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Why People Stay: Helping Your Employees Feel Seen, Safe, and Valued [Hardback]

(Christopher Newport University, USA)
  • Formāts: Hardback, 182 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 430 g, 7 Tables, black and white; 1 Line drawings, black and white; 3 Halftones, black and white; 4 Illustrations, black and white
  • Izdošanas datums: 07-Aug-2018
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1138210307
  • ISBN-13: 9781138210301
  • Hardback
  • Cena: 191,26 €
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 182 pages, height x width: 234x156 mm, weight: 430 g, 7 Tables, black and white; 1 Line drawings, black and white; 3 Halftones, black and white; 4 Illustrations, black and white
  • Izdošanas datums: 07-Aug-2018
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • ISBN-10: 1138210307
  • ISBN-13: 9781138210301

Why People Stay is the result of a doctoral study that revealed participants’ sense of commitment (to the organization, to the team, to the mission, or to something else). This was in spite of numerous experiences of antisocial workplace behavior, or AWB, reported by each participant. The incidents reported included perceptions of disrespect and subtle discourtesy, appropriation of credit for work not performed, deliberate poor work performance, racial harassment, abusive language, abusive supervision, bullying and threats of violence, to other demeaning behaviors. Over 70 unique instances were reported, in all, by just 11 participants over the course of some 30 hours of interviews. Yet they all stayed in their workplace. Why? And what does this choice suggest about employee engagement, in toxic workplaces or work groups?

This book explores these questions, and more, and sounds an alarm to executives and culture monitors that the root cause of your human capital losses is that your people do not feel seen, safe, and valued and you can change that. It looks at organizational commitment and organizational engagement in an environment where it can be difficult to remain authentically committed in the presence of AWB. The participants in this study were queried as to just why they stayed under such conditions. The aim of this book is to share their surprising results.

This positive book about negative experiences is essential reading for executives, HR and organizational development professionals, as well as students at both postgraduate and undergraduate levels.

List of illustrations
xi
PART I Introduction
1(6)
WHO: Who is this book written for?
2(1)
WHAT: What is this, just another book about leadership?
2(1)
WHY: Why do I need to read this book; what's different about it?
3(1)
HOW: How should we go about achieving this "positive outcome"? How is this book going to help?
4(1)
Structure of the book
4(3)
PART II The concept -- executive summary
7(66)
1 General concepts and practical application (WIIFM?)
8(20)
Seen, safe, and valued
10(2)
Organizational culture
12(2)
Management and leadership
14(3)
The work of management
17(4)
Antisocial workplace behavior (AWB)
21(1)
Practical applications
22(1)
Organizational commitment
23(1)
The dark side of organizational commitment: entrenchment
24(1)
Practical applications
25(1)
Organizational engagement
25(1)
Key takeaways
26
Recommended reading
21(7)
2 Rationale for examining bad behavior in the workplace: why do people stay?
28(7)
"Nonprofit Nancy"
28(1)
Rationale for the study
29(1)
Assumptions
30(1)
Connecting to theory
30(1)
How to handle it
31(1)
Practical applications and consulting notes
32(2)
Key takeaways
34(1)
Recommended reading
34(1)
3 Theoretical constructs
35(14)
Legalese --- the black and white/zero tolerance
35(2)
So, what are we talking about here?
37(1)
The psychological contract
38(3)
Bullying
41(2)
Verbal abuse
43(2)
Uncivil workplace behaviors/workplace incivility
45(2)
Practical applications and consulting notes
47(1)
Key takeaways
47(1)
Recommended reading
48(1)
4 What the research has shown
49(24)
By the numbers
50(1)
Who is this Norm?
51(3)
Behavioral rationale
54(1)
Individual values and ethical workplaces
54(1)
A brief, adulterated, and wholly insufficient summary of ethical perspectives
55(2)
Ethical culture and predictable behavior
57(4)
Norms of communication and civility
61(2)
Organizational commitment
63(3)
Continuance commitment
66(1)
Normative commitment
66(5)
Summary
71(1)
Key takeaways
71(1)
Recommended reading
72(1)
PART III The study -- executive summary
73(50)
5 What, why, who, and how
74(22)
What
74(1)
Why
75(1)
Level of analysis
76(1)
Followership orientation
77(2)
Organizational culture, perceptions of justice, and norms of civility
79(1)
Trust (separate from organizational justice)
79(1)
Who
79(1)
How
80(1)
How --- from the participant's perspective
81(2)
How --- from my perspective
83(1)
Ethical considerations and assumptions
84(1)
Confidentiality
84(1)
Impact of self-examination
85(1)
Ethical leading and following
85(8)
Healthy, ethical workplaces, and honorable leaders
93(1)
Ethical failures in the workplace no longer solely due to leadership
94(1)
Key takeaways
94(2)
6 What actually happened (and is happening in your workplace)
96(17)
Overview: what led me here
96(2)
The psychic prison metaphor
98(2)
Results of the study
100(1)
Antisocial workplace behavior
101(1)
Trust, revisited
102(3)
Civility, incivility, and toxicity --- a review
105(3)
Deviant, uncivil behavior
108(1)
Time to pay attention
109(2)
Workplace bullying
111(1)
Unethical leaders/followers
112(1)
Key takeaways
112(1)
7 Structure and culture
113(10)
Organizational structure
113(5)
Cultural orientation
118(2)
Why they stayed: letting the data speak
120(2)
Key takeaways
122(1)
PART IV Composite themes -- executive summary
123(30)
8 Sensemaking
124(4)
Key takeaways
126(2)
9 Why people endure
128(6)
Organizational commitment
129(3)
Entrenchment
132(1)
Key takeaways
133(1)
10 Followership
134(19)
Early understanding of followership as a concept
135(2)
The courageous follower
137(2)
Partner
139(2)
Implementer
141(1)
Resource
142(2)
Engagement and purpose
144(4)
Transformational leadership and engagement
148(2)
Key takeaways
150(3)
PART V Where to, from here? Executive summary
153(14)
11 Connecting theory and practice
154(13)
The voice/exit option
155(2)
Exit and stay interviews
157(3)
Stay interviews help you gauge, and increase, engagement
160(2)
Intentional mentoring programs
162(3)
Recommended reading
165(2)
Bibliography 167(8)
Index 175
Angela N. Spranger is an engaging facilitator, college lecturer, corporate trainer, and human resources professional. She is principal consultant with StepOne Consulting, LLC, consulting on compliance, performance management, and professional development concerns such as strengths-building, diversity, and mentoring. Her specialty is engaging with individuals and small groups on a deep level and coaching them toward attaining their own stretch goals.