What are we going to cover
•
•
•
•
•
•
What is motivation
Nature / characteristics of motivation
Classification of motivation
What are motives
Classification of motives
Theories of Work Motivation
– Maslow's theory of need hierarchy
What are we going to cover
• Theories of Work Motivation
–
–
–
–
Herzberg's two-factor theory
Mc Gregor’s theory
Vroom’s Expectancy theory
Porter Lawler model
• Morale - Definition
• Relationship with productivity
• Morale Indicators
What is motivation?
Motivation is a Latin word, which means to move.
It is the willingness of an individual to respond to
organisational requirements.
Koontz O’Donnell defines it as “ a general term applying
to the entire class of drives, desires, needs wishes &
similar forces that induce an individual or a group of
people at work.”
What is motivation?
It can also be defined as “a willingness to expend
energy to achieve a goal or a reward. It is a force that
activates dormant energies & sets in motion the
action of people. It is the function that kindles a
burning passion for action among the human beings
of an organisation.”
Performance = Ability x Motivation
What is motivation?
It is a process which starts with a physiological or
psychological deficiency or need that activates or a
drive that is aimed at a goal or incentive.
Needs: are created when there is a deprivation or
deficiency. Here, a physiological or psychological
imbalance exists.
Drives or motives: Drives are deficiencies with
direction. They are action oriented & provide a thrust
towards achieving an incentive or goal.
What is motivation?
Incentive or goal: Attaining an incentive will restore the
balance. After achieving the goal, needs & drives will
be reduced.
Needs
Drives
or motives
Incentive
or Goal
Nature / characteristics of motivation
1. Unending process: human wants keep changing &
increasing.
2. A psychological concept: deals with the human
mind.
3. Whole individual is motivated: as it is based on
psychology of the individual.
Nature / characteristics of motivation
4. Motivation may be financial or non-financial:
Financial includes increasing wages, allowance,
bonus, perquisites etc.
5. Motivation can be positive or negative: positive
motivation means use of incentives - financial or
non-financial. Egs. of positive motivation:
confirmation, pay rise, praise etc. Negative
motivation means emphasizing penalties. It is
based on force of fear. Eg. demotion, termination.
Nature / characteristics of motivation
6. Motivation: motivation & job satisfaction are
different. Motivation is goal-oriented behaviour.
Job satisfaction is the outcome of job performance.
Classification of motivation
1. Positive and negative
2. Financial and non – financial
3. Extrinsic and intrinsic:
Extrinsic motivation is available only after completion
of the job. Eg. increase in wages, rest periods,
holidays etc.
Intrinsic motivation is available at the time of
performance of a job. Eg. praise, recognition,
delegation of authority & responsibility.
What are motives?
A motive is an inner state that energizes, activates, or
moves & directs, channels behaviour towards goals.
Classification of motives
Motives can be classified as:
1. Primary motives
2. General motives
3. Secondary motives
Classification of motives
Primary motives:
Also called physiological / biological / unlearned
motives. 2 criteria for the motive to be primary are
that they should be unlearned & physiological.
Eg. hunger, thirst, sleep, avoidance of pain, sex &
material concern.
Primary motives tend to reduce the tension or
stimulation.
Classification of motives
General motives:
Are ones which are
physiologically based.
unlearned
but
are
not
These needs induce the person to increase the amount
of stimulation.
Eg. curiosity, manipulation, activity & affection
Classification of motives
Secondary motives:
These are the most important w.r.t. the study of O.B.
A motive must be learned in order to be a secondary
one.
These drives are closely tied to the learning concepts,
such as motives for power, achievement, affiliation
referred to as n Pow, n Ach, n Aff.
Security & status are also secondary motives.
Classification of motives
Examples of key secondary needs:
Need for Achievement:
Doing better than competitors
Attaining a difficult goal
Solving a complex problem
Need for power:
Controlling people & activities
Being in a position of authority over others
Defeating an opponent
Classification of motives
Need for affiliation:
Being liked by many people
Working with people who are friendly & co-operative
Participating in pleasant social activities
Need for security:
Having a secure job
Having protection against illness & disability
Avoiding tasks or decision with a risk of failure & blame
Classification of motives
Need for status:
Working for the right company in the right job
Having a degree from the right university
Having the right privileges
Theories of Work Motivation
Maslow's theory of need hierarchy:
Abraham Maslow, an American psychologist, viewed
the motivation of human beings as arising from
levels of hierarchy of needs.
According to him, each one of us is a ‘wanting’ being.
Theories of Work Motivation
His basic assumptions were:
1. All human needs cannot be satisfied, because, if
one need is satisfied, another arises.
2. A satisfied need does not motivate behaviour. eg.
need for food motivates only till one gets food.
Theories of Work Motivation
3. Some needs are innate (natural / inherent) eg. the
need for food & water; while some are acquired
from social experiences eg. need for social esteem.
4. Human beings attempt to satisfy their needs in a
specific order, based on hierarchy.
Theories of Work Motivation
Maslow’s hierarchy of needs
Self
actualization
needs
Esteem needs
Social needs
Safety & security needs
Physiological needs
Theories of Work Motivation
Maslow explained each level of hierarchy as follows:
1. Physiological needs:
These are necessary to sustain life. They include food,
water, clothing, shelter.
These needs have the highest potency for motivation.
A person who lacks these will be motivated by these.
Theories of Work Motivation
2. Safety needs:
When physiological needs are reasonably satisfied,
safety needs begin to manifest themselves.
These needs include protection from physical dangers,
such as fire or accident.
Economic security, security of income against
contingencies such as sickness, injury, non-hostile
working atmosphere are also safety needs.
Theories of Work Motivation
3. Social needs:
When physiological & safety needs are reasonably
satisfied, social needs become important
motivators.
Man is a social being & wants to receive & give
acceptance, friendship & affection.
He feels the need for belonging, for being an accepted
member of a formal or an informal group.
Theories of Work Motivation
4. Esteem needs:
When the first three needs are essentially satisfied,
esteem needs become dominant.
The person must feel important & must also receive
recognition from others, as that recognition
supports the feelings of personal worth.
Thus feelings of self-esteem, self-confidence, prestige &
power are produced which are related to
enhancing
competence,
knowledge
&
achievement.
Theories of Work Motivation
5. Self actualization needs:
At the summit of the hierarchy is the need to realize
one’s potentialities so as to satisfy what Maslow
referred to as ‘the desire to become everything
that one is capable of becoming.’
Thus the person becomes interested in self-fulfillment,
self-development, & creativity in the broadest
sense of the term.
Theories of Work Motivation
Criticisms of Maslow’s theory:
1. Hierarchy cannot be regarded as rigid. For some
people, the levels may not be clearcut & may tend
to overlap.
2. Some individuals may lack ambition & may remain
at the primary levels of the hierarchy concerned
only with physiological & safety needs.
Theories of Work Motivation
3. The order suggested by Maslow may not be
applicable to everybody.
4. A single need cannot motivate an individual. There
may be several & that too in combinations,
existing.
Hence the theory may not have universal validity.
To be continued …..
• Theories of Work Motivation
–
–
–
–
Herzberg's two-factor theory
Mc Gregor’s theory
Vroom’s Expectancy theory
Porter Lawler model
• Morale - Definition
• Relationship with productivity
• Morale Indicators
What are we going to cover
• Theories of Work Motivation – contd.
–
–
–
–
Herzberg's two-factor theory
Mc Gregor’s theory
Vroom’s Expectancy theory
Porter Lawler model – also imp, not written in syll.
• Morale - Definition
• Effects of Morale
– Relationship of morale with productivity
• Morale Indicators
Theories of Work Motivation
Herzberg's two-factor theory:
Frederick Herzberg, in the late 1950s conducted a study
on motivation. He and his associates used semistructured interviews to elicit from 200 engineers
& accountants in Pittsburgh area, the factors which
satisfy or dissatisfy the workers.
Theories of Work Motivation
His study revealed that factors responsible for job
satisfaction are quite different from those
responsible for job dissatisfaction.
Certain factors give job satisfaction, but absence of
these does not mean job dissatisfaction. It only
means no job satisfaction.
Similarly, certain factors cause job dissatisfaction, but
absence of these does not mean job satisfaction. It
only means no job dissatisfaction.
Theories of Work Motivation
According to Herzberg, motivational factors are
responsible for job satisfaction; and Hygiene or
Maintenance factors are responsible for job
dissatisfaction.
Theories of Work Motivation
Motivational factors:
The presence of these factors motivates workers & at
the same time, absence of these does not cause
dissatisfaction.
Theories of Work Motivation
Hygiene or Maintenance factors:
The presence of these factors maintains motivation at
zero level, but absence of these factors causes
serious dissatisfaction.
In other words, presence of these factors prevents
dissatisfaction.
Maintaining motivation at zero level thus prevents
negative motivation, hence they are called
maintenance factors.
Theories of Work Motivation
Motivators
Achievement
Work itself
Recognition
Responsibility
Advancement
Possibility of growth
Hygiene factors
Co. policy & admn.
