Deck 15: Organizational Change

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Question
Unfreezing occurs by making the driving forces stronger, weakening the restraining forces, or a combination of both.
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Question
To bring about effective change, leaders typically create an urgency to change by buffering employees from the external environment.
Question
Fear of the unknown usually motivates employees to support organizational change.
Question
Customer feedback provides a human element that can energize employees to change their current behavior patterns.
Question
The urgency for change must always be initiated from a problem-oriented perspective in order to be effective.
Question
Unfreezing occurs when the driving forces are weaker than the restraining forces.
Question
Exposing employees to external forces can strengthen the urgency for change, but leaders often need to begin the change process before problems come knocking at the company's door.
Question
Refreezing involves producing disequilibrium between the current state and the future state.
Question
When employees apply a cost-benefit analysis to a potential change, they consider only their own self-interest.
Question
The force field analysis model states that stability is achieved only when the driving forces for change subside and are replaced by restraining forces acting in the same direction.
Question
Even when present conditions are very bad, most people do not welcome an uncertain future.
Question
Resistance detracts from employees' sense of procedural justice.
Question
One reason why employees typically resist change is that they dislike predictable role patterns.
Question
When people support change, they typically assume that it is others who need to change.
Question
Team norms can contribute to resistance to change.
Question
Resistance is a form of voice.
Question
Subtle resistance is much more common than overt resistance.
Question
According to the force field analysis model, stability occurs when the driving forces and restraining forces are of approximately equal strength in opposite directions.
Question
Resistance is a form of conflict that should be viewed as relationship conflict.
Question
Resistance is motivational; it potentially engages people to think about change strategy and process.
Question
Change agents can often single handedly lead a change initiative.
Question
In order to bring about a change in a particular organization, employees need to break old routines and adopt new role patterns.The stress management strategy is best suited for this situation.
Question
Increasing the driving forces alone will not bring about change.
Question
Diffusion of change is more likely to succeed if some people who have worked under the new system are moved to other areas of the organization.
Question
Negotiation and coercion are necessary for people who will clearly gain something from the change and in cases where the speed of change is critical.
Question
Learning is the highest priority and first strategy required for any organizational change.
Question
Information systems and reward systems can both help to refreeze the desired conditions in organizational change.
Question
The group of people with a commitment to a change is called a dominant coalition.
Question
One problem with negotiation is that it tends to produce compliance rather than commitment to the change process.
Question
Firing people is the least desirable way to change organizations.
Question
The best way to manage resistance to change among those who will clearly lose out from the change is to introduce coercion practices.
Question
Unless the change must occur quickly or employee interests are highly incompatible with the organization's needs, employee involvement is almost an essential part of the change process.
Question
Coercion should never be used to manage change in organizations.
Question
Pilot projects are usually more flexible and less risky than centralized, organization-wide programs.
Question
Transformational leaders act as agents of organizational change.
Question
Learning increases employees' change self-efficacy.
Question
Action research is the process of determining whether the change process is ethical or not.
Question
Organizational rewards are powerful systems that refreeze behaviors.
Question
The communication strategy should be applied to reduce resistance to change where the change must occur quickly with little financial cost.
Question
Pilot projects get diffused quickly when employees understand how the practices in a pilot project apply to them even though they are in a completely different functional area.
Question
Lewin's force field analysis model appeals to all cultures because it is based on a logical linear sequence.
Question
Using the action research model instead of the other models such as the parallel learning approach enables an organization to eliminate the threat of violating individual privacy rights.
Question
The first step in the Four-D model of appreciative inquiry is dreaming, in which participants envision what might be possible in an ideal organization.
Question
Future search conferences are meetings among a small task force of senior executives who have been given the mandate to identify a change agent on a particular corporate strategy.
Question
One ethical concern with some organizational change programs is that they may threaten the employee's self-esteem.
Question
Appreciative inquiry tries to break away from the approach to change advocated by action research.
Question
The emerging philosophy of positive organizational behavior directs the group's attention away from its own problems and focuses participants on the group's potential and positive elements.
Question
Practices such as action research avoid the use of management's power to induce compliance and conformity and is less likely to create ethical issues.
Question
Action research maintains the view that having a research orientation is less important than having an action orientation.
Question
The positive principle advocates the view that people are motivated and guided by the vision they see and believe in for the future.
Question
An important feature of parallel learning structures is that they operate within the existing organizational hierarchy.
Question
How we perceive and understand the change process depends on the questions we ask and language we use throughout that process.This is called the constructionist principle.
Question
Some change experts recommend introducing rapid change when the organization wants to overhaul a system quickly and decisively.
Question
A unique feature of appreciative inquiry is that it breaks away from the problem-solving mentality by reframing relationships around what is positive and possible.
Question
The main objective of force field analysis is to help change agents to:

A)identify ways to control the external environment.
B)find ways to increase the driving forces for change.
C)diagnose a situation better by understanding the driving and restraining forces for change.
D)determine whether change is necessary in the organization or not.
E)determine and single out the force that causes organizational resistance for change.
Question
Which of these forces pushes organizations toward a new state of affairs?

