Management Chapter 12
McClelland's Achievement Theory
**Achievement, affiliation, and power Achievement: An individual's desire for goals that are well-defined and moderately difficult and include employee participation/feedback Affiliation: The desire to work with others in the organization rather than alone Power: a function of the influence and control an individual has over others
Motivation (Ariely)
*Revised model of labor -Payment -Meaning -Creation -Challenge -Ownership -Identity -Pride
Self-Actualization Needs
-Derive from the desire to be the best you can be to maximize your potential
Alderfer's ERG Theory
-Existence--Coincides Maslow's physiological/security needs -Relatedness--Coincides Maslow's Social/Esteem needs -Growth--internal esteem needs
Herzberg's Two Factors
-Maintenance -Motivational
Differences between Maslow and Alderfer
-Simplifies Maslow's 5 levels into 3 -Alderfer makes distinction between external and internal esteem -Alderfer does not see categories as a step by step and that a person can satisfy several needs simultaneously
Compressed Work Week
A four-day or shorter period in which an employee works 40 hours
Content Theories
A group of theories that assume that workers are motivated by the desire to satisfy needs and that seek to identify what their needs are
Fixed-Ratio Schedule
A pattern of offering reinforcement after a specified number of desired performance behaviors, regardless of the time elapsed between them
Fixed-Interval Schedule
A pattern of reinforcement at specified periods of time, regardless of behavior
Variable-Interval Schedule
A pattern where by the period of reinforcement varies between one reinforcement and the next
Variable-Ratio Schedule
A pattern whereby the number of behaviors required for reinforcement is varied
Expectancy
A person's expectation that effort will lead to high performance
Instrumentality
A person's expectation that performing a task will lead to a desired outcome
Reinforcement Theory
A process theory which assumes that behavior may be reinforced by relating it to its consequences
Process Theories
A set of theories that try to determine "how" and "why" employees are motivated to perform
Social Learning Theory
A theory stating that employees learn not only through direct experience by also through observation and personal qualities `
Expectancy Theory
A theory stating that motivation depends not only on how much a person wants something but also on the person's perception of how likely he or she is to get it
Equity Theory
A theory stating that the extent to which people are willing to contribute to an organization depends on their assessment of the fairness of the rewards they will receive in exchange
Goal-setting Theory
A theory which recognizes the importance of goals in improving employee performance
Flextime
A work schedule that allows employees to choose their staffing and ending times as long as they are at work during a specified period of time
Job Sharing
A working arrangement whereby two employees do one job
Behavior Modification
An application of reinforcement theory, which involves change in behavior and encouraging appropriate actions by relating the consequences of behavior to the behavior itself
Motivation
An inner drive that directs behavior towards goals
The Human Relations Approach (Social)
Elton Mayo --Giving employees feedback and some level of self-esteem and appreciating their performance would best motivate them --Hawthorne studies showed that social needs are of great importance in motivating employees`
Physiological Needs
Essentials for living--water, food, shelter, and clothing. -People devote all efforts towards these until needs are met
The Traditional Approach (Economic)
Frederick Taylor-Father of scientific Management --Approach was based on the principle of hedonism, which maintains that people are motivated to seek pleasure and avoid pain --Believed that work was generally distasteful to employees and earning money and avoiding punishment were employee's primary goals
Social Needs
Love, companionship, and friendship--the desire of acceptance by other
Security Needs
Relate to protecting yourself from physical and economic harm
Esteem Needs
Relates to respect--Self-respect and respect from others. Competition also relates in needing to feel like you can do something better than someone else
Positive Reinforcement
The act of strengthening a desired behavior be rewarding it or providing other positive outcomes
Avoidance
The act of strengthening a desired behavior by allowing individuals to avoid negative consequences by performing the behavior
Punishment
The act of weakening or eliminating an undesired behavior by providing negative consequences
Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
The order in which people strive to satisfy the five basic needs as theorized by Maslow-- physiological, security, social, esteem, and self-actualization
Morale
The sum total of employees' attitudes toward their jobs, employer, and colleagues
Valence
The value of each potential outcome which describes its importance
Motivational Factors
Those aspects of a job that relate the content of the work, including achievement, recognition, the work itself, involvement, responsibility, and advancement
Maintenance Factors
Those aspects of a job that relate to the work, setting, including adequate wages, comfortable working conditions, fair company policies, and job security
The Human Resources Approach (Social & Economic)
Views workers as complex entities who are valuable resources to the organization as well as important in their own right.
Extinction
Weakening an undesired behavior by not providing positive consequences