Interpersonal relations
Supervision
Money
Job security
Status
Working conditions
Theories of Work Motivation
Herzberg’s framework is compatible with Maslow’s
need hierarchy. Maslow’s lower order needs are
analogous to Herzberg’s hygiene factors & his upper
level needs correspond to Herzberg’s motivators.
Herzberg’s theory was also challenged by the thought
that there exists a tendency of people to attribute
good results to their own effort & blame others for
poor results.
Theories of Work Motivation
Douglas Mc Gregor’s X & Y theory:
Theory X :
This theory assumes that most people prefer to be
directed, are not interested in assuming
responsibility & want safety above all.
Accompanying this philosophy is the belief that work is
inherently distasteful to most people & people are
motivated by money & the threat of punishment.
Theories of Work Motivation
Managers who accept Theory X assumptions, attempt
to structure, control & closely supervise their
subordinates.
Theory Y:
This theory assumes that people are not by nature lazy
& unreliable. Man can be self-directed & creative at
work, if properly motivated.
Theories of Work Motivation
Managers who accept this theory, attempt to help their
employees mature, by exposing them to
progressively less control, allowing them to assume
more self-control.
Employees are able to achieve the satisfaction of social
esteem & self-actualization needs with this kind of
environment.
Theories of Work Motivation
Theory X
1. Workers dislike to work
by themselves.
2. Workers are not ready
to accept responsibility.
Theory Y
1. Workers feel that work
is as natural as play.
2. Workers are ready to
accept responsibility if
proper
motivation
is
available to them.
3. Workers prefer to be 3. Workers are directed by
directed by others.
themselves.
Theories of Work Motivation
Theory X
4.
Workers
are
unambitious.
5. Workers by nature
resist change & want
security.
6. Workers lack creativity
&
fail
to
solve
organisational problems.
Theory Y
4. Workers are ambitious.
5. Workers are ready to
cope up with changes.
6. Workers have a high
degree of creativity &
succeed
in
solving
organisational problems.
Theories of Work Motivation
Theory X
Theory Y
7. Focus is on the lower 7. Focus is on both the
level needs of workers i.e. lower level needs & higher
physiological & safety
level needs of workers i.e.
social, esteem & selfactualisation.
8.
Strict
control
is 8. Workers exercise selfnecessary
to
achieve control & self-direction to
organisational objectives. achieve
organisational
objectives.
Theories of Work Motivation
Theory X
Theory Y
9.
Authority
is
not 9. Authority is delegated.
delegated.
10. Autocratic leadership 10. Democratic leadership
is followed.
is followed.
Theories of Work Motivation
Vroom’s Expectancy theory:
The model is built around the concepts of valence,
instrumentality & expectancy & is commonly called
VIE theory.
By valence, Vroom means the strength of an
individual’s preference for a particular outcome.
Theories of Work Motivation
Valence is positive when a person prefers attaining the
outcome to not attaining it.
Valence is zero when the individual is indifferent
towards the outcome.
Valence is negative when a person prefers not attaining
the outcome to attaining it.
Theories of Work Motivation
Another major input into the valence is the
instrumentality of the first level outcome in obtaining
a desired second level outcome.
Eg. person would be motivated towards superior
performance because of the desire to be promoted.
The superior performance (first level outcome) is
seen as being instrumental in obtaining a promotion
(second level outcome).
Theories of Work Motivation
Another important variable is Expectancy. It relates
efforts to first level outcomes; while instrumentality
relates first level & second level outcomes.
So, expectancy is the probability (ranging from 0 to 1)
that a particular action or effort will lead to a
particular first level outcome.
Instrumentality refers to the degree to which a first
level outcome will lead to a desired second level
outcome.
Theories of Work Motivation
Strength of motivation to perform a certain act will
depend on the algebraic sum of the products of the
valences of outcome (which include instrumentality)
times the expectancies.
Motivational force F:
F = ∑ Valence x Expectancy
Theories of Work Motivation
VIE theory
Instrumentalities
Expectancy
First level
outcomes
Second level
outcomes
Outcome 1 a
Outcome 1
Outcome 1 b
Motivational
Force F
Outcome 2 a
Outcome 2
Outcome 2 b
Outcome 2 c
Theories of Work Motivation
Eg. of VIE
theory
Motivation
Of
workers
Instrumentalities
Expectancy
that the
workers
First level
will achieve outcomes
the orgnal
goals
Production
standard
i.e. the
organisational
goal
Second level
outcomes
Personal goals
i.e. money,
recognition,
security
Theories of Work Motivation
This model can clarify the relationship between
individual & organisational goals. Eg. suppose
workers are given a certain standard of production.
By measuring the worker’s output, mgt can determine
how imp. their personal goals are, the
instrumentality of the organisational goal in attaining
their personal goals & the worker’s expectancies that
their effort & ability will accomplish the
organisational goals.
Theories of Work Motivation
If the output is below standard, it may be that workers
do not give high importance to the second level
outcome;
or they may not see the first level outcome being
instrumental in achieving the second level outcome;
or they may think that their efforts will not accomplish
the first level outcome.
Anyone or a combination of these possibilities will
result in low motivation, according to Vroom.
Morale
What is Morale?
The dictionary meaning is mood & spirit. High morale
means an enthusiastic, confident feeling with respect
to individual or group achievement.
In employment, morale refers to the participative
attitudes towards achievement of organisational
objectives. It means team spirit & togetherness of
people for a common purpose.
What is Morale?
It is defined as the capacity of a group of people to pull
together persistently (i.e. tirelessly, patiently) &
consistently (again & again) in the pursuit of a
common purpose.
What is Morale?
It consists of 3 different aspects:
1. Feeling of being accepted by one’s work group
2. Sharing common goals with one’s group
3. Having confidence in the desirability of these goals.
What is Morale?
Individual & group morale:
An individual’s morale is related with knowing one’s
expectations & living up to them.
It reflects the individual’s attitude towards life.
Group morale reflects the group feeling – a group
assessment of conditions – esprit de corps (team
spirit)
Effects of Morale
Relationship of morale with productivity:
There are various schools of thought on this concept.
Some believe that high morale is related to high
productivity & vice-versa.
Some believe that morale is not related to productivity.
Effects of Morale
Miller & Form have given 4 combinations of morale &
productivity:
1.
2.
3.
4.
High productivity – high morale
Low productivity – high morale
High productivity – low morale
Low productivity – low morale
Effects of Morale
High productivity – high morale: this situation occurs
when group goals (pride in work group, group
recognition) & individual goals (freedom on work,
good wages, job interest) are satisfied leading to
high motivation, high productivity & high morale.
Effects of Morale
Low productivity – high morale: individual goals only
are satisfied. Individual behaviour is determined by
informal groups causing restriction of output,
where supervisors lack technical & administrative
skills & where workers lack adequate skills.
Effects of Morale
High productivity – low morale: in this situation,
supervisor is only able to increase productivity
through his skills or planning ability by use of
penalty (loss of pay or loss of job) rather than
motivating the workers.
Low productivity – low morale: occurs when opposite
factors to situation 1 arise.
Morale Indicators
1. Organisation itself: goals,
organisational structure
public
reputation,
2. Nature of work: routine or specialised, stress
3. Level of satisfaction: is determined by –
opportunity for advancement, job security,
opportunity to learn, use new ideas, co-operation
of fellow employees, working hours, recognition,
communication.
Morale Indicators
4. Supervision received: high rate of turnover
indicates a poor leadership.
5. Perception of the self: Morale of employees who
lack self-confidence or who suffer from a poor
physical or mental health is generally low.
6. Employee’s perception of past awards & future
opportunities for rewards: whether fair,
satisfactory
Morale Indicators
7. Employee’s age: Earlier belief was that there exists
a U shaped relation between age & morale –
initially high, then low & again high.
But, today it is believed that there is a direct
relationship – high morale with high age, because
of stability, serious attitude towards work,
reliability, less absenteeism, sense of responsibility.
Morale Indicators
8. Employee’s educational level & occupational level:
Inverse relation exists between educational level &
morale. Higher the education, less satisfaction –
because employee compares his attainment with
others.
But a high educational level gives the opportunity to be
high in the ladder, hence satisfaction must be
derived by the individual.
Morale Indicators
Occupational level: also influences morale. Eg.
executives are more satisfied than managers,
managers are more satisfied than the subordinates
etc.
To sum up…..
A manager’s success depends on how well he
can motivate his subordinates & boost
their morale to give their best & also keep
them satisfied.
Motivation is one of the key tools for the
success of any enterprise.
McClelland Achievement
Motivation Theory
What is Motivation?
• The word 'motivation' comes from the
Latin word meaning 'to move‘
• External motivation: bonus, work conditions
(getting the office with the window)
• An inner (self-motivation) or outer drive to
meet a need or goal
Why is Motivation Important?
• It is one of the three key elements in
performance
• Performance = f {Ability x Motivation x
Opportunity}
• Ability refers to a natural talent to do something mental
or physical
• Motivation is not a stable individual characteristic.
Motivation is not a trait.
