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  2. 12 Common Types of Negative Work Feedback (& How To Give It)

    www.aol.com/lifestyle/12-common-types-negative...

    While it can be uncomfortable, being able to deliver negative feedback effectively is a managerial superpower. Use these examples and best practices to help you develop it. 12 Common Types of ...

  3. Managing up and managing down - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Managing_up_and_managing_down

    Supporting employees’ decisions. Encouraging and supporting the decisions that employees make can motivate employees who have low self-esteem and do not find motivation in the same things as their peers. Coaching and developing employees’ skills. Taking the time to coach and develop the skills of the people one works around benefits both ...

  4. Workplace deviance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Workplace_deviance

    Employees then resort to misbehaving (or acting out) as a means of avenging their organization for the perceived wrongdoing. Workplace deviance may be viewed as a form of negative reciprocity. "A negative reciprocity orientation is the tendency for an individual to return negative treatment for negative treatment". [3]

  5. Emotions in the workplace - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emotions_in_the_workplace

    Positive emotions in the workplace help employees obtain favorable outcomes including achievement, job enrichment and higher quality social context". [2] "Negative emotions, such as fear, anger, stress, hostility, sadness, and guilt, however increase the predictability of workplace deviance,", [3] and how the outside world views the organization.

  6. Counterproductive work behavior - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Counterproductive_work...

    Counterproductive work behavior (CWB) is employee's behavior that goes against the legitimate interests of an organization. [1] This behavior can harm the organization, other people within it, and other people and organizations outside it, including employers, other employees, suppliers, clients, patients and citizens.

  7. Theory X and Theory Y - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theory_X_and_Theory_Y

    Theory X is based on negative assumptions regarding the typical worker. This management style assumes that the typical worker has little ambition, avoids responsibility, and is individual-goal oriented. In general, Theory X style managers believe their employees are less intelligent, lazier, and work solely for a sustainable income.

  8. Managerial psychology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Managerial_psychology

    A 2009 issue of Journal of Managerial Psychology presents an experiment with 202 full-time employees (81 males, mean age=38.3 and 121 females, mean age= 28.4) working in very different jobs in the retail, manufacturing and healthcare to investigate the extent to which personality and demographic factors explain variance in motivation and job ...

  9. 70/20/10 model (learning and development) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/70/20/10_Model_(Learning...

    The odds are that development will be about 70% from on-the-job experiences - working on tasks and problems; about 20% from feedback and working around good and bad examples of the need; and 10% from courses and reading.