Chapter 6 Applied Performance Practices
1) Experienced Meaningfulness 2) Experienced responsibility 3) Knowledge of results
3 Critical Psychological States
1) Individual 2) Team 3) Organizational
3 Most Popular Performance Rewards
1) Self-determination 2) Meaning 3) Competence 4) Impact
4 Dimensions of Empowerment
1) Membership/ Seniority 2) Job Status 3) Competency 4) Performance
4 Types of Financial Reward Practices
1) Skill Variety 2) Task identity 3) Task Significance 4) Autonomy 5) Job Feedback
5 Core Job Characteristics
1) Link Rewards to Performance 2) Relevant 3) Team Awards for Interdependent Jobs 4) Ensure rewards are valued 5) Watch for Unintended consequences
5 Strategies for Improving Reward Effectiveness
1) Personal Goal Setting 2) Constructive Thought Patterns 3) Designing Natural Rewards 4) Self-Monitoring 4) Self-Reinforcement
5 Strategies of Self-Leadership
Job Specialization
Dividing work into separate jobs, each with a subset of tasks required to complete the product/service, bu can reduce employee motivation, quality, and increase absenteeism, turnover, and wage cost
Motivator Hygeine Theory
Frederick Hertzberg's theory stating that employees are primarily motivated by growth and esteem needs (motivators), not by lower-level needs (hygienes)
Commisions
Individual Performance Reward in which pay increases with sale volume
Piece rate systems
Individual Performance Reward which rewards employees based on # of units produced
Employee share ownership plans (ESOPs)
OBJECTIVE reward system that encourage employees to buy company shares usually at a discounted price or through a no-interest loan
reate jobs that can be performed efficiently yet employees are motivated and engaged (good combo of complexity and simplicity)
Organization's goal for job design
False, there is a low P-to-O expectancy because there is a weak connection between individual effort and corporate profits
T or F there is a high performance to outcome (P-to-O) expectancy associated with Financial reward practices
Frederick Winslow Taylor
Who was the champ of specialization?
Golden handcuffs
a disadvantage of Seniority rewards as it creates continuance commitment because people only stay because of the bonuses and benefits
Job characteristics model
a job design model that relates the motivational properties of jobs to specific personal and organizational consequences of those properties
Empowerment
a psychological concept in which can lead to high performance especially in customer facing roles
Profit-sharing plans
a reward system that pays bonuses to employees on the basis of the previous year's level of corporate profits
Membership/ Seniority
aka "pay for pulse" and is defined as Pay raises, bonuses etc. based on how long you've worked rather than your job performance
Job status
almost every organization rewards employees to some extent on the basis of the status or worth of the jobs they occupy via Pay and perks
Experienced Meaninfulness
belief that one's work is worthwhile or important and is linked to skill variety, task identity and task significance
Competency
can be specific or core (broad) and produce superior performance
Job Feedback
degree to which employees can tell how well they are doing based on the direct sensory information from the job itself (Road crews can see how well they prepped the roadbed and laid asphalt
Knowledge of Results
employees want info about the consequences of their work effort; focus is on the job itself, but can also be provided by supervisors, co-workers etc.
Competence
empowered employees are confident about their ability to perform the work well and have a capacity to grow with new challenges
Meaning
empowered employees care about their work and believe what they do is important
Self-determination
empowered employees feel that they have the freedom, independence, and discretion over work activities
Impact
empowered employees view themselves as active participants in the organization; that is, their decision and actions have an influence of company's success
Skill based pay
form of competency reward in which there is a reward based on mastery of a specific skill block (pay increase when you learn how to use another machine)
Self-talk
process of talking to ourselves about our own thoughts or actions
Share options
reward systems that give employees the right to purchase company shares at a future date or predetermined price
Job evaluation
systematically rating the worth of jobs w/I an organization by measuring their required skill, effort, responsibility and working conditions
Gainsharing plans
team based rewards that OBJECTIVELY calculate bonuses from the work unit's cost savings and productivity improvement and causes strong link between effort and performance
Autonomy
the degree to which a job gives employees the freedom, independence and discretion to schedule their work to determine the procedures used in completing it
Task Significance
the degree to which a job has a substantial impact on the organization and or larger society, it is observable and perceptual
Task identity
the degree to which a job requires completion of a whole or an identifiable piece of work
Skill variety
the extent to which employees must use different skills and talents to perform tasks within their jobs
Job Enlargement
the practice of adding more tasks to an existing job and is effective when skill variety is combined with autonomy
Job enrichment
the practice of giving employees more responsibility for scheduling, coordinating, and planning one's own work
Job Rotation
the practice of moving employees from one job to another
Scientific Management
the practice of systematically partitioning work into its smallest elements and standardizing tasks to achieve maximum efficiency
Job design
the process of assigning tasks to a job, including the interdependency of those tasks with other jobs
Self Leadership
the process of influencing oneself to establish the self-direction and self-motivation needed to perform a task
Mental Imagery
the process of mentally practicing a task and visualizing its successful completion
Cycle time
time required to complete before starting over with a new work unit
Natural groups
way of increasing job enrichment by Stitching highly interdependent tasks into one job
Client Relationships
way of increasing job enrichment by having employee ○ Directly responsible for specific clients rather than using the supervisor as a go-between
Money
what men value more and, and China and Japan have a High power distance value for this
Experienced REsponsibility
work motivation and performance increase when employee feel personally accountable for the outcomes of their efforts