• Opportunity refers to the different situations that
workers may find themselves in.
McClelland's Achievement
Motivation
• McClelland's Achievement Motivation
Theory is based upon the idea that people
have an achievement need. An
achievement need is the need to be
successful and to receive recognition for
your success.
3 characteristics of people
1. Need for Achievement - doing innovative,
new, interesting and challenging things.
2. Need for Affiliation - the need for
feedback / contact with others.
3. Need for Power - the need for
responsibility, or to be responsible for
others.
McClelland's experiment
-- The Thematic Apperception Test (TAT) -It consisted of showing individuals a series of
pictures and asking them to give brief
descriptions of what was happening in the
pictures. The responses were analysed in terms
of the presence or absence of certain themes.
The themes McClelland and his associates were
looking for revolved around the following
motivators: achievement, affiliation and power.
THEMATIC APPERCEPTION TEST
• The Thematic Apperception Test or TAT is
amongst the most widely used, researched, and
taught psychological tests
• TAT was developed by the American psychologist
Henry A. Murray and Christina D. Morgan at
during the 1930s to explore the underlying
dynamics of personality, such as internal
conflicts, dominant drives and interests and
motives.
• It uses a standard series of 31 provocative yet
ambiguous pictures about which the subject
must tell a story.
• A subject is asked questions such as: What
dialogue might be carried on between
characters? How might the "story" continue after
the picture shown?
• For this reason, the TAT is also known as the
'picture interpretation technique'.
• Today, the TAT is widely used as a tool for
research around areas of psychology such as
dreams, fantasies and what motivates people to
choose their occupation.
• Sometimes it is used in a psychiatric context to
assess disordered thinking, in forensic
examinations to evaluate crime suspects or to
screen candidates for high-stress occupations.
• THE NEXT FEW SLIDES WILL CONTAIN SOME
PICTURES.
• THEIR MEANING WILL DIFFER FROM PERSON TO
PERSON AS THEY WILL BE INTEPRETED ACOORDING
TO INDIVIDUAL PERCEPTION
Achievement
• The need for achievement is characterised by the
wish to take responsibility for finding solutions to
problems, master complex tasks, set goals, get
feedback on level of success.
THE NEED FOR ACHIEVEMENT (N-ACH)
•
•
•
•
The n-ach person is 'achievement motivated'
and therefore:
seeks achievement,
attainment of realistic but challenging goals,
advancement in the job.
There is a strong need for feedback as to
achievement and progress, accompained with
a need for a sense of accomplishment.
Affiliation
• The need for affiliation is characterised by
a desire to belong, an enjoyment of
teamwork, a concern about interpersonal
relationships, and a need to reduce
uncertainty.
THE NEED FOR AFFILIATION (N-AFFIL)
• The n-affil person is 'affiliation motivated',
• He has a need for friendly relationships and is
motivated towards interaction with other
people.
• The affiliation driver produces motivation and
need to be liked and held in popular regard.
• These people are team players.
Power (Influence)
• The need for power is characterised by a
drive to control and influence others, a
need to win arguments, a need to
persuade and prevail.
THE NEED FOR AUTHORITY AND POWER (NPOW)
•
•
•
•
•
The n-pow person is 'authority motivated'. This
driver produces a need to be
influential,
effective
to make an impact.
There is a strong need to lead and for their ideas to
prevail.
There is also motivation and need towards increasing
personal status and prestige.
TYPES OF POWER
A persons need for power is of two types
• PERSONAL POWER
Those who need Personal Power want to
direct others, which is often perceived as
undesirable.
INSTITUTIONAL POWER
• Persons who need Institutional power or
Social Power want to organise the efforts of
others to further the goals of the organisation.
• Managers with high need for institutional
power tend to be more effective managers as
compared to those with high Personal Power.
Need for Achievement and
Entrepreneurship
• McClelland further described the profile of
an entrepreneur as someone high in
achievement motivation and low in power
motivation, while good managers have
high power motivation and low
achievement motivation.
What Is Motivation?
Direction
Intensity
Persistence
Why Rewards Often Fail to Motivate
Too much emphasis on monetary rewards
Rewards lack an “appreciation effect”
Extensive benefits become entitlements
Counterproductive behavior is rewarded
Too long a delay between performance and
rewards
 Too many one-size-fits-all rewards
 Use of one-shot rewards with a short-lived
motivational impact
 Continued use of demotivating practices
such as layoffs, across-the-board
raises and cuts, and excessive
executive compensation





Contingent Consequences in Operant Conditioning
Behavior-Consequence Relationship
Nature of Consequences
Positive or Pleasing
Contingent
Presentation
Contingent
Withdrawal
Positive Reinforcement
Behavioral outcome:
Negative or Displeasing
Punishment
Behavioral outcome:
Target behavior occurs
more often.
Target behavior occurs
less often.
Punishment
(Response Cost)
Negative Reinforcement
Behavioral outcome:
Target behavior occurs
less often.
Behavioral outcome:
Target behavior occurs
more often.
(no contingent consequence)
Extinction
Behavioral outcome:
Target behavior occurs less often
Schedules of Reinforcement
Schedule
Description
Continuous
(CRF)
Reinforcer follows every response
Intermittent
Reinforcer does not follow every response
Fixed ratio (FR)
A fixed number of responses must be
emitted before reinforcement occurs.
Variable ratio (VR)
A varying or random number of responses
must be emitted before reinforcement occurs.
Fixed interval (FI) The first response after a specific period of
time has elapsed is reinforced
Variable interval (VI)
The first response after varying or random
periods of time have elapsed is reinforced.
Maslow’s
Hierarchy
of Needs
Self
Esteem
Social
Safety
Physiological
Herzberg’s Two-Factor Theory
Hygiene Factors
Motivational Factors
• Quality of supervision
• Rate of pay
• Company policies
• Working conditions
• Relations with others
• Job security
• Career Advancement
High
Job Dissatisfaction
• Personal growth
• Recognition
• Responsibility
• Achievement
0
Job Satisfaction
High
Alderfer’s ERG Theory
Existence
Growth
Relatedness
Need for
Achievement
(nAch)
The Theory
of Needs
Need for
Power
(nPow)
Need for
Affiliation
(nAff)
David
McClelland
Cognitive Evaluation
Intrinsic
Motivators
Extrinsic
Motivators
The Job Characteristics Model
Core job
characteristics
*Skill variety
*Task identity
*Task
significance
*Autonomy
*Feedback from
job
Critical
psychological
states
*Experienced
meaningfulness of the
work
*Experienced
responsibility for
outcomes of the work
*Knowledge of the actual
results of the work
activities
Moderators
1. Knowledge and skill
2. Growth need strength
3. Context satisfactions
Outcomes
*High internal
work
motivation
*High growth
satisfaction
*High general
job satisfaction
*High work
effectiveness
Approaches to Job Design
1. The Mechanistic Approach focuses on identifying the
most efficient way to perform a job. Employees are trained
and rewarded to perform their jobs accordingly.
2. Motivational Approaches these techniques (job
enlargement, job rotation, job enrichment, and job
characteristics) attempt to improve employees’ affective and
attitudinal reactions and behavioral outcomes.
3. Biological and Perceptual- Motor Approaches
Biological techniques focus on reducing employees’ physical
strain, effort, fatigue, and health complaints. The PerceptualMotor Approach emphasizes the reliability of work outcomes
by examining error rates, accidents, and workers’ feedback
about facilities and equipment.
Skills and Best Practices: Applying the Job
Characteristics Model
1.
2.
3.
Diagnose the level of employee motivation and
job. satisfaction and consider redesigning jobs
when motivation ranges from low to moderate.
Determine whether job redesign is appropriate in a
given context.
Redesign jobs by including employees’ input.
Equity Theory
Employee’s
Perception
Ratio
Comparison*
Outcomes A
<
Inputs A
Outcomes A
Inputs A
*Where
Inequity (Under-Rewarded)
Inputs B
=
Inputs A
Outcomes A
Outcomes B
Outcomes B
Equity
Inputs B
>
Outcomes B
Inequity (Over-Rewarded)
Inputs B
A is the employee, and B is a relevant other or referent.
Negative and Positive Inequity
A. An Equitable Situation
Other
Self
$2
= $2 per hour
1 hour
$4
= $2 per hour
2 hours
Negative and Positive Inequity (cont)
B. Negative Inequity
Self
$2
= $2 per hour
1 hour
Other
$3
1 hour
= $3 per hour
Negative and Positive Inequity (cont)
C. Positive Inequity
Other
Self
$3
= $3 per hour
1 hour
$2
= $1 per hour
1 hours
Organizational Justice
Distributive Justice: The perceived fairness of
how resources and rewards are distributed.
Procedural Justice: The perceived fairness of the
process and procedures used to make allocation
decisions.
Interactional Justice:
The perceived fairness of
the decision maker’s
behavior in the process of
decision making.
Research into Equity
Distributive
Justice
Procedural
Justice
Amount and
Allocation
of Rewards
Perceived
Fairness of the
Distribution Process
Equity Sensitivity
Equity Sensitivity is an individual’s tolerance for
negative and positive equity.
