Asking Questions and Trying Different Options
Asking questions to gain a better understanding of the conflict is essential. You may need to use brainstorming ideas and ask detailed and follow-up questions after each side states their needs. Spend some time answering these review questions.
- Identify the types of conflict commonly found in organizations, and provide examples of each.
- How can conflict be good for an organization?
- Identify some reasons for the prevalence of intergroup conflict in organizations.
- How does intergroup conflict affect behavior within a work group? behavior between two or more groups?
- Review the basic conflict model discussed in this chapter. What lessons for management follow from this model?
- Of the various strategies for resolving and preventing conflicts that are presented in this chapter, which ones do you feel will generally be most effective? least effective? Why?
- What is the difference between distributive and integrative bargaining? When would each be most appropriate?
- How can cultural differences affect bargaining behavior? If you were negotiating with a Japanese firm, what might you do differently than if you were facing an American firm? Explain.
Source: J. Stewart Black and David S. Bright; OpenStax, https://openstax.org/books/organizational-behavior/pages/14-chapter-review-questions
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.
Last modified: Tuesday, May 30, 2023, 6:17 AM