A)Process forces
B)Driving forces
C)Equilibrium forces
D)Restraining forces
E)Freezing forces
Question
Appreciative inquiry is always the best approach to changing team or organizations, because it is almost always successful.
Question
Action research is a problem-focused process of organizational change.
Question
A parallel learning structure is an organizational change approach in which a social structure is constructed alongside the formal hierarchy to increase the organization's learning.
Question
Future search events minimize resistance to change by severely limiting involvement from employees.
Question
Refreezing refers to:

A)getting one's own way in organizational politics.
B)a management practice used to discourage newcomers from engaging in organizational politics.
C)aligning the organization's systems with the desired behaviors to support and reinforce the new role patterns.
D)repeating the change process to obtain better organizational outcomes and employee performance.
E)producing disequilibrium between the driving and restraining forces of change.
Question
Increasing the driving forces and reducing the restraining forces tends to:

A)reduce the need for change.
B)unfreeze the status quo.
C)refreeze the status quo.
D)decrease environmental stability.
E)produce environmental equilibrium.
Question
Senior executives at a large retail organization want employees to become more customer-friendly.Employees think they are serving customers well enough and the company is the dominant player in the market.What should the executives do to create an urgency to change in this situation?

A)Stop trying to convince employees that they should change their behavior and use other strategies to gain market share.
B)Keep pushing employees to change even though they don't see the need to change and attempt to replace the existing change agent.
C)Introduce punishments for employees who do not become more customer-friendly.
D)Inform employees about the driving forces in the external environment indicating that the company's dominant position will be threatened unless they become more customer-friendly.
E)Introduce a reward-punishment scheme to promote the change in the organization.
Question
Creating urgency for change is most closely associated with:

A)the delivering stage of appreciative inquiry.
B)the final stage of a search conference.
C)reducing the restraining forces.
D)the process of increasing the driving forces.
E)refreezing the desired conditions.
Question
Employee involvement is almost an essential part of the change process unless the:

A)benefits of change are unknown to the employee.
B)organization is looking for a gradual change.
C)change must occur quickly in the organization.
D)employee strength of the organization is huge.
E)organization is planning to introduce continuous changes.
Question
Which of the following change management strategies should be given a priority when employees need to break old routines and adopt new role patterns?

A)Coercion
B)Employee involvement
C)Learning
D)Stress management
E)Negotiation
Question
When managing change, learning interventions should be used:

A)to break routines that cause resistance to change.
B)when the organization wants to reduce the cost of implementing change.
C)when employees resist change due to negative valence of change.
D)in all change management activities.
E)only when all other strategies have failed.
Question
The highest priority and first strategy required for any organizational change is to:

A)alter the responsibilities of senior executives in the organization.
B)introduce stress management counseling to the employees.
C)train employees who do not possess the skills required under the new conditions.
D)communicate the need for change and keep employees informed about what they can expect from the change effort.
E)negotiate a new set of relations among those who will clearly lose out from the change.
Question
Unfreezing refers to:

A)getting one's own way in organizational politics.
B)ineffective management practices that discourage newcomers from staying with the organization.
C)ensuring that the change effort is diffused to others within the organization.
D)the process of improving organizational communication.
E)producing disequilibrium between the driving and restraining forces of change.
Question
Which of the following types of resistance to change is a strategy to "prove" that the decision is wrong?

A)Negative valence of change
B)Not-invented-here syndrome
C)Fear of the unknown
D)Breaking routines
E)Incongruent organizational systems
Question
One way that communication minimizes resistance to change is by:

A)generating an urgency to change.
B)encouraging negotiation.
C)eliminating organizational politics.
D)promoting speedy refreezing.
E)encouraging stress management.
Question
Which of these forces are commonly called resistance to change?

A)Process forces
B)Driving forces
C)Parallel learning structures
D)Restraining forces
E)Unfreezing forces
Question
By creating ________, employee involvement reduces the fear of the unknown and the not-invented-here syndrome.