• Benevolents
• Sensitives
• Entitleds
Motivation Theories
Are Culture Bound
Hierarchy
of Needs
Need for
Achievement
Equity Theory
Expectancy Theory
Individual
Effort
1
Individual
Performance
2
Organizational
Rewards
3
1. Effort-performance relationship
2. Performance-rewards relationship
3. Rewards-personal goals relationship
Personal
Goals
Vroom’s Expectancy Theory Concepts
Expectancy: Belief that effort leads to a specific
level of performance
Instrumentality: A performance  outcome
perception.
Valence: The Value of a reward or outcome
Managerial Implications of
Expectancy Theory
• Determine the outcomes employees value.
• Identify good performance so appropriate behaviors
can be rewarded.
• Make sure employees can achieve targeted
performance levels.
• Link desired outcomes to targeted levels of
performance.
• Make sure changes in outcomes are large enough
to motivate high effort.
• Monitor the reward system for inequities.
Organizational Implications of
Expectancy Theory
• Reward people for desired performance, and do not keep
pay decisions secret.
• Design challenging jobs.
• Tie some rewards to group accomplishments to build
teamwork and encourage cooperation.
• Reward managers for creating, monitoring, and maintaining
expectancies, instrumentalities, and oucomes that lead to
high effort and goal attainment.
• Monitor employee motivation through interviews or
anonymous questionnaires.
• Accommodate individual differences by building flexibility
into the motivation program.
Goal-Setting Theory
• Specificity
• Commitment
• Challenge
• Self-efficacy
• Feedback
• Characteristics
• Participation
• Culture
Insights from Goal-Setting Research
 Difficult Goals Lead to Higher Performance.
- Easy goals produce low effort because the goal is too easy to
achieve.
- Impossible goals ultimately lead to lower performance
because people begin to experience failure.
 Specific Difficult Goals Lead to Higher Performance for Simple
Rather Than Complex Tasks.
- Goal specificity pertains to the quantifiability of a goal.
- Specific difficult goals impair performance on novel, complex
tasks when employees do not have clear strategies for
solving these types of problems.
 Feedback Enhances The Effect of Specific, Difficult Goals.
- Goals and feedback should be used together.
Insights from Goal-Setting Research
(continued)
 Participative Goals, Assigned Goals, and Self-Set Goals Are
Equally Effective.
- Managers should set goals by using a contingency approach.
Different methods work in different situations.
 Goal Commitment and Monetary Incentives Affect GoalSetting Outcomes.
- Difficult goals lead to higher performance when employees
are committed to their goals.
- Difficult goals lead to lower performance when employees
are not committed to their goals.
- Goal based incentives can lead to negative outcomes for
employees in complex, interdependent jobs requiring
cooperation.
Guidelines for Writing “SMART”
Goals
Specific
Measurable
Attainable
Results oriented
Time bound
An Integrative Model of Motivation
High
nAch
Equity
Comparison
O
O
IA
IB
Ability
Opportunity
Individual
Effort
Performance
Appraisal Criteria
Individual
Performance
Performance
Appraisal
System
Organization
Rewards
Reinforcement
Goals Direct
Behavior
Personal
Goals
Dominant
Needs
Special Motivation Issues
• Professionals
• Contingent workers
• Diversified workforce
• Low-skilled service workers
• Highly repetitive tasks
MOTIVATION
What is motivation ?
It is a result of interaction between the
individual and the situation
The word “Motivation” has been derived
from a Latin word “movere” meaning “to
move”.
Stephen Robbins defines motivation as
“the process that accounts for an
individual’s
intensity,
direction
and
persistence of effort towards attaining a
goal”
What is motivation ?
Intensity – How hard?
Direction – Where are the efforts going ?
Persistence – How long?
What is motivation ?
According to Fred Luthans “ motivation is
a process that starts with physiological and
psychological deficiency or need that
activates a behavior or a drive that is aimed
at a goal or incentive”
Needs : are created where there is
physiological or psychological imbalance.
Drives : or motives are set up to alleviate
needs
Incentives : are anything that will
alleviate a need & reduce the drive.
Types of motives
Primary Motives
General Motives
Secondary Motives
Primary Motives
Primary Motives are unlearned and
physiologically based.
These motives not necessarily take
precedence over general and secondary
motive.
E.g. Hunger, thirst, avoidance of
pain, maternal concerns and physical
needs.
General Motives
General Motives are unlearned but
not physiologically based.
Unlike primary motives, they induce
the amount of stimulation.
E.g. Curiosity, manipulation, activity
and affection.
Secondary Motives
Secondary Motives are learned and
not physiologically based.
E.g. Power, achievement, affiliation
security and status.
Secondary Motive – Power motive
Need for power
Influencing people to change their
attitudes or behavior
Controlling people and activities
Being in a position of authority over
others.
Gaining control over information &
resources
Defeating an opponent or enemy.
Secondary Motive – Achievement motive
Need for achievement
Doing better than competitors
Attaining or surpassing a difficult goal
Solving a complex problem
Carrying out a challenging assignment
successfully
Developing a better way to do
something.
Secondary Motive – Affiliation motive
Need for affiliation
Being liked by many people
Being accepted as a part of the group /
team
Maintaining harmonious relations and
avoiding conflicts
Participating in pleasant social activities.
Secondary Motive –
Security motive
Need for security
Having a secure job
Being protected against loss of income
Having protection against illness or
disability
Avoiding tasks or decisions with a risk of
failure and blame.
Security is basically based on fear or
loss of something.
Secondary Motive –
Status motive
Status is defined as “relative ranking”
that a person holds in the group,
organization or society.
Status may be high or low
Secondary Motive –
Status motive
Need for status
Having the right car and clothes
Working for the right job and right
company
Having a degree from the right
university
Living in the right neighborhood and
having the membership of the right club
Having executive privileges.
THEORIES
OF
MOTIVATION
Maslow’s hierarchy of needs Theory.
Herzberg’s two-factor theory.
Victor Vroom’s theory.
Porter and Lawler’s theory.
Abraham Maslow’s
hierarchy of needs theory
It is based on the following propositions;
Man is a wanting being
Satisfied need is not a motivator
The needs of a man has hierarchy or
importance.
Abraham Maslow’s
hierarchy of needs theory
Lower
order
needs
Self
Actualization
Esteem needs
Social Needs
Safety Needs
Physiological Needs
Few weaknesses
It states that lower level people are able to
satisfy lower order needs and higher level
people are able to satisfy higher order needs
It ignores the fact that an act may be
motivated by several needs and not any
single need.
Fredrick Herzberg’s
Two-factor Theory
He conducted a motivational study on 200
accountants and engineers
He made use of critical incident method
for analyzing data
Questions :
When did you feel particularly good about
your job?
When did you feel exceptionally bad about
your job ?
Frederick Herzberg’s
Two-factor Theory
The good feelings = Job experience / job
content
The bad feelings = Job surroundings / job
context
Job content factors = Motivators
Job context factors = Hygiene
Hygiene Factors
• Company policy and
administration
• Supervision
• Salary
• Interpersonal
relationships
• Working conditions.
Motivators
•
•
•
•
•
Achievement
Recognition
Work itself
Responsibility
Advancement.
Hygiene factors prevent dissatisfaction, but do not
lead to satisfaction.
Few weaknesses
There is always a question regarding the
samples used by Herzberg
Low-complexity job workers
Age
The varied situations
preferences for motivators.
may
affect
Victor Vroom’s
Expectancy theory of motivation



Expectancy
theory  An employee will be
argues
that
the
motivated to exert high
strength
of
the
level of effort when
tendency to act in a
certain way depends  he/she believes that the
effort will lead to a good
on
performance appraisal;
the strength of an
that a good appraisal will
expectation that the
lead to organizational
act will be followed
rewards such as a bonus,
by a given outcome
salary increments or
and
promotion;
on the attractiveness
of that outcome to the  and that the rewards will
satisfy the employee’s
individual.
personal goals.
Vroom’s Expectancy theory
This theory focuses on three relationships;
Valence
: Effort – performance
Expectancy
: Performance – reward
Instrumentality : Rewards – personal goals
Let us see the applicability
If I give a max. effort, will it be recognized in my
performance appraisal?
If I get a good performance appraisal, will it
lead to organizational rewards?
if I am rewarded, are the rewards the ones that I
find personally attractive?
Weakness
Like other theories, this too is a model
that helps managers understand certain
aspects of motivation, but
it does not give practical solutions to
solve motivational problems.
• EXTRINSIC
• INTRINSIC





 Feeling of
responsibility
 Achievement
 Constant learning
 Taking challenges
Pay
Benefits
Promotions
Transfers
Insurance
Value of
reward
Effort
Perceived
Equitable
rewards
Abilities
Performance
(accomplish
-ments)
Intrinsic
rewards
Satisfaction
Extrinsic
rewards
Perceived
effort-reward
probability
Role
perception
Chapter 4
Motivating
Self and Others
Theories of Motivation
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
What is motivation?
