Motivation
Job Design: Job Characteristics Model Core Job Characteristics
job characteristics found to various degrees in all jobs skill variety task identity task significance autonomy feedback
Job Design: Motivator-Hygiene Model Motivators (No Satisfaction vs. Satisfaction)
jobs that do not offer achievement, recognition, stimulating work, responsibility, advancement
Job Design: Motivator-Hygiene Model Hygiene Factors (Dissatisfaction vs. No Dissatisfaction)
jobs w/ poor company policies and administration technical supervision salary interpersonal relationships with supervisors working conditions
Goal Setting in Organization: Management by Objectives
management system incorporating participation in decision-making, goal setting, and feedback
Equity Thoery
model of motivation that explains how people strive for fairness and justice in social exchanges or give-and-take relationships
Expectancy Theory
motivation depends on the expectation that effort will lead to a valued outcome employees make cognitive evaluations before deciding to expend effort Effort→Performance→Outcome
Need Theory of Motivation: Maslow Hierarchy of Needs
motivation is a function of give basic needs humans needs emerge in a predictable stair step fashion once a need is satisfied it activates the next higher need in the hierarchy
Motivation
motivation represents the psychological processes that cause the arousal, direction and persistence of voluntary actions that are goal directed
Motivation Factors for Employees Overview
needs of employees characteristics of the task/job itself fairness attainability and value outcomes actively managing others through goals and objectives
Job Design: Job Characteristics Model Intrinsic Motivation
occurs when an individual is motivated to do one's work because of the positive internal feelings that are generated by doing well, rather than being dependent on external factors (such as incentive pay or compliments from the boss) for the motivation to work effectively
Integrated Model of Motivation: Contextual Factors
organizational culture, cross-culture values, job design, physical environment, rewards and reinforcement, group norms, communication technology, leader behavior, organization design
Organizational Justice: Distributive Justice
perceived fairness of how resources and rewards are distributed
Organizational Justice: Procedural Justice
perceived fairness of the process and procedures used to make allocation decisions
P-E Fit:
person environment fit the compatibility between an individual and a work environment that occurs when their characteristics are well matched it is difficult for some one to be motivated when you don't feel like you "fit" in the organization
Integrated Model of Motivation: Personal Factors
personality, ability, core self-evaluations, emotions attitudes, needs
Need Theory of Motivation: Needs
physiological or psychological deficiencies that arouse behavior need theories of motivation posit that employees are motivated by jobs that fulfill their unmet needs
Vroom's Expectancy Theory: Valence
positive or negative value people place on outcomes
Motivating Employees Through Job Design: Job Design
any set of activities that involve the alteration of specific jobs or interdependent systems of jobs with the intent of improving the quality of employee job experience and their on-the-job productivity
Motivation at Fedex
Cargo handling facility Handlers are paid reasonable hourly wage Goal=to pack planes up quickly Cargo handlers always running late problem with instrumentality b/c not a strong linkage to finishing ahead of schedule and money (actually made more money if stayed later b/c paid by the hour) breakdown in instrumentality, valence was high then they finally offered a bonus for finishing early and they got the outcome they wanted Effort (load packages) →Performance. (finish ahead of schedule) →Outcome ($$)
Goal Setting Theory: Motivational Functions of Goals
Direct attention→help us filter out distractions Regulate effort→provide us with urgency Increase persistence→goals help us follow through on long, difficult tasks Foster the development and application of task strategies and action plans→can cause us to plan more efficiently in advance
Job Design: Motivator-Hygiene Model
Herzberg hypothesized that motivators cause a person to move from a state of no satisfaction to satisfaction theory predicts managers can motivate individuals by incorporating "motivators" into an individual's job. At best, according to Herzberg's interpretation, an individual will experience no job dissatisfaction when he or she has no grievances about hygiene factors
Negative Inequity
another person received greater outcome from less input
Vroom's Expectancy Theory: Motivation
boils down to the decision of how much effort to exert in a specific task situation
Integrated Model of Motivation: Motivation and Employee Engagement
driven by both personal and contextual factors individual level group level organizational level
The Individual-Organization Exchange Relationship
employees inputs (for which they expects as just return) include education/training, knowledge, skills, abilities, creativity effort, and time on the outcome side, the organization provides such things as pay/bonuses, fringe benefits, challenging assignments, promotions, status symbols, recognition, sense of purpose, etc. -look at a similar levels as us and compare out outcomes to their outcomes and see if they have a better or worse ratio than us
Practical Lessons from Equity Theory
employees may be quite happy with their input/outcome ratio until they see it differs from another person no matter how far management thinks the organization's policies, procedures, and reward systems are, each employee's perception of the equity of those factors is what counts employees often try to gain a sense of equity by various means
Equitable Situation
equal ratio
Positive Inequity
higher ratio
Goal Setting Theory: Goal
what an individual is trying to accomplish; it is the object or aim of an action Companies that have these programs have higher productivity and higher employee satisfaction
Job Design: Job Characteristics Model Extrinsic Motivation
when an individual is motivated by external factors
Organizational Justice: Interactional Justice
quality of the interpersonal treatment people receive when procedures are implemented
Equity Sensativity
reflects an individual's "different preferences for tolerances for, and reactions to the level of equity associated with any given situation"
Vroom's Expectancy Theory: Expectancy
represents an individual's belief that a particular degree of effort will be followed by a particular level of performance
Vroom's Expectancy Theory: Instrumentality
represents an individual's belief that performance will lead to an outcome
What Contributes to Employee Engagement?
sense of choice sense of progress sense of competence sense of meaningfulness
Goal Setting Theory: Guidelines for Writing SMART Goals
specific: stated in precise rather than vague terms measurable: needed to assess the extent to which a goal is accomplished. Attainable: realistic challenging, attainable results oriented: focus on desired end results that support org. visions time bound: specify target dates for completion
Employee Engagement
the harnessing of organization members' whole selves to their work roles; in engagement, people employ and express themselves physically, cognitively, and emotionally during role performance" when employees give all of themselves related to intrinsic motivation (think of engagement as a high level of intrinsic motivation