Deck 15: Decision Making and Organizational Learning

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Question
According to March and Simon's administrative model of decision making, decision makers often choose satisfactory solutions rather than optimal ones.
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Question
When universities develop policies dictating how to deal with students who cannot complete their courses, they are using a performance program to make a programmed decision.
Question
A performance program allows organizational members to be creative when faced with unusual situations.
Question
There is always a clear boundary between ethical and unethical decisions in an organization.
Question
The administrative decision-making model prohibits decision makers from using any of the elements of the classical decision-making model.
Question
Satisficing is the process of making acceptable responses to opportunities and problems based on limited information available.
Question
While heuristics can expedite the decision-making process, it can also lead to biases that cause systematic decision-making errors.
Question
The classical model of decision making is based on realistic assumptions.
Question
Because recurring problems and opportunities require very little thought for response, nonprogrammed decisions are used to handle them.
Question
The concept of "bounded rationality" advocated by March and Simon disregards the cognitive limitations of the decision maker.
Question
Nonprogrammed decision making involves searching for the extra information that is needed to make the right choice.
Question
Decisions are made in response to either problems or opportunities.
Question
The classical decision-making model is prescriptive; it describes how decisions should be made.
Question
Decision making is the process by which members of an organization choose a specific course of action to respond to opportunities and problems that confront them.
Question
According to the classical model of decision making people should choose the easiest option possible.
Question
Programmed decision making responds to recurring opportunities and problems.
Question
The rules of thumb that help people simplify decision making are called heuristics.
Question
Decision making in response to problems occurs when organizations take advantage of opportunities to increase efficiency and effectiveness.
Question
When members of an organization choose how to respond to new or novel problems and opportunities, they engage in nonprogrammed decision making.
Question
Recognizing the problems with the classical model of decision making, James March and Herbert Simon developed the administrative decision-making model.
Question
Decision makers tend to take more risks when they frame or view decisions in positive terms rather than in negative terms.
Question
An enterprise resource planning (ERP) system is a company-wide intranet that allows an organization to link and coordinate functional activities and operations.
Question
The anchoring and adjustment heuristic reflects the tendency to make decisions based on adjustments from some initial amount (or anchor).
Question
Individuals seldom make decisions as quickly as groups can.
Question
An example of the value of diversity to group decision making is auto manufacturers including women and foreign designers on their team.
Question
Groupthink occurs in cohesive groups whose members strive for agreement at the expense of accurately assessing information relevant to the decision.
Question
When managers decide not to launch a product in a specific global market because it did not perform well in a similar market, they are using the representativeness heuristic.
Question
The diversity of people participating in group decision making is NOT an advantage to this kind of decision making.
Question
The use of information technology (IT) can reduce the effects of biases and heuristics on decision making.
Question
Escalation of commitment is rare in organizations, but is more common in people's personal lives.
Question
One source of bias emanating from the representativeness heuristic is the failure to consider the base rate, or the actual frequency with which events occur.
Question
Sunk costs cannot be affected by subsequent decision making.
Question
One of the advantages of group decision making is the availability and diversity of members' skills, knowledge, and expertise.
Question
The likelihood employees will accept a decision decreases when they take part in the decision-making process.
Question
Escalation of commitment can occur because decision makers do not want to admit that they have made a mistake.
Question
The management team of a toy company decided that they would begin producing children's clothes. After six months, the company had made little money on its new clothing line. They could not compete with other children's clothing lines. Still, the management team decided to spend more money marketing their new line. This is an example of escalation of commitment.
Question
The availability heuristic can lead to an overestimation of the frequency of vivid or extreme events and their causes.
Question
Group decision making has certain advantages over individual decision making when the decisions are complex and require acceptance by others for successful implementation.
Question
Decisions about the degree to which costs must be cut are often made using the anchoring and adjustment heuristic.
Question
Escalation of commitment is the tendency of decision makers to invest additional time, money, or effort into bad decisions or unproductive courses of action that are already draining the organization's resources.
Question
Group decisions are characterized by a diffusion of responsibility.
Question
In a crisis, groupthink can protect the collective interests of the group because no one person can be made a "scapegoat" for making a poor decision.
Question
When compared to decisions made by individuals, decisions made by groups tend to be more balanced or "middle-of-the-road."
Question
The illusion of invulnerability occurs when group members mistakenly believe that they are in total agreement when making decisions.
Question
Research suggests that brainstorming groups tend to produce more ideas than individuals who are working separately.
Question
When the Delphi technique is used, group members do NOT meet face to face.
Question
The nominal group technique can be used to overcome production blocking.
Question
The tendency for groups to make less extreme decisions than individuals is known as group polarization.
Question
Production blocking inhibits high quality brainstorming from occurring.
Question
Group conflict is dysfunctional when individual members become more concerned about "winning the battle" than making a good decision.
Question
Brainstorming is a spontaneous, participative, decision-making technique that groups use to generate a wide range of alternatives from which to make a decision.
Question
The people in charge of forming top-level teams to respond to sudden crises might be well advised to build devil's advocacy into the decision-making process in order to become aware of the perils hidden in the recommended course of action.
Question
Electronic brainstorming can prevent some of the production blocking that occurs during face-to-face brainstorming sessions.
Question
Total quality management (TQM) includes two group decision-making techniques: benchmarking and empowerment.
Question
The nominal group technique works best for complex decisions that require large amounts of information processing and repeated group meetings.
Question
When the Delphi technique is used experts meet face-to-face to make decisions.
Question
When the nominal group technique is used only the best ideas are discussed with the whole group.
Question
A devil's advocate should NOT raise problems when decisions are made unless he believes that he is making valid points.
Question
Although groupthink occurs only in cohesive groups, many cohesive groups never succumb to this faulty mode of decision making.
Question
Because conflict within groups is dysfunctional, the group leader needs to be sure it is always eliminated.
Question
Peter Senge argues that team learning is as, or even more, important than individual-level learning in promoting organizational learning.
Question
Benchmarking involves selecting a high-performing organization that is currently providing high-quality goods or services to its customers and using it as a model.
Question
Decision making in response to ________ occurs when individual, group, or organizational goal attainment and performance are threatened.

