Define role overload, role conflict, and role ambiguity. Give examples of each from your own experience.
What will be an ideal response?
Role overload occurs when others' expectations exceed one's capacity to respond. Role conflict occurs when one feels torn between conflicting expectations of important people in one's life. Role ambiguity occurs when others' expectations are not known.
The student should then give an example of each.
You might also like to view...
How should a routine request begin?
A) With a clear statement of request B) With a buffer that builds up to the main request C) With a justification for the request D) With an attention-getting statement, fact or question E) With the phrase "thank you" or similar words of appreciation
In a business where egoism is the predominant ethical theory, which employee would receive a scarce resource when there is competition over that scarce resource?
a. the one who needs it the most b. the more politically powerful employee c. all competing employees through equal distribution d. the employee who makes a better argument to management
Exhibit Duckett Group The Duckett Group is trying to determine its optimal average cash balance. The firm has determined that it will need $5,000,000 net new cash during the coming year. The fixed transaction cost of converting securities to cash is $50, and the firm earns 10 percent on its marketable securities investments. Refer to Exhibit Duckett Group. What will be the total cost to Duckett of maintaining the optimal average cash balance, as determined by the Baumol model?
A. $35,356 B. $7,071 C. $18,493 D. $70,711 E. $53,190
Cost per click is a performance measure in which ________, whereas cost per thousand is a performance measure in which ________.
A. a company paying a set amount to Facebook for every time a user clicks on its ad; a company that pays pennies for every time its ad loads on a Facebook page, up to a fixed amount B. a company paying a set amount for the ad to be placed on the website for a certain amount of time; a company paying a set amount to Facebook for every purchase that originated from an ad on a website C. a company paying a set amount to Facebook for every purchase that originated from an ad on a website; a company paying a set amount for the ad to be placed on the website for a certain amount of time D. a company paying a set amount to Facebook for every purchase that originated from an ad on a website; a company that pays pennies for every time its ad loads on a Facebook page, up to a fixed amount E. a company that pays pennies for every time its ad loads on a Facebook page, up to a fixed amount; a company paying a set amount to Facebook for every time a user clicks on its ad