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E-grāmata: Organizational Behaviour in Sport

(Newcastle Business School, Australia), (Victoria University, Australia)
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  • What makes the sports organization different from other commercial organizations?
  • How can managers in sport improve organizational effectiveness?

Sport is a special kind of commercial enterprise. Whether it’s the ability to engender exceptionally high levels of commitment and loyalty or the fact that the employees (athletes) are simultaneously the service provider and the product, the sports organization is different.

This comprehensive and accessible textbook examines the key theories that are used to underpin organizational analysis in sport, helping the student and practitioner to understand the different types of behaviour that occur within the sports organization and to develop ways of managing that behaviour more effectively. The book explores behaviour on individual, interpersonal, group and whole organization levels, and develops an evidence-based framework for analysis built around key concepts such as:

  • motivation
  • rewards and incentives
  • interpersonal relationships
  • power, influence and leadership
  • culture and ideology
  • conflict, disputes and grievances
  • anxiety, stress and alienation
  • equity and inclusion.

With international case-studies and data, review questions and useful guides to further reading included in every chapter, no other textbook develops critical skills or an awareness of ethical issues as effectively as this book. It is important reading for all students and practitioners working in sport, leisure or recreation management.

Recenzijas

"A number of textbooks have been published that examine organisational behaviour issues in sport. They are all highly instructive, but tend to do it in conventional ways by taking generic models of organisational theory, group dynamics, and interpersonal relations, and inserting a few sport-related cases. This book is different because it first and foremost provides a detailed contextual frame that both connects sport to the world of business, and sets it apart from it. Within this strong sport-business frame it uses hardened theories of workplace behaviour to illuminate the ways sport works, and how it can ultimately work better. In taking this approach this book highlights the various individual, interpersonal and organisational behaviours that occur when delivering the sport product to its various stakeholders.

The book has three additional strengths:

First, it is written by two highly experienced sport management academics: James Skinner is Director of the Institute for Sport Business, and Professor of Sport Business, at the London campus of Loughborough University in the UK. Bob Stewart is the Sport Management Program Director at the College of Sport and Exercise Science at Victoria University in Melbourne in Australia. Between them, Bob and James have 40 years of teaching and research experience. They have also published more than 20 books that examine the commercial, social and cultural development of sport. They have the ideal background for putting together a book that examines the complex behaviours of people working in sport setting, be they highly bureaucratised sport businesses, or informal community associations and clubs. They both write very clearly and concisely and bring prosaic theories and concepts to life by linking them to highly grounded cases and incidents. This fusion of theory and practice threads its way through the entire book, and places it in a league of its own.

Second, the book has something for everyone. There are 21 succinctly written chapters together with more than 40 cases that cover everything you wanted to know about managing people in sport settings. Specific chapters are allocated to sports special features, organisational design and structure, culture and climate, job analysis and selection, orientation and induction, rewards and incentives, training and development, personality, perception, motivation, emotions, attitudes and job satisfaction, group behavior, team dynamics, interpersonal communication, safety and risk, stress and aggression, conflict, misbehaviour and dispute resolution, power and politics, bargaining and negotiation, and, finally, change and organisational realignment. The coverage is broad, but it is also deep.

Finally, everything is superbly glued together by the overarching proposition that sport enterprises will only fulfil their potential if their staff be they highly paid or volunteers are managed in ways that enhance their technical skills, creative capabilities, and interpersonal sensitivities.

I unreservedly recommend this book to anyone who wants to find out how best to manage people working in the sport industry. Students and practitioners alike will find it a highly valuable resource that offers fresh insights at every turn of the page. Essential reading!" - Aaron Smith, Professor of Management, RMIT University, Australia

List of illustrations
ix
Introduction: Organizational behaviour in sport 1(6)
PART A Contextual, structural and operational features of sport enterprises
7(42)
1 Sport's special features
9(14)
2 Design and structure
23(14)
3 Culture and climate
37(12)
PART B Job-task processes in sport enterprises
49(44)
4 Job analysis and selection
51(10)
5 Orientation and induction
61(11)
6 Reward systems
72(11)
7 Training and development
83(10)
PART C Employee traits, dispositions and behaviours
93(40)
8 Personality
95(11)
9 Perceptions
106(10)
10 Motivation
116(10)
11 Attitudes, emotions and job satisfaction
126(7)
PART D Communication systems and social processes
133(46)
12 Group behaviour
135(9)
13 Team dynamics
144(11)
14 Interpersonal communication
155(11)
15 Leadership
166(13)
PART E Managing problematic structures, operations and behaviours
179(32)
16 Safety and risk
181(11)
17 Stress and aggression
192(10)
18 Conflict management and resolution
202(9)
PART F Power, control and change
211(31)
19 Power and politics
213(8)
20 Bargaining and negotiation
221(10)
21 Change and realignment
231(11)
Index 242
James Skinner is the Director of the Institute for Sport Business and Professor of Sport Business at Loughborough University London, UK. His primary research interests are in leadership, culture and change in sport.

Bob Stewart is a Professor of Sport Management in the College of Sport and Exercise Science at Victoria University, Australia. His primary research interests are in the field of sport policy, culture and the regulation of sport.