Ostrich Effect

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Author_William Kahn
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Collaboration
Compelling Distractions
Counterfeit Problem
Difficult conversations
Emotional Exhaustion
Employee engagement
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Existential Philosophers
Firm's Daily Operations
Firm’s Daily Operations
Group dynamics
Leader Follower Relationship
managing workplace escalation patterns
micro-interactions
Mike's Tone
Mike’s Tone
Narrative Arc
Nurse Manager
organizational behavior
Organizational change
Pre-operative Procedures
Product Design Department
Product Design Meeting
Product Design Team
professional relationships
Rational Interests
Senior Leaders
Senior Leadership Team
Senior Leadership Team Meeting
social dynamics
Surgical Error
team dysfunction
Team work
Unit Members
Vice Versa
White House Staff Member
workplace avoidance
Workplace relations
Wrong Conversations
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138023505
  • Weight: 408g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 24 Nov 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The Ostrich Effect goes beyond the typical "how to" approach of most books that deal with difficult conversations at work. It aims to teach the reader what conversations to have, and when to have them, in order to solve destructive problems that occur in the workplace.

Like the proverbial ostrich with its head in the sand, people often avoid confronting small issues at work, but, if avoided, these issues will escalate and inevitably wreak havoc. Drawing on a combination of social science research and Kahn’s practical experience as an organizational psychologist, the book examines the micro-processes that underlie the way in which these problems develop and flourish. These micro-processes are tiny, fleeting, and hardly noticeable, but when they are identified, something startling becomes apparent: there is a predictable pattern to this escalation. The book uses a variety of examples to demonstrate this pattern across a range of organizations and industries, and offers a toolkit to help guide the reader in resolving people problems at work. The toolkit focuses not on changing others, but on changing how we interact with others—our own behavior is the most powerful force for change that we have.

The ostrich remains the symbol of those of us who foolishly ignore our problems while hoping that they will magically disappear. By identifying this "ostrich effect", the reader is empowered to re-frame and neutralize its impact.

William A. Kahn is professor of organizational behavior at Boston University’s Questrom School of Business, USA. He has written widely for academic and practitioner audiences, is an expert blogger on Psychology Today, and consults for a number of public and private organizations on issues related to leading organizational change. He authored Holding Fast: The Struggle to Create Resilient Caregiving Organizations and The Student Guide to Successful Project Teams, both published by Routledge.

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