Individual Differences, Mental Ability, and Personality
Individual Differences, Mental Ability, and Personality
Workers in most factories produce standardized materials that will make the final
product easier to manufacture. If this process of handling materials can be applied
to the management of people, achieving the objectives of the organization will be a
much easier task. This cannot happen because of the big difference between
materials and people.
Materials do not complain even if they are cut into standardized pieces, or stores in
a warehouse. People cannot be subjected to such treatment if they are to be useful
to the organization.
Individual Differences
Individual differences refer to the variation in how people respond to the same
situation based on personal characteristics. The idea is that each person is different
from all others and that these differences are usually substantial rather than
meaningless.
Productivity refers to the rate of output per worker. It differs from person to
person. If the rate of output in a sales office is measured in terms of number of units
sold by each salesman, it cannot be expected that everyone will sell the same
number of units for a given period. This may be attributed to individual differences
among the salesmen like experience, age, education, and the like.
3. Culture – refers to the learned and shared ways of thinking and acting
among a group of people or society. This definition implies that culture has
two dimensions. Specifically, these are classified as follows:
a. Social Culture – which refers to the social environment of human-
created beliefs, customs, knowledge, and practices that define
conventional behavior in a society.
b. Organizational culture – is the set of values, beliefs, and norms that
is shared among members of an organization.
People differ in terms of aptitude and ability and their behavior in the organization is
affected.
A person’s overall abilities are made up of two sets of factors: physical and mental.
Personality
One aspect that makes people different from one another is personality. The
differences translate into different behaviors including those in the workplaces.
Personality refers to the sum total of ways in which an individual reacts and
interacts with others. The “ways” are the patterns of behavior that are consistent
and enduring.
Determinants of Personality
The personality of an individual is a result of both hereditary and environment
factors. Heredity defines the limits by which environment can develop personality
characteristics.
Hereditary factors are those factors that are determined at conception. These
include the following:
1. Physical stature
2. Facial attractiveness
3. Gender
4. Temperament
5. Muscle composition and reflexes
6. Energy level
7. Biological rhythms
There are certain factors that are considered in determining human personality. A
person’s personality traits could either be on the positive or negative side of the
factors, and they will be in various degrees of development. It is not hard to think
that two or more persons will have the same traits that are developed in different
degrees. This along provides sufficient indication that individuals are really different
from one another.
The traits are partially inherited and they will develop depending on the
environment where the person is situated. For instance, an employee may have a
natural tendency for risk taking life experimenting on entrepreneurial ventures. This
tendency will have the opportunity to grow in an organization that encourages such
activities.