A)stress
B)a sense of entitlement
C)a sense of ownership
D)a goal
E)transformation
Question
BusCorp.wants to introduce a new procedure for processing customer requests.If this change will require employees to break old routines and adopt new role patterns, the preferred strategy for dealing with resistance to this change such as this is:

A)communication.
B)learning.
C)stress management.
D)negotiation.
E)coercion.
Question
One problem of the learning strategy has in minimizing resistance to change is that it:

A)tends to change people too quickly.
B)leads to long-term antagonism with the change agent.
C)creates compliance but not commitment to the change process.
D)is a time-consuming process.
E)attempts to change the drives instead of reducing the restraining forces.
Question
One problem that communication, learning, and employee involvement have in minimizing resistance to change is that they:

A)can lead to more subtle forms of resistance.
B)lead to long-term antagonism with the change agent.
C)create compliance but not commitment to the change process.
D)are time-consuming.
E)are not effective when the change effort needs more employee commitment.
Question
Which model of organization change explicitly refers to unfreezing the current situation and refreezing the desired state?

A)Parallel learning structures
B)Process consultation
C)Appreciative inquiry
D)Quantum change
E)Force field analysis
Question
Resistance to change:

A)should be viewed as task conflict.
B)refers to the fact that employees are happy with the status quo and can perform well only in the status quo.
C)is the change agents' distorted perception of employee behavior based on their own doubts about the success of the change process.
D)indicates that change is not required in the organization.
E)is an impediment to change.
Question
In organizational change, unfreezing may occur by:

A)increasing the restraining forces.
B)increasing the driving forces.
C)reducing the urgency to change.
D)changing individuals in key positions.
E)reducing the pace of the change.
Question
Increasing the restraining forces and reducing or removing the driving forces would:

A)make the change process more difficult to implement.
B)remove any resistance to change.
C)have no effect on the change process.
D)give the change agent more power in the change process.
E)align the organization's systems and structures with the desired behaviors.
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Deck 15: Organizational Change
1
Unfreezing occurs by making the driving forces stronger, weakening the restraining forces, or a combination of both.
True
Explanation: Unfreezing occurs when the driving forces are stronger than the restraining forces.This happens by making the driving forces stronger, weakening or removing the restraining forces, or both.
2
To bring about effective change, leaders typically create an urgency to change by buffering employees from the external environment.
False
Explanation: Creating an urgency to change typically occurs by informing employees about competitors, changing consumer trends, impending, government regulations, and other forms of turbulence in the external environment.These are the main driving forces in Lewin's model.They push people out of their comfort zones, energizing them to face the risks that change creates.In many organizations, however, leaders buffer employees from the external environment to such an extent that these driving forces are hardly felt by anyone below the top executive level.
3
Fear of the unknown usually motivates employees to support organizational change.
False
Explanation: When employees do not know the probability of good or bad outcomes from a change, they tend to anticipate worse rather than better outcomes.
4
Customer feedback provides a human element that can energize employees to change their current behavior patterns.
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5
The urgency for change must always be initiated from a problem-oriented perspective in order to be effective.
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6
Unfreezing occurs when the driving forces are weaker than the restraining forces.
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7
Exposing employees to external forces can strengthen the urgency for change, but leaders often need to begin the change process before problems come knocking at the company's door.
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8
Refreezing involves producing disequilibrium between the current state and the future state.
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9
When employees apply a cost-benefit analysis to a potential change, they consider only their own self-interest.
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10
The force field analysis model states that stability is achieved only when the driving forces for change subside and are replaced by restraining forces acting in the same direction.
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11
Even when present conditions are very bad, most people do not welcome an uncertain future.
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12
Resistance detracts from employees' sense of procedural justice.
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13
One reason why employees typically resist change is that they dislike predictable role patterns.
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14
When people support change, they typically assume that it is others who need to change.
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15
Team norms can contribute to resistance to change.
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16
Resistance is a form of voice.
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17
Subtle resistance is much more common than overt resistance.
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18
According to the force field analysis model, stability occurs when the driving forces and restraining forces are of approximately equal strength in opposite directions.
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19
Resistance is a form of conflict that should be viewed as relationship conflict.
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20
Resistance is motivational; it potentially engages people to think about change strategy and process.
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21
Change agents can often single handedly lead a change initiative.
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22
In order to bring about a change in a particular organization, employees need to break old routines and adopt new role patterns.The stress management strategy is best suited for this situation.
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k this deck
23
Increasing the driving forces alone will not bring about change.
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24
Diffusion of change is more likely to succeed if some people who have worked under the new system are moved to other areas of the organization.
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25
Negotiation and coercion are necessary for people who will clearly gain something from the change and in cases where the speed of change is critical.
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26
Learning is the highest priority and first strategy required for any organizational change.
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27
Information systems and reward systems can both help to refreeze the desired conditions in organizational change.
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28
The group of people with a commitment to a change is called a dominant coalition.
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29
One problem with negotiation is that it tends to produce compliance rather than commitment to the change process.
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30
Firing people is the least desirable way to change organizations.
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31
The best way to manage resistance to change among those who will clearly lose out from the change is to introduce coercion practices.
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32
Unless the change must occur quickly or employee interests are highly incompatible with the organization's needs, employee involvement is almost an essential part of the change process.
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33
Coercion should never be used to manage change in organizations.
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34
Pilot projects are usually more flexible and less risky than centralized, organization-wide programs.
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35
Transformational leaders act as agents of organizational change.
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36
Learning increases employees' change self-efficacy.
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37
Action research is the process of determining whether the change process is ethical or not.
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38
Organizational rewards are powerful systems that refreeze behaviors.
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39
The communication strategy should be applied to reduce resistance to change where the change must occur quickly with little financial cost.
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40
Pilot projects get diffused quickly when employees understand how the practices in a pilot project apply to them even though they are in a completely different functional area.
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41
Lewin's force field analysis model appeals to all cultures because it is based on a logical linear sequence.
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42
Using the action research model instead of the other models such as the parallel learning approach enables an organization to eliminate the threat of violating individual privacy rights.
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k this deck
43
The first step in the Four-D model of appreciative inquiry is dreaming, in which participants envision what might be possible in an ideal organization.
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44
Future search conferences are meetings among a small task force of senior executives who have been given the mandate to identify a change agent on a particular corporate strategy.
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45
One ethical concern with some organizational change programs is that they may threaten the employee's self-esteem.
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46
Appreciative inquiry tries to break away from the approach to change advocated by action research.
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47
The emerging philosophy of positive organizational behavior directs the group's attention away from its own problems and focuses participants on the group's potential and positive elements.
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48
Practices such as action research avoid the use of management's power to induce compliance and conformity and is less likely to create ethical issues.
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49
Action research maintains the view that having a research orientation is less important than having an action orientation.
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50
The positive principle advocates the view that people are motivated and guided by the vision they see and believe in for the future.
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51
An important feature of parallel learning structures is that they operate within the existing organizational hierarchy.
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52
How we perceive and understand the change process depends on the questions we ask and language we use throughout that process.This is called the constructionist principle.
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53
Some change experts recommend introducing rapid change when the organization wants to overhaul a system quickly and decisively.
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k this deck
54
A unique feature of appreciative inquiry is that it breaks away from the problem-solving mentality by reframing relationships around what is positive and possible.
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k this deck
55
The main objective of force field analysis is to help change agents to:

