MGMT Chapter 12
Outputs
"what do you think you're getting out of the job?" rewards that people receive
Inputs:
"what do you think you're putting into the job?" what people perceive they give to an organization like time, effort
Hygiene factors:
"what will make my people dissatisfied?" pay and security, working conditions, interpersonal relationships, company policy -effect job context
Motivating factors:
"what will make my people satisfied?" Achievement, recognition, the work itself, responsibility -effect job rewards and performance
Job design
1) the division of an organization's work among its employees and 2) the application of motivational theories to jobs to increase satisfaction and performance
Herz Berg's Two factor model
1.Motivation factors (growth, satisfiers) 2.Hygiene factors (existence and relatedness, dissatisfier) -focus on hygiene factors and reach a state of "not dissatisfied"
Alderfer's ERG theory
1.existence (physiological, safety) 2.relatedness (social) 3.growth (self actualization and esteem) -can be motivated by more than one need
McClelland's Achievement theory
1.need for achievement- looking for next challenge, set the bar. 2.need for affiliation-social need is dominant 3.Need for power-control
Growth needs
Esteem, self actualization
Equity perceptions evolve in a four step process
Evaluation of self, evaluation of other, comparison of self with other, feelings of equity or inequity
The nature of motivation
P=f(A,E&M) p=performance A=ability(capable to do it) E=environment(tools to do it) M=motivation(want to do it)
Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs
a) Physiological need (air, food)-lowest level b)safety needs(shelter) c)social needs (relationships) d)Esteem needs (self&others) e)self actualization(meant to be)-highest level
Job characteristics
a) five core job characteristics that affect. b) three critical psychological states of an employee that in turn affect. c) work outcomes-the employees motivation, performance and satisfaction
Reinforcement
anything that causes a given behavior to be repeated or inhibited
Punishment
applying negative consequences to stop or change undesirable behavior
Reinforcement theory
attempts to explain behavior change by suggesting that behavior with positive consequences tends to be repeated, whereas behavior with negative consequences tends to be repeated.
Frustration regression component
can't meet a certain need (running for office and keep failing)
Process perspectives
concerned with the thought process by which people decide how to act
Job enrichment
consists of building into a job such motivating factors as responsibility, achievement, recognition, stimulating work and advancement
Job enlargement
consists of increasing the number of tasks in a job to increase variety and motivation
4 perspectives on motivation
content, process, job design, reinforcement
Contingency factors
degree to which individuals want personal and psychological development, knowledge and skill, desire for personal growth, context satisfactions
Comparison
equity theory suggests that people compare the ratio of their own outcomes to inputs against the ration of someone else's
Three psychological states
experienced meaningfulness of work, experienced responsibility for work outcomes, knowledge of actual results of the work
Equity theory
focuses on employee perceptions as to how fairly they think they are being treated compared with others
Motivation
forces that cause people to behave in certain ways
4 elements of goal setting theory
goals should be specific, goals should be challenging, goals should be achievable, goals should be linked to action plans
Work outcomes
high work motivation, high work performance, high work satisfaction, low absenteeism, and turnover
negative reinforcement
is the removal of unpleasant consequences following a desired behavior
As a manager you want to motivate people to:
join your organization, stay with your organization, show up for work at your organization, do extra for your organization, be engaged while at your organization
Using the Hierarchy of Needs theory:
managers should first try to meet employees level 1&2 needs of course, so employees aren't preoccupied, then they need to give employees a chance to fulfill their higher level needs in ways that also advance the goals of the organization
Content perspectives
need based perspectives, theories that emphasize the needs that motivate people
Using the ERG theory to motivate employees:
people are motivated by different needs at different times in their lives, which suggests that managers should customize their reward and recognition programs to meet employees varying needs
Primary needs
physiological, safety, social,
Intrinsic rewards
satisfaction in performing the task itself, feeling of accomplishment
Extrinsic rewards
satisfaction in the payoff from others, such as money a person receives from others, such as money a person receives from others for performing a particular task.
Five core job characteristics
skill variety, task identity, task significance, autonomy, feedback
Goal setting theory
suggests that employees can be motivated by goals that are specific and challenging but achievable
Expectancy theory
suggests that people are motivated by two things: 1. how much they want something and 2. how likely they think they are to get it
Expectancy
the belief that particular level of effort will lead to a particular level of performance
Instrumentality
the expectation that successful performance of the task will lead to the outcome desired
Job simplification
the process of reducing the number of tasks a worker performs
Positive reinforcement
the use of positive consequences to encourage desirable behavior
Valence
value, the importance a worker assigns to the possible outcome or reward
Extinction
withholding rewards for desirable behavior, so that behavior is less likely to occur in the future