The Basics of Power
What Is Power?
We'll look at the aspects and nuances of power in more detail in this chapter, but simply put, power is
the ability to influence the behavior of others to get what you want.
Gerald Salancik and Jeffery Pfeffer concur, noting, "Power is simply the ability to get things done the way one wants them to be done". If you want a larger budget to open a new store in a large city and you get the budget increase, you have used your power to influence the decision.
Power
distribution is usually visible within organizations. For example,
Salancik and Pfeffer gathered information from a company with 21
department managers and asked 10 of those department heads to rank all the managers according to the influence each person had in the organization. Although ranking 21 managers might seem like a difficult task, all the managers were immediately able to create that list. When
Salancik and Pfeffer compared the rankings, they found virtually no disagreement in how the top 5 and bottom 5 managers were ranked. The only slight differences came from individuals ranking themselves higher than their colleagues ranked them. The same findings held true for factories, banks, and universities.