How do needs motivate people?
Are there other ways to motivate people?
Do equity and fairness matter?
How can rewards and job design motivate
employees?
What kinds of mistakes are made in reward
systems?
What is Motivation?
• Motivation
– The processes that account for an individual’s
intensity, direction, and persistence of effort
toward attaining a goal
Theory X and Theory Y
• Theory X
• Theory Y
Motivators
• Intrinsic
• Extrinsic
Needs Theories of Motivation
• Basic idea:
– Individuals have needs that, when unsatisfied, will
result in motivation
•
•
•
•
Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
Motivation-Hygiene theory
Alderfer’s ERG theory
McClelland’s Theory of Needs
Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
•
•
•
•
•
Physiological
Safety
Social
Esteem
Self-actualization
Exhibit 4-1
Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
Selfactualization
Esteem
Social
Safety
Physiological
Herzberg’s Motivation-Hygiene Theory
• Hygiene factors - necessary, but not sufficient,
for healthy adjustment
– Extrinsic factors; context of work
• Motivators - the sources of satisfaction
– Intrinsic factors; content of work
Comparison of Satisfiers and Dissatisfiers
Source: Reprinted by permission
of Harvard Business Review. An
exhibit from Frederick
Herzberg, “One More Time:
How Do You Motivate
Employees?” Harvard Business
Review 81, no. 1 (January 2003),
p. 90. Copyright © 1987 by the
President and Fellows of
Harvard College; all rights
reserved.
Criticisms of Motivation-Hygiene
Theory
• The procedure that Herzberg used is limited by its
methodology
• The reliability of Herzberg’s methodology is
questioned
• Herzberg did not really produce a theory of
motivation
• No overall measure of satisfaction was used
• The theory is inconsistent with previous research
Alderfer’s ERG Theory
• Existence
• Relatedness
• Growth
McClelland’s Theory of Needs
• Need for Achievement
• Need for Power
• Need for Affiliation
Exhibit 4-4 Summarizing the Various
Needs Theories
Maslow
Alderfer
Herzberg
McClelland
Growth
Motivators
Need for Achievement
Self-Actualization
Esteem
Affiliation
Hygiene
Factors
Security
Existence
Physiological
Need for Power
Relatedness
Need for Affiliation
Summary: Hierarchy of Needs
•
•
•
•
Maslow
Herzberg
Alderfer
McClelland
Summary: Impact of Theory
•
•
•
•
Maslow
Herzberg
Alderfer
McClelland
Summary: Support and Criticism of
Theory
•
•
•
•
Maslow
Herzberg
Alderfer
McClelland
Process Theories of Motivation
• Look at the actual process of motivation
– Expectancy theory
– Goal-setting theory
Expectancy Theory
• The theory that individuals act depending on whether
their effort will lead to good performance, whether good
performance will be followed by a given outcome, and
whether that outcome is attractive to them.
Expectancy Relationships
• The theory focuses on three relationships:
– Effort-performance relationship
– Performance-reward relationship
– Rewards-personal goals relationship
Exhibit 4-5 How Does Expectancy
Theory Work?
My professor offers me $1 million if I memorize the textbook by tomorrow morning.
Expectancy
Effort
Performance Link
No matter how much effort
I put in, probably not possible
to memorize the text in 24 hours
E=0
Instrumentality
Performance
Rewards Link
My professor does not look
like someone who has $1 million
I=0
Valence
Rewards
Personal Goals Link
There are a lot of wonderful things
I could do with $1 million
V=1
Conclusion: Though I value the reward, I will not be motivated to do this task.
Exhibit 4-6
Steps to Increasing Motivation, Using
Expectancy Theory
Improving Expectancy
Improve the ability of the
individual to perform
• Make sure employees have skills
for the task
• Provide training
• Assign reasonable tasks and goals
Improving Instrumentality
Increase the individual’s belief that
performance will lead to reward
• Observe and recognize performance
• Deliver rewards as promised
• Indicate to employees how previous
good performance led to greater
rewards
Improving Valence
Make sure that the reward is
meaningful to the individual
• Ask employees what rewards they
value
• Give rewards that are valued
Goal-Setting Theory
• The theory that specific and difficult goals lead to
higher performance.
– Goals tell an employee what needs to be done and how much
effort will need to be expended.
– Specific hard goals produce a higher level of output than does
the generalized goal of “do your best.”
How Does Goal Setting Motivate?
• Goals:
– Direct attention
– Regulate effort
– Increase persistence
– Encourage the development of strategies and
action plans
Chapter 4, Nancy Langton and Stephen
P. Robbins, Fundamentals of
Organizational Behaviour, Third
Canadian Edition
4-177
Goals Should Be SMART
• For goals to be effective, they should be
SMART:
Chapter 4, Nancy Langton and Stephen
P. Robbins, Fundamentals of
Organizational Behaviour, Third
Canadian Edition
4-178
Exhibit 4-7 Locke’s Model of
Goal Setting
Directing attention
Goals
motivate
by . . .
Regulating effort
Increasing persistence
Task
performance
Encouraging the development
of strategies and action plans
Source: Adapted from E. A. Locke and G. P. Latham, A Theory of Goal Setting and Task
Performance (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1980). Reprinted by permission of Edwin A.
Locke.
Chapter 4, Nancy Langton and Stephen
P. Robbins, Fundamentals of
Organizational Behaviour, Third
Canadian Edition
4-179
Contingency Factors in
Goal Setting
• Self-efficacy
– An individual’s belief that he or she is capable of
performing a task.
Chapter 4, Nancy Langton and Stephen
P. Robbins, Fundamentals of
Organizational Behaviour, Third
Canadian Edition
4-180
Management by Objectives
• A program that encompasses
– Specific goals
– Participative decision-making
– Explicit time period
– Performance feedback
Overall
Organizational
Objectives
Cascading
Objectives
Divisional
Objectives
XYZ Company
Consumer Products Industrial Products
Division
Division
Departmental
Objectives
Sales
Production
Individual
Objectives
Develop
Customer Marketing
Research
Service
Responses to the Reward System
• Equity Theory
• Fair Process
Equity Theory
• Main points
– Individuals compare their job inputs and
outcomes with those of others and then
respond so as to eliminate any inequities.
– Equity theory recognizes that individuals are
concerned not only with the absolute amount
of rewards for their efforts, but also with the
relationship of this amount to what others
receive.
Exhibit 4-7 Equity Theory
Ratio of Output to Input
Person 1
Person 1’s Perception
Inequity, underrewarded
Person 2
Person 1
Equity
Person 2
Person 1
Person 2
Inequity, overrewarded
Responses to Inequity
•
•
•
•
•
•
Change Inputs
Change Outcomes
Adjust Perceptions of Self
Adjust Perceptions of Others
Choose a Different Referent
Leave the Field
Fair Process and Treatment
• Historically, equity theory focused on:
– Distributive justice
• However, equity should also consider
– Procedural justice
Fair Process and Treatment
• Distributive Justice
• Procedural Justice
• Interactional Justice
Motivators
• Intrinsic
• Extrinsic
Four Key Rewards to Increase Intrinsic
Motivation
1. Choice
2. Competence
3. Meaningfulness
4. Progress
Exhibit 4-9 Building Blocks for Intrinsic
Rewards
Leading for Choice
Leading for Competence
• Delegated authority
• Trust in workers
• Knowledge
• Security (no punishment) for honest mistakes
• Skill recognition
• Challenge
• A clear purpose
• Information
Leading for Meaningfulness
• Positive feedback
• High, non-comparative standards
Leading for Progress
• A noncynical climate
• Clearly identified passions
• A collaborative climate
• An exciting vision
• Celebrations
• Access to customers
• Relevant task purposes
• Whole tasks
• Milestones
• Measurement of improvement
Source: Reprinted with permission of the publisher. From Intrinsic Motivation at Work: Building Energy and
Commitment. Copyright © K. Thomas. Berrett-Koehler Publishers Inc., San Francisco, CA. All rights reserved.
www.bkconnection.com.
Variable-Pay Programs
• A portion of an employee’s pay is based on
some individual and/or organizational
measure of performance.
– Individual-based
– Group-based
– Organizational-based
Exhibit 4-11 Comparing Various Pay
Programs
Designing Motivating Jobs
• Job Characteristic Model (JCM) is a model that identifies five
core job dimensions and their relationship to personal and
work outcomes.
• Job Enrichment
JCM – Core Job Dimensions
•
•
•
•
•
Skill variety
Task identity
Task significance
Autonomy
Feedback
JCM – Critical Psychological States
• Experienced meaningfulness
• Experienced responsibility for outcomes
• Knowledge of the actual results
Exhibit 4-12 – Examples of High and
Low Job Characteristics
Skill Variety
Task Identity
Task Significance
Autonomy
Feedback
Exhibit 4-13 The Job
Characteristics Model
Core job
dimensions
Critical
psychological states
Personal and
work outcomes
Skill variety
Task identity
Task significance
Experienced
meaningfulness
of the work
High internal
work motivation
Autonomy
Experienced
responsibility
for outcomes
of the work
Feedback
Knowledge of the
actual results of
the work activities
Employee growthneed strength
High-quality
work performance
High satisfaction
with the work
Low absenteeism
and turnover
Source: J. R. Hackman, G. R.