A)identify ways to control the external environment.
B)find ways to increase the driving forces for change.
C)diagnose a situation better by understanding the driving and restraining forces for change.
D)determine whether change is necessary in the organization or not.
E)determine and single out the force that causes organizational resistance for change.
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Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
56
Which of these forces pushes organizations toward a new state of affairs?

A)Process forces
B)Driving forces
C)Equilibrium forces
D)Restraining forces
E)Freezing forces
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57
Appreciative inquiry is always the best approach to changing team or organizations, because it is almost always successful.
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k this deck
58
Action research is a problem-focused process of organizational change.
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59
A parallel learning structure is an organizational change approach in which a social structure is constructed alongside the formal hierarchy to increase the organization's learning.
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k this deck
60
Future search events minimize resistance to change by severely limiting involvement from employees.
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Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
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k this deck
61
Refreezing refers to:

A)getting one's own way in organizational politics.
B)a management practice used to discourage newcomers from engaging in organizational politics.
C)aligning the organization's systems with the desired behaviors to support and reinforce the new role patterns.
D)repeating the change process to obtain better organizational outcomes and employee performance.
E)producing disequilibrium between the driving and restraining forces of change.
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Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
62
Increasing the driving forces and reducing the restraining forces tends to:

A)reduce the need for change.
B)unfreeze the status quo.
C)refreeze the status quo.
D)decrease environmental stability.
E)produce environmental equilibrium.
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Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
63
Senior executives at a large retail organization want employees to become more customer-friendly.Employees think they are serving customers well enough and the company is the dominant player in the market.What should the executives do to create an urgency to change in this situation?

