Research Catalog

Organizational traps : leadership, culture, organizational design

Title
Organizational traps : leadership, culture, organizational design / by Chris Argyris.
Author
Argyris, Chris, 1923-2013
Publication
Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press, 2012.

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TextUse in library HM791 .A74 2010Off-site

Details

Description
ix, 214 pages; 23 cm
Summary
  • ""Argyris has once again challenged my thinking, theories, and advice. Despite an explosion of books and articles about how to lead, improve organizational effectiveness, and change culture, we continue to see well intentioned and competent leaders embroiled in personal and organizational failures. Using decades of research. Argyris shows us the problem: our theories and advice ignore or bypass the hard truth: people avoid conversations that will help them learn about gaps between their intention to change and reality. Argyris argues that this well documented truth must be incorporated in our theories if they are to be robust and make a sustained difference. And leaders must insist we do if they are to avoid spending millions on flawed advice."--Michael Beer. Chairman, TruePoint, and Professor Emeritus, Harvard Business School. "Drawing on fascinating cases from a lifetime of research on group and organizational dynamics, Chris Argyris shows how our own reasoning processes entrap us in patterns of behavior that we detest but cannot change. He explains how these traps become self-sealing and why even our best efforts to escape them merely tighten their bonds. The provocative strategy he offers for breaking out of our self-created traps merits close attention by anyone who seeks to improve life and work in organizations."--J. Richard Hackman, Edgar Pierce Professor of Social and Organizational Psychology, Harvard University. "For over half a century, Chris Argyris has been helping those who are willing to reflect on their own behavior to become more effective. This latest work is his clearest elucidation yet of why we fall into the traps that stymie us and how we can author our own escapes. And while he is at it, he provides wise counsel on how to audit the logic of those who purport to tell us the secrets of leadership."--Roger Martin, Dean, Rotman School of Management, University of Toronto.
  • "Chris Argyris is a master of revealing the universal dysfunctionalities of organizations and the challenges of dealing with them. Here he picks up the theme of Organizational Traps and successfully links them to issues of leadership, culture, and organizational design. Once again Argyris offers us insights in how to understand and tackle them."--Andrew M Pettigrew, Professor of Strategy and Organization, Said Business School, University of Oxford.--Book jacket.
  • "Anyone who has spent time in an organization knows that dysfunctional behavior abounds. Conflict is frequently avoided or pushed underground rather than dealt with openly. At the same time, the same arguments often burst out again and again, almost verbatim. Turf battles continue for extended periods without resolution. People nod their heads in agreement in meetings, and then rush out of the room to voice complaints to sympathetic ears in private. Worst of all, when people are asked if things will ever change, they throw up their hands in despair. They feel like victims trapped in an asylum. And people often are trapped. But they are not trapped by some oppressive regime or organizational structure that has been imposed on them. They are not victims. In fact, people themselves are responsible for making the status quo so resistant to change. We are trapped by our own behavior. Researchers and practitioners have often reflected on these things, but there is a puzzle. On the one hand, there is substantial agreement that these traps are counterproductive to effective performance. On the other hand, there is almost no focus on how organizational traps can be prevented or reduced. This book argues that whatever theory is used to describe and understand such organizational traps should be used to design and implement interventions that reduce and prevent them."--Publisher description.
Subject
  • Corporate culture
  • Organizational behavior
  • Leadership
  • Leadership
  • Organizational Culture
  • 85.08 organizational sociology and psychology
  • Organisationsverhalten
  • Führung
  • Organisationskultur
  • Organizational culture
  • Organizational behaviour
  • Führungstechnik
  • Unternehmenskultur
  • Organisation
  • Verhalten
Note
  • Originally published in 2010.
Bibliography (note)
  • Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
Introduction : What do traps and their consequences look like? ; Traps can lead to disaster -- Part I. Why we act against our own stated interests : How we deal with difficult situations : The Department of State and Secretary Rusk ; Traps are universal ; Intel Corporation ; Effects of unilateral leadership ; The perniciousness of traps -- Actions that trap us : The left-hand-right-hand case method ; Directions for completing the left-hand-right-hand case ; A preliminary view of the cases ; Case 1. Submerging the primary issue ; Case 2. CLosed to learning ; Case 3. Competing methods ; Case 4. Easing in ; Case 5. The CEO and the IT group ; Case 6. Advanced MBAs -- Causes of traps : A theory of action ; How we create traps ; How Model I theory-in-use and defensive reasoning lead to traps -- Part II. How conventional approaches bypass traps, and what to do about it : Leadership and traps : The quantitative approach ; Leadership: a historiometric approach ; Leadership: qualitative approaches ; Becoming a conflict competent leader ; Narcissistic leaders and other personality types ; Appreciative inquiry ; Competing commitments ; Inadequacies of current management research -- Culture, leadership, and traps / co-author, Ian Smith : Productive and counterproductive cultures ; The Andy case ; The Royal/Dutch Shell case ; Reflecting on cultures and traps -- Strengthening new approaches : Seeking help from outside consultants ; The collaborative community ; Structural approaches ; The ambidextrous organization ; Human potential -- Conclusion : Traps and the human predicament : The attempt to fine new ways forward ; Helping moon shots to succeed ; The human predicament.
ISBN
  • 9780199586165
  • 0199586160
  • 9780199639649
  • 0199639647
LCCN
2010281219
OCLC
  • ocn477256777
  • 477256777
  • SCSB-8804064
Owning Institutions
Princeton University Library