Article Summary of "Process and Outcome Goal Orientations in Conflict Situations: The Importance of Framing" by Tal Y. Katz and Caryn J. Block
Citation: Katz, Tal Y. and Caryn J. Block. "Process and Outcome Goal Orientations in Conflict Situations: The Importance of Framing" in The Handbook of Conflict Resolution: Theory and Practice, Morton Deutsch and Peter T. Coleman, eds. San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers, 2000, pp. 279-288.
This Article Summary written by: Conflict Research Consortium Staff
The authors argue that a person's goal orientation has
significant implications for their behavior in conflict situations, and for the
likelihood of a constructive resolution. They suggest ways to encourage parties
to adopt productive goal orientations.
Generally, people interpret, or "frame", a situation either
as requiring some performance, or as an opportunity to learn. People who think
of a situation as a learning opportunity tend to focus on process, and on
gaining competency. They show more enthusiasm and effort for their tasks. They
seek out new challenges, and view failure as another opportunity to learn.
People who think of a situation in terms of their performance tend to focus on
outcomes, and on how their performance will be judged. They show challenge
avoidance and learned-helplessness due to fear of failure, since failure is
viewed as a lack of personal worth.
Various factors influence a person's goal orientation. The
organizational setting may favor one orientation over another. Receiving
comparative feedback on a task tends to shift a person toward the outcome
orientation. Information on how much a person has improved encourages the
process orientation. People who think of their abilities as fixed talents tend
to adopt an outcome orientation. People who think abilities can be cultivated
and improved tend to adopt a process orientation. Similarly, people who think of
positions as fixed tend toward an outcome orientation, while people who think of
positions as malleable tend toward a process orientation.
These orientations have significant impacts on people's
conflict behavior. Outcome oriented parties tend to focus on positions, often
becoming increasingly locked in to one position. Process oriented parties tend
to focus on finding the best negotiation strategy to resolve the conflict.
Hence, the process orientation is more likely to result in constructive conflict
resolution. Process oriented behaviors tend to be beneficial in conflict
situations. Process oriented people have more positive feelings for the conflict
situation, invest more effort into resolution, and are more likely to take risks
and make goodwill gestures. Outcome oriented behaviors tend to be maladaptive in
conflict situations. They avoid challenges or risks and focus on their own
positions to the exclusion of the other party. Process oriented negotiators view
negative feedback as an opportunity to revise and improve their negotiation
strategy. Outcome oriented negotiators tend to take negative feedback
personally, as showing their lack of ability. Negative feedback threatens their
self-esteem, making them anxious and reducing cognitive flexibility.
The authors identify several factors that influence choice
of orientation in conflict situations. First, the conflict setting itself may
emphasize outcomes, or processes. Conflict situations that emphasize party
outcomes should be reframed, either by the parties or with the help of a
mediator, to focus instead on processes such as developing common ground, mutual
understanding, trust and empowerment. Parties and mediators can influence goal
orientation by the types of feedback they offer. They can also encourage
adoption of the process orientation by stressing that positions are malleable
and flexible.
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