interpersonal
Management
(noun)
Between two or more people.
Psychology
(adjective)
Existing between two or more people.
Examples of interpersonal in the following topics:
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Influences on Business Buying
- Environmental, organizational, and interpersonal factors all impact the business buying decision process.
- Four main influences impact the business buying decision process: environmental factors, organizational factors, interpersonal factors, and individual factors.
- The interpersonal relationships between people working in the company's buying center can hinder the buying process.
- Give examples of how environmental, organizational, interpersonal, and individual factors influence the business buying decision process
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Mintzberg's Management Roles
- Mintzberg defined ten management roles within three categories: interpersonal, informational, and decisional.
- Henry Mintzberg (1973), the Cleghorn Professor of Management Studies at McGill University, defined ten management roles within three categories: interpersonal, informational, and decisional.
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Challenges to Achieving Organizational Diversity
- There are various challenges to achieving diversity at individual, interpersonal, and organizational levels.
- There are various challenges to achieving diversity, ranging from the difficulties of defining the term to the individual, interpersonal, and organizational challenges involved in implementing diversity practices.
- Communication, be it via language or cultural signals, is also a critical challenge in the interpersonal arena.
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Relationships and Families in Adulthood
- Several theories examine how interpersonal relationships form and develop during adulthood.
- An interpersonal relationship is a strong, deep, or close association or acquaintanceship between two or more people that may range from brief to enduring in duration.
- Interpersonal relationships are dynamic systems that change continuously during their existence.
- This model was formulated to describe heterosexual, adult romantic relationships, but it has been applied to other kinds of interpersonal relationships since then.
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The Eight Intelligences
- Although Gardner classifies interpersonal and intrapersonal intelligences separately, there is a lot of interplay between the two and they are often grouped together.
- Interpersonal intelligence is the ability to interpret and respond to the moods, emotions, motivations, and actions of others.
- Interpersonal intelligence also requires good communication and interaction skills, and the ability show empathy towards the feelings of other individuals.
- Teachers can encourage the growth of Interpersonal Intelligences by designing lessons that include group work and by planning cooperative learning activities.
- It is an internalized version of Interpersonal Intelligence.
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Types of Communication: Verbal, Written, and Nonverbal
- Social psychologist Michael Argyle said that while spoken language is normally used to communicate information about external events that impact the speakers, non-verbal codes establish and maintain interpersonal relationships.
- Humans communicate interpersonal closeness through series of non-verbal actions known as immediacy behaviors.
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Styles of Interpersonal Conflict
- Affective conflict relates to trouble that develops in interpersonal relationships among team members.
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Interpersonal Skills of Successful Managers
- The development of human skills—which could be perceived as a combination of social, interpersonal, and leadership skills—is central to the success of a manager.
- Interpersonal skills and communication skills lie at the center of human-based managerial considerations.
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Frontline Management
- Frontline management balances functional expertise with strong interpersonal skills to optimize specific operational processes.
- A front line manager needs to have two distinctive skill sets: the interpersonal skills to manage people as well as the technical expertise to be among the front lines actively executing functional tasks.
- However, on the interpersonal side they should be effective at:
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Equity Theory
- Equity theory explains the relational satisfaction in terms of fair or unfair distribution of resources within interpersonal relationships.
- Equity theory attempts to explain relational satisfaction in terms of perceptions of fair or unfair distributions of resources within interpersonal relationships.