A) problems
B) opportunities
C) management directives
D) affordabilities
Question
Peter Senge has argued that for organizational learning to occur, each person needs to develop a sense of personal mastery.
Question
Decision making in response to ________ occurs when members of an organization make choices or act in ways that result in benefits or gains.

A) problems
B) opportunities
C) contingencies
D) consequences
Question
In order to create a learning organization, managers need to promote learning at the individual and group levels.
Question
Empowerment is the process of giving employees the authority to make decisions and be responsible for their outcomes.
Question
During the holiday season, a clothing store always hires ten more employees due to the increase in business. How is this an example of programmed decision making?

A) Hiring more employees is a response to a novel opportunity.
B) Hiring more employees is a response to a new threat.
C) Hiring more employees is a response to a recurring threat.
D) Hiring more employees is a response to a repeated opportunity.
Question
Organizational members are engaged in ________ when they choose how to respond to new problems or novel opportunities.

A) bounded decision making
B) performance analysis
C) nonprogrammed decision making
D) programmed decision making
Question
________ is the process by which members of an organization choose a specific course of action to respond to problems and opportunities.

A) Satisficing
B) Bounded rationality
C) Performance analysis
D) Decision making
Question
Education and experience are at the heart of a shared vision.
Question
A learning organization takes purposeful steps to enhance and maximize the potential for explorative and exploitative organizational learning to take place.
Question
Exploitation involves organizational members learning ways to refine and improve existing organizational behaviors and procedures to increase effectiveness.
Question
Brenda Butler, editor of the Republican, is trying to decide whether to take a job at a much larger newspaper or to become the CEO and publisher of the Republican. Brenda has to make this decision because of ________.

A) an opportunity
B) a threat
C) a problem
D) bounded rationality
Question
The best companies have learned everything that they need to know to be a successful company.
Question
Systems thinking is an ongoing mental model that all of the organization's members use to frame problems or opportunities.
Question
The process of organizational learning seeks to improve the decision-making ability of employees and enhance organizational efficiency and effectiveness.
Question
Mike Barry, editor of the Carole Creek Times, has to decide which one of two reporters he will fire because the newspaper is losing money. Mike has to make this decision MOST LIKELY because of ________.