Oldham, Work Design (excerpted
from pages 78-80). Copyright ©
1980 by Addison-Wesley
Publishing Co. Reprinted by
permission of Addison-Wesley
Longman.
Beware the Signals That Are Sent By
Rewards
• Often reward systems do not reflect
organizational goals:
– Individuals are stuck in old patterns of rewards
and recognition.
– Organizations don’t look at the big picture.
– Management and shareholders focus on shortterm results.
Exhibit 4-10
Management Reward Follies
We hope for:
But we reward:
• Teamwork and collaboration
• The best individual team members
• Innovative thinking and risk taking
• Proven methods and no mistakes
• Development of people skills
• Technical achievements and
accomplishments
• Employee involvement and
empowerment
• High achievement
• Long-term growth
• Commitment to total quality
• Candor
• Tight control over operations,
resources
• Another year’s efforts
• Quarterly earnings
• Shipment on schedule, even with
defects
• Reporting good news
Why Do Managers Engage in Reward
Follies?
• Stuck in old patterns of rewards and
recognition
• Don’t look at the big picture
• Focus on short-term results
Caveat Emptor: Apply Motivation
Theories Wisely
• Motivation Theories Are Culture-Bound
– Canada and US rely on extrinsic rewards more
than other countries.
– Japan and Germany rarely use individual
incentives.
– China is more likely to give bonuses to everyone.
Can We Just Eliminate Rewards?
• Alfie Kohn suggests that organizations should focus less
on rewards, more on creating motivating environments:
–
–
–
–
–
–
Abolish Incentives.
Re-evaluate Evaluation.
Create Conditions for Authentic Motivation.
Encourage Collaboration.
Enhance Content.
Provide Choice.
Putting It All Together
• What we know about motivating employees in organizations:
– Recognize individual differences.
– Employees have different needs.
– Don’t treat them all alike.
– Spend the time necessary to understand what’s important to each
employee.
– Use goals and feedback.
– Allow employees to participate in decisions that affect them.
– Link rewards to performance.
– Check the system for equity.
Summary and Implications
1. What is Motivation?
– Motivation is the process that accounts for an
individual’s intensity, direction, and persistence
of effort toward reaching the goal.
2. How do needs motivate people?
– All needs theories of motivation propose a
similar idea: individuals have needs that, when
unsatisfied, will result in motivation.
Summary and Implications
3. Are there other ways to motivate people?
–
Process theories focus on the broader picture of how
someone can set about motivating another individual.
Process theories include expectancy theory and goalsetting theory (and its application, management by
objectives).
4. Do equity and fairness matter?
–
Individuals look for fairness in the reward system.
Rewards should be perceived by employees as related
to the inputs they bring to the job.
Summary and Implications
5.
How can rewards and job design motivate employees?
– Recognition helps employees feel that they matter. Employers
can use variable-pay programs to reward performance.
Employers can use job design to motivate employees. Jobs that
have variety, autonomy, feedback, and similar complex task
characteristics tend to be more motivating for employees.
6. What kinds of mistakes are made in reward systems?
– Often reward systems do not reward the performance that is
expected. Also, reward systems sometimes do not recognize that
rewards are culture-bound.
Summary
• Need Theories
– Be aware that individuals differ in their levels and types of
needs
• Goal Setting Theory
– Clear and difficult goals lead to higher levels of employee
productivity.
• Expectancy Theory
– Offers a relatively powerful explanation of employee
productivity, absenteeism, and turnover.
Summary
• Equity Theory
– Strongest when predicting absence and turnover behaviours.
– Weakest when predicting differences in employee
productivity.
• Cognitive Evaluation Theory
– When you give extrinsic rewards for behaviour that had been
previously intrinsically rewarded this can result in a decrease
in the overall level of motivation.
Chapter 4
Motivating
Self and Others
Motivating Self and Others
Questions for Consideration
1. What is motivation?
2. How do needs motivate people?
3. Are there other ways to motivate people?
4. Do equity and fairness matter?
5. Are there tips for motivating people for different goals?
6. How do you motivate for individual differences?
7. What kinds of mistakes are made in reward systems?
8. Do motivational theories work the same in every country?
9. Could rewards be overrated?
What is Motivation?
• Motivation
– The processes that account for an individual’s
intensity, direction, and persistence of effort
toward attaining a goal
• Intensity: how hard a person tries
• Direction: where effort is channeled
• Persistence: how long effort is maintained
Theory X and Theory Y
• Theory X
– The assumption that employees dislike work, will attempt
to avoid it, and must be coerced, controlled, or threatened
with punishment if they are to perform.
• Theory Y
– The assumption that employees like work, are creative,
seek responsibility, and can exercise self-direction and selfcontrol.
Motivators
• Intrinsic
– A person’s internal desire to do something, due to
such things as interest, challenge, and personal
satisfaction.
• Extrinsic
– Motivation that comes from outside the person,
such as pay, bonuses, and other tangible rewards.
Needs Theories of Motivation
• Basic idea:
– Individuals have needs that, when unsatisfied, will
result in motivation
• Maslow’s hierarchy of needs
• Herzberg’s two factor theory (motivation-hygiene
theory)
• Alderfer’s ERG theory
• McClelland’s theory of needs
Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
• Physiological
– Includes hunger, thirst, shelter, sex and other
bodily needs
• Safety
– Includes security and protection from physical
and emotional harm
• Social
– Includes affection, belongingness, acceptance,
and friendship
Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
• Esteem
– Includes internal esteem factors such as selfrespect, autonomy, and achievement; and
external esteem factors such as status,
recognition, and attention
• Self-actualization
– The drive to become what one is capable of
becoming; includes growth, achieving one’s
potential, and self-fulfilment
Exhibit 4-1
Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
Selfactualization
Esteem
Social
Safety
Physiological
Herzberg’s Motivation-Hygiene Theory
• Hygiene factors - necessary, but not sufficient,
for healthy adjustment
– Extrinsic factors; context of work
•
•
•
•
Company policy and administration
Unhappy relationship with employee's supervisor
Poor interpersonal relations with one's peers
Poor working conditions
Herzberg’s Motivation-Hygiene Theory
• Motivators - the sources of satisfaction
– Intrinsic factors; content of work
•
•
•
•
•
Achievement
Recognition
Challenging, varied or interesting work
Responsibility
Advancement
Exhibit 4-2 Contrasting Views of
Satisfaction and Dissatisfaction
Traditional view
Dissatisfaction
Satisfaction
Herzberg's view
Motivators
No Satisfaction
Satisfaction
Hygiene Factors
Dissatisfaction
No dissatisfaction
Criticisms of Motivation-Hygiene
Theory
• The procedure that Herzberg used is limited by its
methodology
• The reliability of Herzberg’s methodology is
questioned
• Herzberg did not really produce a theory of
motivation
• No overall measure of satisfaction was used
• The theory is inconsistent with previous research
Alderfer’s ERG Theory
• Existence
– Concerned with providing basic material existence
requirements
• Relatedness
– Desire for maintaining important interpersonal
relationships
• Growth
– Intrinsic desire for personal development
McClelland’s Theory of Needs
• Need for Achievement
– The drive to excel, to achieve in relation to a set of
standards, to strive to succeed
• Need for Power
– The need to make others behave in a way that they would
not have behaved otherwise
• Need for Affiliation
– The desire for friendly and close interpersonal
relationships
Exhibit 4-4 Summarizing the Various
Needs Theories
Maslow
Alderfer
Herzberg
McClelland
Growth
Motivators
Need for Achievement
Self-Actualization
Esteem
Affiliation
Hygiene
Factors
Security
Existence
Physiological
Need for Power
Relatedness
Need for Affiliation
Summary: Hierarchy of Needs
– Maslow: Argues that lower-order needs must be satisfied before one
progresses to higher-order needs.
– Herzberg: Hygiene factors must be met if person is not to be
dissatisfied. They will not lead to satisfaction, however. Motivators
lead to satisfaction.
– Alderfer: More than one need can be important at the same time. If a
higher-order need is not being met, the desire to satisfy a lower-level
need increases.
– McClelland: People vary in the types of needs they have. Their
motivation and how well they perform in a work situation are related
to whether they have a need for achievement, affiliation, or power.
Summary: Impact of Theory
– Maslow: Enjoys wide recognition among practising managers.
Most managers are familiar with it.
– Herzberg: The popularity of giving workers greater responsibility
for planning and controlling their work can be attributed to his
findings. Shows that more than one need may operate at the
same time.
– Alderfer: Seen as a more valid version of the need hierarchy.
Tells us that achievers will be motivated by jobs that offer
personal responsibility, feedback, and moderate risks.
– McClelland: Tells us that high need achievers do not necessarily
make good managers, since high achievers are more interested
in how they do personally.
Summary: Support and Criticism of
Theory
– Maslow: Research does not generally validate the theory.