A)Stop trying to convince employees that they should change their behavior and use other strategies to gain market share.
B)Keep pushing employees to change even though they don't see the need to change and attempt to replace the existing change agent.
C)Introduce punishments for employees who do not become more customer-friendly.
D)Inform employees about the driving forces in the external environment indicating that the company's dominant position will be threatened unless they become more customer-friendly.
E)Introduce a reward-punishment scheme to promote the change in the organization.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
64
Creating urgency for change is most closely associated with:

A)the delivering stage of appreciative inquiry.
B)the final stage of a search conference.
C)reducing the restraining forces.
D)the process of increasing the driving forces.
E)refreezing the desired conditions.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
65
Employee involvement is almost an essential part of the change process unless the:

A)benefits of change are unknown to the employee.
B)organization is looking for a gradual change.
C)change must occur quickly in the organization.
D)employee strength of the organization is huge.
E)organization is planning to introduce continuous changes.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
66
Which of the following change management strategies should be given a priority when employees need to break old routines and adopt new role patterns?

A)Coercion
B)Employee involvement
C)Learning
D)Stress management
E)Negotiation
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Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
67
When managing change, learning interventions should be used:

A)to break routines that cause resistance to change.
B)when the organization wants to reduce the cost of implementing change.
C)when employees resist change due to negative valence of change.
D)in all change management activities.
E)only when all other strategies have failed.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
68
The highest priority and first strategy required for any organizational change is to:

A)alter the responsibilities of senior executives in the organization.
B)introduce stress management counseling to the employees.
C)train employees who do not possess the skills required under the new conditions.
D)communicate the need for change and keep employees informed about what they can expect from the change effort.
E)negotiate a new set of relations among those who will clearly lose out from the change.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
69
Unfreezing refers to:

A)getting one's own way in organizational politics.
B)ineffective management practices that discourage newcomers from staying with the organization.
C)ensuring that the change effort is diffused to others within the organization.
D)the process of improving organizational communication.
E)producing disequilibrium between the driving and restraining forces of change.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
70
Which of the following types of resistance to change is a strategy to "prove" that the decision is wrong?

A)Negative valence of change
B)Not-invented-here syndrome
C)Fear of the unknown
D)Breaking routines
E)Incongruent organizational systems
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Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
71
One way that communication minimizes resistance to change is by:

A)generating an urgency to change.
B)encouraging negotiation.
C)eliminating organizational politics.
D)promoting speedy refreezing.
E)encouraging stress management.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
72
Which of these forces are commonly called resistance to change?

A)Process forces
B)Driving forces
C)Parallel learning structures
D)Restraining forces
E)Unfreezing forces
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73
By creating ________, employee involvement reduces the fear of the unknown and the not-invented-here syndrome.

A)stress
B)a sense of entitlement
C)a sense of ownership
D)a goal
E)transformation
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74
BusCorp.wants to introduce a new procedure for processing customer requests.If this change will require employees to break old routines and adopt new role patterns, the preferred strategy for dealing with resistance to this change such as this is:

A)communication.
B)learning.
C)stress management.
D)negotiation.
E)coercion.
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75
One problem of the learning strategy has in minimizing resistance to change is that it:

A)tends to change people too quickly.
B)leads to long-term antagonism with the change agent.
C)creates compliance but not commitment to the change process.
D)is a time-consuming process.
E)attempts to change the drives instead of reducing the restraining forces.
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76
One problem that communication, learning, and employee involvement have in minimizing resistance to change is that they:

A)can lead to more subtle forms of resistance.
B)lead to long-term antagonism with the change agent.
C)create compliance but not commitment to the change process.
D)are time-consuming.
E)are not effective when the change effort needs more employee commitment.
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77
Which model of organization change explicitly refers to unfreezing the current situation and refreezing the desired state?

A)Parallel learning structures
B)Process consultation
C)Appreciative inquiry
D)Quantum change
E)Force field analysis
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78
Resistance to change:

A)should be viewed as task conflict.
B)refers to the fact that employees are happy with the status quo and can perform well only in the status quo.
C)is the change agents' distorted perception of employee behavior based on their own doubts about the success of the change process.
D)indicates that change is not required in the organization.
E)is an impediment to change.
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79
In organizational change, unfreezing may occur by:

A)increasing the restraining forces.
B)increasing the driving forces.
C)reducing the urgency to change.
D)changing individuals in key positions.
E)reducing the pace of the change.
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80
Increasing the restraining forces and reducing or removing the driving forces would:

A)make the change process more difficult to implement.
B)remove any resistance to change.
C)have no effect on the change process.
D)give the change agent more power in the change process.
E)align the organization's systems and structures with the desired behaviors.
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Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 124 flashcards in this deck.