Abstract:
Organizations have employees who tend to devi ate from norms, come up with different ways of
doing things to increase their competitiveness.
The effects of deviant behaviors in the organiza tion have economical, sociological, psychologi cal, and anthropological implications. Positive
deviance (constructive deviance) is a behavior
that deviates from the norms of the reference
group and has positive effects on the organization.
It is an endogenous source of organizational cre ativity that has been shown to be powerful tool for
learning and change. It is positive in terms of
intention, effects, and conforms to hyper norms.
It is not harmful to other employees or organiza tion as a whole.
The fundamental success of the positive devi ance approach depends on getting the organiza tion to: define its own problem based on context,
develop and use its own information to discover
the scale of the problem and any positive deviants,
determine whether the successful practices are in
detail to be understood by other employees,
design practical ways of spreading and sharing
these practices among the employees, and dissem inate the practices among other employees to
replicate them.
Positive Deviance can be used when a problem
meets several criteria, which are (1) the problem is
not merely technical, (2) that other solutions have
not worked, and (3) that there is a commitment in
the organization/community to address the problem (Pascale et al. 2011). Within Positive
Deviance, the focus is on the positive outliers of
the normal distribution. The Positive Deviance
approach challenges managers to think outside
of the dominant frameworks. Therefore, the Pos itive Deviance approach is an asset-method.
The organization policies guide the individual
behavior and practices to have harmony. Positive
deviant behaviors have a greater tendency to
resign, and develop stress related problems and
low morale because their ideas may not be
accepted by management and fellow employees.
Positive deviant employees tend to experience
low self-esteem, an increase in fear and lack of
confidence at work, as well as physical and psy chological pain. Together with these negative out comes, deviant behaviors of employees can also
be functional and constructive. For example, vio lating organizational norms by demonstrating
deviant behaviors can serve as a source of inno vation and creativity, thus contributing to the
organization’s competitive advantage as well as
to the societal well-being.