In particular, there is little support for the hierarchical
nature of needs. Criticized for how data were collected and
interpreted.
– Herzberg: Not really a theory of motivation: Assumes a link
between satisfaction and productivity that was not
measured or demonstrated.
– Alderfer: Ignores situational variables.
– McClelland: Mixed empirical support, but theory is
consistent with our knowledge of individual differences
among people. Good empirical support, particularly on
needs achievement.
Process Theories of Motivation
• Look at the actual process of motivation
– Expectancy theory
– Goal-setting theory
Expectancy Theory
• The strength of a tendency to act in a certain way
depends on the strength of an expectation that the
act will be followed by a given outcome and on the
attractiveness of that outcome to the individual.
Expectancy Relationships
• The theory focuses on three relationships:
– Effort-performance relationship
• The perceived probability that exerting a given amount of effort
will lead to performance.
– Performance-reward relationship
• The degree to which the individual believes that performing at a
particular level will lead to a desired outcome.
– Rewards-personal goals relationship
• The degree to which organizational rewards satisfy an individual’s
personal goals or needs and are attractive to the individual.
Exhibit 4-5 How Does Expectancy
Theory Work?
My professor offers me $1 million if I memorize the textbook by tomorrow morning.
Expectancy
Effort
Performance Link
No matter how much effort
I put in, probably not possible
to memorize the text in 24 hours
E=0
Instrumentality
Performance
Rewards Link
My professor does not look
like someone who has $1 million
I=0
Valence
Rewards
Personal Goals Link
There are a lot of wonderful things
I could do with $1 million
V=1
Conclusion: Though I value the reward, I will not be motivated to do this task.
Exhibit 4-6
Steps to Increasing Motivation, Using
Expectancy Theory
Improving Expectancy
Improve the ability of the
individual to perform
• Make sure employees have skills
for the task
• Provide training
• Assign reasonable tasks and goals
Improving Instrumentality
Increase the individual’s belief that
performance will lead to reward
• Observe and recognize performance
• Deliver rewards as promised
• Indicate to employees how previous
good performance led to greater
rewards
Improving Valence
Make sure that the reward is
meaningful to the individual
• Ask employees what rewards they
value
• Give rewards that are valued
Goal-Setting Theory
• The theory that specific and difficult goals lead to
higher performance.
– Goals tell an employee what needs to be done and how much
effort will need to be expended.
• Specific goals increase performance
• Difficult goals, when accepted, result in higher performance than
do easy goals
• Feedback leads to higher performance than does nonfeedback.
– Specific hard goals produce a higher level of output than does
the generalized goal of “do your best.”
• The specificity of the goal itself acts as an internal stimulus.
Management by Objectives
• A program that encompasses
– Specific goals
– Participative decision-making
– Explicit time period
– Performance feedback
Responses to the Reward System
• Equity Theory
• Fair Process
Equity Theory
• Main points
– Individuals compare their job inputs and
outcomes with those of others and then
respond so as to eliminate any inequities.
– Equity theory recognizes that individuals are
concerned not only with the absolute amount
of rewards for their efforts, but also with the
relationship of this amount to what others
receive.
Exhibit 4-7 Equity Theory
Ratio of Output to Input
Person 1
Person 1’s Perception
Inequity, underrewarded
Person 2
Person 1
Equity
Person 2
Person 1
Person 2
Inequity, overrewarded
Equity Comparisons
•
•
•
•
Self-inside
Self-outside
Other-inside
Other-outside
Responses to Inequity
•
•
•
•
•
•
Change Inputs
Change Outcomes
Adjust Perceptions of Self
Adjust Perceptions of Others
Choose a Different Referent
Leave the Field
Fair Process and Treatment
• Historically, equity theory focused on:
– Distributive justice
• However, equity should also consider
– Procedural justice
Fair Process
• Distributive Justice
– Perceived fairness of the amount and allocation of rewards
among individuals
• Procedural Justice
– Perceived fairness of the process used to determine the
distribution of rewards
• Interactional Justice
– The quality of the interpersonal treatment received from
another
Motivating to Show People Matter
• Employee Recognition Programs
– Programs that use multiple sources and recognizes both
individual and group accomplishments.
• Linking Programs and Reinforcement Theory
– Consistent with reinforcement theory, rewarding a
behaviour with recognition immediately following that
behaviour is likely to encourage its repetition.
• Employee Recognition Programs in Practice
– In contrast to most other motivators, recognizing an
employee’s superior performance often costs little or no
money, making them highly attractive to industry.
Variable Pay Programs
• A portion of an employee’s pay is based on some
individual and/or organizational measure(s) of
performance.
– Individual-based
• Piece-rate wages, bonuses
• Workers are paid a fixed sum for each unit of production
completed.
– Group-based
• Gainsharing: an incentive plan where improvements in group
productivity determine the total amount of money that is
allocated.
Variable Pay Programs
– Organizational-based
• Profit-sharing: organization wide programs that distribute
compensation based on some established formula designed
around a company’s profitability.
• Employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs): company-established
benefit plans in which employees acquire stock as part of their
benefits.
Exhibit 4-8 Comparing Various Pay
Programs
Approach
Strengths
Weaknesses
Variable
pay
• Motivates for performance.
• Individuals do not always have
control over factors that affect
productivity.
• Cost-effective.
• Makes a clear link between
organizational goals and individual • Earnings vary from year to year.
rewards.
• Can cause unhealthy competition
among employees.
Teambased pay
• Encourages individuals to work
together effectively.
• Difficult to evaluate team
performance sometimes.
• Promotes goal of team-based
work.
• Equity problems could arise if all
members paid equally.
Skill-based • Increases the skill levels of
employees.
pay
• Increases the flexibility of the
workforce.
• Can reduce the number of
employees needed.
• Employers may end up paying for
unneeded skills.
• Employees may not be able to
learn some skills, and thus feel
demotivated.
Variable-Pay Programs
• Linking variable-pay plans and expectancy theory
– Evidence supports the importance of this linkage,
especially for operative employees working under piecerate systems.
– Group and organization wide incentives reinforce and
encourage employees to sublimate personal goals for the
best interests of their department or organization.
Rewards for Other Types of
Performance
• Commissions beyond sales
– Customer satisfaction and/or sales team outcomes, such as
meeting revenue or profit targets.
• Leadership effectiveness
– Employee satisfaction, or how the manager handles his or
her employees.
• New goals
– All employees who contribute to specific organizational
goals, such as customer satisfaction, cycle time, or quality
measures.
Rewards for Other Types of
Performance
• Knowledge workers in teams
– Performance of knowledge workers and/or professional
employees who work on teams.
• Competency and/or skills
– Abstract knowledge or competencies—for example,
knowledge of technology, the international business
context, customer service, or social skills.
Motivating Specific Groups
•
•
•
•
•
Professionals
Contingent workers
Low-skilled service workers
Unionized employees
Public sector employees
Motivating Professionals
• How are “professionals” different?
– Receive a great deal of “intrinsic” satisfaction from
their work.
– Strong and long-term commitment to their field of
expertise
– Well paid/ Chief reward is work itself.
– Value support
– More focused on work as central life interest.
Motivating Professionals
• How do we motivate professionals?
– Provide challenging projects
– Give them autonomy in follow interests and
structure work.
– Reward with educational opportunities.
– Recognize their contributions.
Motivating Contingent Workers
• No simple solutions to motivating contingent
workers.
– Contingent or temporary workers have little or no job
security/stability, therefore they don’t identify with the
organization or display the commitment of permanent
employees.
– Contingent or temporary workers are typically provided
with little or no health care, pensions, or similar benefits.
Motivating Contingent Workers
• Greatest motivating factor is the opportunity
to gain permanent employment.
• Motivation is also increased if the employee
sees that the job he or she is doing for the
firm can develop salable skills.
Motivating Low-Skilled Service
Workers
• Many 15- to 24-year-olds have “McJobs” with pay
levels near minimum wage
• To motivate
–
–
–
–
Employees want more respect
Make jobs more appealing
Raise pay levels
Find unusual ways to motivate:
• Flexible work schedules
• Broader responsibility for inventory, scheduling, and hiring
• Creation of a “family” atmosphere among employees
Motivating Unionized Employees
• Constraints of contract affect some forms of rewards
– Some unions against pay-for-performance
• Additional ideas
–
–
–
–
Create better work environments
Show appreciation
Provide opportunities for training and advancement
Listen to employees concerns
Motivating Public Sector Employees
• Special challenge
– Much work is service-oriented, harder to measure
productivity
– Hard to link rewards to performance
• What to do
– Goal setting helps
• Goal difficulty and goal specificity help improve
motivation
Exhibit 4-10
Management Reward Follies
We hope for:
But we reward:
• Teamwork and collaboration
• The best individual team members
• Innovative thinking and risk taking
• Proven methods and no mistakes
• Development of people skills
• Technical achievements and
accomplishments
• Employee involvement and
empowerment
• High achievement
• Long-term growth
• Commitment to total quality
• Candor
• Tight control over operations,
resources
• Another year’s efforts
• Quarterly earnings
• Shipment on schedule, even with
defects
• Reporting good news
Why Do Managers Engage in Reward
Follies?