A) an opportunity
B) a performance program
C) a problem
D) bounded rationality
Question
Exploration involves organizational members learning ways to refine and improve existing organizational behaviors and procedures to increase effectiveness.
Question
Groups allow for the creation of synergy-the idea that the whole equals the sum of its parts.
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Deck 15: Decision Making and Organizational Learning
1
According to March and Simon's administrative model of decision making, decision makers often choose satisfactory solutions rather than optimal ones.
True
2
When universities develop policies dictating how to deal with students who cannot complete their courses, they are using a performance program to make a programmed decision.
True
3
A performance program allows organizational members to be creative when faced with unusual situations.
False
A performance program is a standard sequence of behaviors that organizational members follow routinely whenever they encounter a particular type of problem or opportunity.
4
There is always a clear boundary between ethical and unethical decisions in an organization.
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5
The administrative decision-making model prohibits decision makers from using any of the elements of the classical decision-making model.
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k this deck
6
Satisficing is the process of making acceptable responses to opportunities and problems based on limited information available.
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7
While heuristics can expedite the decision-making process, it can also lead to biases that cause systematic decision-making errors.
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8
The classical model of decision making is based on realistic assumptions.
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9
Because recurring problems and opportunities require very little thought for response, nonprogrammed decisions are used to handle them.
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10
The concept of "bounded rationality" advocated by March and Simon disregards the cognitive limitations of the decision maker.
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11
Nonprogrammed decision making involves searching for the extra information that is needed to make the right choice.
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12
Decisions are made in response to either problems or opportunities.
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13
The classical decision-making model is prescriptive; it describes how decisions should be made.
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14
Decision making is the process by which members of an organization choose a specific course of action to respond to opportunities and problems that confront them.
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15
According to the classical model of decision making people should choose the easiest option possible.
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16
Programmed decision making responds to recurring opportunities and problems.
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17
The rules of thumb that help people simplify decision making are called heuristics.
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18
Decision making in response to problems occurs when organizations take advantage of opportunities to increase efficiency and effectiveness.
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19
When members of an organization choose how to respond to new or novel problems and opportunities, they engage in nonprogrammed decision making.
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20
Recognizing the problems with the classical model of decision making, James March and Herbert Simon developed the administrative decision-making model.
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21
Decision makers tend to take more risks when they frame or view decisions in positive terms rather than in negative terms.
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22
An enterprise resource planning (ERP) system is a company-wide intranet that allows an organization to link and coordinate functional activities and operations.
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23
The anchoring and adjustment heuristic reflects the tendency to make decisions based on adjustments from some initial amount (or anchor).
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24
Individuals seldom make decisions as quickly as groups can.
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25
An example of the value of diversity to group decision making is auto manufacturers including women and foreign designers on their team.
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26
Groupthink occurs in cohesive groups whose members strive for agreement at the expense of accurately assessing information relevant to the decision.
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27
When managers decide not to launch a product in a specific global market because it did not perform well in a similar market, they are using the representativeness heuristic.
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28
The diversity of people participating in group decision making is NOT an advantage to this kind of decision making.
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29
The use of information technology (IT) can reduce the effects of biases and heuristics on decision making.
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30
Escalation of commitment is rare in organizations, but is more common in people's personal lives.
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31
One source of bias emanating from the representativeness heuristic is the failure to consider the base rate, or the actual frequency with which events occur.
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32
Sunk costs cannot be affected by subsequent decision making.
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33
One of the advantages of group decision making is the availability and diversity of members' skills, knowledge, and expertise.
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k this deck
34
The likelihood employees will accept a decision decreases when they take part in the decision-making process.
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k this deck
35
Escalation of commitment can occur because decision makers do not want to admit that they have made a mistake.
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k this deck
36
The management team of a toy company decided that they would begin producing children's clothes. After six months, the company had made little money on its new clothing line. They could not compete with other children's clothing lines. Still, the management team decided to spend more money marketing their new line. This is an example of escalation of commitment.
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k this deck
37
The availability heuristic can lead to an overestimation of the frequency of vivid or extreme events and their causes.
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k this deck
38
Group decision making has certain advantages over individual decision making when the decisions are complex and require acceptance by others for successful implementation.
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k this deck
39
Decisions about the degree to which costs must be cut are often made using the anchoring and adjustment heuristic.
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k this deck
40
Escalation of commitment is the tendency of decision makers to invest additional time, money, or effort into bad decisions or unproductive courses of action that are already draining the organization's resources.
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k this deck
41
Group decisions are characterized by a diffusion of responsibility.
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42
In a crisis, groupthink can protect the collective interests of the group because no one person can be made a "scapegoat" for making a poor decision.
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k this deck
43
When compared to decisions made by individuals, decisions made by groups tend to be more balanced or "middle-of-the-road."
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k this deck
44
The illusion of invulnerability occurs when group members mistakenly believe that they are in total agreement when making decisions.
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k this deck
45
Research suggests that brainstorming groups tend to produce more ideas than individuals who are working separately.
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k this deck
46
When the Delphi technique is used, group members do NOT meet face to face.
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k this deck
47
The nominal group technique can be used to overcome production blocking.
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48
The tendency for groups to make less extreme decisions than individuals is known as group polarization.
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49
Production blocking inhibits high quality brainstorming from occurring.
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50
Group conflict is dysfunctional when individual members become more concerned about "winning the battle" than making a good decision.
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51
Brainstorming is a spontaneous, participative, decision-making technique that groups use to generate a wide range of alternatives from which to make a decision.
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k this deck
52
The people in charge of forming top-level teams to respond to sudden crises might be well advised to build devil's advocacy into the decision-making process in order to become aware of the perils hidden in the recommended course of action.
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k this deck
53
Electronic brainstorming can prevent some of the production blocking that occurs during face-to-face brainstorming sessions.
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k this deck
54
Total quality management (TQM) includes two group decision-making techniques: benchmarking and empowerment.
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k this deck
55
The nominal group technique works best for complex decisions that require large amounts of information processing and repeated group meetings.
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k this deck
56
When the Delphi technique is used experts meet face-to-face to make decisions.
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k this deck
57
When the nominal group technique is used only the best ideas are discussed with the whole group.
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k this deck
58
A devil's advocate should NOT raise problems when decisions are made unless he believes that he is making valid points.
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k this deck
59
Although groupthink occurs only in cohesive groups, many cohesive groups never succumb to this faulty mode of decision making.
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k this deck
60
Because conflict within groups is dysfunctional, the group leader needs to be sure it is always eliminated.
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Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
61
Peter Senge argues that team learning is as, or even more, important than individual-level learning in promoting organizational learning.
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Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
62
Benchmarking involves selecting a high-performing organization that is currently providing high-quality goods or services to its customers and using it as a model.
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Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
63
Decision making in response to ________ occurs when individual, group, or organizational goal attainment and performance are threatened.

