend not to see ethical issues in “black and white”
but as shades of gray
– Global companies need global standards for managers

5-19
Summary and Managerial Implications
• Perception:
– People act based on how they view their world
– What exists is not as important as what is believed
– Managers must also manage perception

• Individual Decision Making


– Most use bounded rationality: they satisfice
– Combine traditional methods with intuition and creativity for
better decisions
• Analyze the situation and adjust to culture and organizational reward
criteria
• Be aware of, and minimize, biases

5-20

You might also like

pFad - Phonifier reborn

Pfad - The Proxy pFad of © 2024 Garber Painting. All rights reserved.

Note: This service is not intended for secure transactions such as banking, social media, email, or purchasing. Use at your own risk. We assume no liability whatsoever for broken pages.


Alternative Proxies:

Alternative Proxy

pFad Proxy

pFad v3 Proxy

pFad v4 Proxy