• Stuck in old patterns of rewards and
recognition
– Stick to rewarding things that can be easily
measured
• Don’t look at the big picture
– Subunits compete with each other
• Focus on short-term results
Cross-Cultural Differences in
Motivation
• Canada and US rely on extrinsic rewards more
than other countries
• Japan and Germany rarely use individual
incentives
– Japan emphasizes group rewards
• China more likely to give bonuses to everyone
Exhibit 4-11 Snapshots of Cultural
Differences in Motivation
Japan:Sales representatives preferred being members of a successful
team with shared goals and values, rather than financial rewards.
Russia:Cotton mill employees given either valued extrinsic rewards
(North American T-shirts with logos, children’s sweatpants, tapes of
North American music, etc.) or praise and rewards were more productive.
However, rewards did not help for those who worked on
Saturdays.
China: Bonuses often given to everyone, r egardless of individual
productivity. Many employees expect jobs for life, rather than jobs based
on performance.
Mexico: Employees prefer immediate feedback on their work. Therefore
daily rewards for exceeding quotas are preferred.
Canada and the United States:Managers rely more heavily on extrinsic
motivators.
Japan and Germany:Firms rarely give rewards based on individual
performance.
Are Rewards Overrated? Cognitive
Evaluation Theory
• Allocating extrinsic rewards for behaviour that
had been previously intrinsically rewarded
tends to decrease the overall level of
motivation.
Abolishing Rewards
• Alfie Kohn suggests that organizations should focus
less on rewards, more on creating motivating
environments
–
–
–
–
–
–
Abolish incentives
Re-evaluate evaluation
Create conditions for authentic motivation
Collaboration
Content
Choice
Summary
• Need Theories
– Be aware that individuals differ in their levels and types of
needs
• Goal Setting Theory
– Clear and difficult goals lead to higher levels of employee
productivity.
• Expectancy Theory
– Offers a relatively powerful explanation of employee
productivity, absenteeism, and turnover.
Summary
• Equity Theory
– Strongest when predicting absence and turnover
behaviours.
– Weakest when predicting differences in employee
productivity.
• Cognitive Evaluation Theory
– When you give extrinsic rewards for behaviour that had
been previously intrinsically rewarded this can result in a
decrease in the overall level of motivation.
Implications
• Recognize Individual Differences
– Employees have different needs.
– Don’t treat them all alike.
– Spend the time necessary to understand what’s
important to each employee.
• Use Goals and Feedback
• Allow Employees to Participate in Decisions
That Affect Them
Implications
• Link Rewards to Performance
– Employees must perceive a clear linkage.
• Check the System for Equity
OB at Work
For Review
1. What are the implications of Theories X and Y for
motivation practices?
2. Identify the variables in expectancy theory.
3. Relate goal-setting theory to the MBO process. How
are they similar? Different?
4. What are the pluses and minuses of variable-pay
programs from an employee’s viewpoint? From
management’s viewpoint?
For Review
5. What is an ESOP? How might it positively influence
employee motivation?
6. What motivates professional employees?
7. What motivates contingent employees?
8. Explain cognitive evaluation theory. How applicable
is it to management practice?
9. What can firms do to create more motivating
environments for their employees?
For Critical Thinking
1. Identify three activities you really enjoy. Next, identify
three activities you really dislike. Using the expectancy
model, analyze why some activities stimulate your effort
while others don’t.
2. Identify five different criteria by which organizations can
compensate employees. Based on your knowledge and
experience, is performance the criterion most used in
practice? Discuss.
For Critical Thinking
3. “Recognition may be motivational for the moment but it doesn’t have any
staying power. Why? Because they don’t take recognition at Safeway or
The Bay!” Do you agree or disagree? Discuss.
4. “Performance can’t be measured, so any effort to link pay with
performance is a fantasy. Differences in performance are often caused by
the system, which means the organization ends up rewarding the
circumstances. It’s the same thing as rewarding the weather forecaster for
a pleasant day.” Do you agree or disagree with this statement? Support
your position.
5. Your text argues for recognizing individual differences. It also suggests
paying attention to members of diverse groups. Does this view contradict
the principles of equity theory? Discuss.
OB at Work
Breakout Group Exercises
• Form small groups to discuss the following topics:
1. One of the members of your team continually arrives late for meetings
and does not turn drafts of assignments in on time. Choose one of the
available theories and indicate how the theory explains the member’s
current behaviour and how the theory could be used to motivate the
group member to perform more responsibly.
2. You are unhappy with the performance of one of your instructors and
would like to encourage the instructor to present more lively classes.
Choose one of the available theories and indicate how the theory
explains the instructor’s current behaviour. How could you as a
student use the theory to motivate the instructor to present more
lively classes?
Breakout Group Exercises
3. Harvard University recently changed its grading policy to recommend
to instructors that the average course mark should be a B. This was the
result of a study showing that more than 50 percent of students were
receiving an A or A- for coursework. Harvard students are often
referred to as “the best and the brightest,” and they pay $27 000 (US)
for their education, so they expect high grades. Discuss the impact of
this change in policy on the motivation of Harvard students to study
harder.
Exhibit 4-12
2002 Compensation of Canada’s Five BestPaid CEOs
2002 Compensation of Canada’s Five Best-Paid CEOs
CEO and Company
2002 To tal Compensation
($000’s)
Rank on share return
past 3 years
(out of 150)
1. Jozef Straus
JDS Uniphase Corp.
229 122
148
2. Eugene Melnyk
Biovail Corp.
122 481
28
3. Gerald Schwartz
Onex Corp.
49 266
46
4. Peter C. Godsoe
Scotiabank
20 365
40
5. Firoz A. Rasul
Ballard Power Systems Inc.
19 354
137
Supplemental Material
Slides for activities I do in my own
classroom
Exercise on Motivation Theories
• Jesse has been underperforming at work, coming in
late, and causing some problems with the other
workers. Previously Jesse has been one of your star
employees. Using the theory assigned to your group,
explain what steps you might take to motivate Jesse
to perform better.
– Describe the plan
– Indicate how the plan relates to the theory
Theories to Apply
• Herzberg Motivation-Hygiene (Two-Factor)
Theory
• Expectancy
• Goal-Setting Theory
• Equity
• Cognitive Evaluation Theory
Motivation and
Emotion
Internal processes that:
1.
2.
G uide
A ctivate
3.
Chapter
10
S ustain
Motivation
Physiological
 Hunger
 Sexual motivation
Cognitive
 Expectancy
 Self-fulfillment
Theories of Motivation
• Drive Theory
• Arousal Theory
• Expectancy Theory
• Goal-Setting Theory
p. 377
Drive Theory
• Biological needs arising within our
bodies create unpleasant states of
arousal
• Hunger, thirst, fatigue, etc.
• Homeostasis- balanced
physiological state
• Motivation is basically a process in
which various biological needs
PUSH us to actions
Drive Theory: An
Overview
Biological need
(need for food, water, oxygen, etc.
Drive state
(hunger, thirst, etc.)
Activation of many different behaviors
Behaviors that do not reduce drive are weakened
Behaviors that reduce drive are strenghtened
Arousal Theory
• Optimization NOT
Minimization
• Arousal: our general level
of activation
• May fluctuate
• Biological influences??
Sensation seekers
• Yerkes-Dodson law
Yerkes-Dodson law
• There is a relationship
between, optimal
performance and the level
of arousal necessary.
• Behavior is Expectancy
determined by Theory
expectations (desirable outcomes).
• Thoughts about future PULL your
behavior.
• Incentives: almost anything we have
learned to value.
Goal-Setting
•
Wood & Locke(1990)
•
•
•
•
•
Specific
Challenging
Attainable
Feedback can improve
performance.
Take life in strides…
Maslow’s Needs
Hierarchy
An arrangement of needs from the most basic to those at the highest levels.
Self-actualization Needs
Need for self-fulfillment
Esteem Needs
Need to develop self-respect, gain the approval of others, and achieve success.
Deficiency needs
(basic needs)
Social Needs
Need to have friends, be loved and appreciated and to belong.
Safety needs
Neesd for feeling safe and secure (in one's life)
Physiological needs
Food, water, oxygen, and SLEEP!!!
Emotions
1.Physiological responses
2.Subjective feelings
3.Expressive reactions
How do we respond?
Cannon – Bard
• Earliest theory
• Simultaneous occurrence .
James – Lange
•More
preferred
•Interpretations determine emotions
•Facial feedback hypothesis
Why go to scary movies?
Schacter – Singer
• Two stage theory
• Dutton & Aron (1974)
Opponent-Process
• Every action has an equal and opposite
reaction
The Emotional Brain
Anterior vs. Posterior
• Pleasant – Unpleasant
• Arousal
Right vs. Left
• Avoidence – withdrawl
• Positive affect - Rewards
Speaking without
Words
1. Nonverbal
Cues
2. Gestures
3. Body language
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