A) problems
B) opportunities
C) management directives
D) affordabilities
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k this deck
64
Peter Senge has argued that for organizational learning to occur, each person needs to develop a sense of personal mastery.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
65
Decision making in response to ________ occurs when members of an organization make choices or act in ways that result in benefits or gains.

A) problems
B) opportunities
C) contingencies
D) consequences
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
66
In order to create a learning organization, managers need to promote learning at the individual and group levels.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
67
Empowerment is the process of giving employees the authority to make decisions and be responsible for their outcomes.
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k this deck
68
During the holiday season, a clothing store always hires ten more employees due to the increase in business. How is this an example of programmed decision making?

A) Hiring more employees is a response to a novel opportunity.
B) Hiring more employees is a response to a new threat.
C) Hiring more employees is a response to a recurring threat.
D) Hiring more employees is a response to a repeated opportunity.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
69
Organizational members are engaged in ________ when they choose how to respond to new problems or novel opportunities.

A) bounded decision making
B) performance analysis
C) nonprogrammed decision making
D) programmed decision making
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Unlock Deck
k this deck
70
________ is the process by which members of an organization choose a specific course of action to respond to problems and opportunities.

A) Satisficing
B) Bounded rationality
C) Performance analysis
D) Decision making
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k this deck
71
Education and experience are at the heart of a shared vision.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
72
A learning organization takes purposeful steps to enhance and maximize the potential for explorative and exploitative organizational learning to take place.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
73
Exploitation involves organizational members learning ways to refine and improve existing organizational behaviors and procedures to increase effectiveness.
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Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
74
Brenda Butler, editor of the Republican, is trying to decide whether to take a job at a much larger newspaper or to become the CEO and publisher of the Republican. Brenda has to make this decision because of ________.

A) an opportunity
B) a threat
C) a problem
D) bounded rationality
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
75
The best companies have learned everything that they need to know to be a successful company.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
76
Systems thinking is an ongoing mental model that all of the organization's members use to frame problems or opportunities.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
77
The process of organizational learning seeks to improve the decision-making ability of employees and enhance organizational efficiency and effectiveness.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
78
Mike Barry, editor of the Carole Creek Times, has to decide which one of two reporters he will fire because the newspaper is losing money. Mike has to make this decision MOST LIKELY because of ________.

A) an opportunity
B) a performance program
C) a problem
D) bounded rationality
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
79
Exploration involves organizational members learning ways to refine and improve existing organizational behaviors and procedures to increase effectiveness.
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Unlock for access to all 175 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
80
Groups allow for the creation of synergy-the idea that the whole equals the sum of its parts.
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k this deck
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