BUSMHR CH 5.3-5.4
Process theories of motivation
attempt to describe how various person factors and environmental factors in the integrative framework affect motivation
Job rotation
calls for moving employees from on specialized job to another
job enlargement
involves putting more variety into workers job by combining specialized tasks of comparable difficulty -also called horizontal loading
voice
is defined as employees upward expression of challenging but constructive opinions, concerns, or ideas on work related issues to their managers
procedural justice
is defined as the perceived fairness of the process and procedures used to make allocation decisons
job crafting
is defined as the physical and cognitive changes individuals make in the task or relational boundaries of their work
instrumentality
is how an individual perceives the movement from performance to outcome
job characteristic model
is to promote high intrinsic motivation by designing jobs that possess the five core job characteristics
Top down
mangers changed their employees tasks with the intent of increasing motivation and productivity
process theories
-equity/justice theory -expectancy theory -goal setting theory
top down approaches
-job enlargement -job rotation -job enrichment -job characteristics model
job characteristics
-skill variety -task identity -task significance -autonomy: enables freedom -Feedback
SMART goals
Goals need to be Specific, Measurable, attainable, results oriented, and time bound
P = A x M X O
P=Performance A=Ability M=Motivation O=Opportunity
Bottom up
employees can actively change or redesign their own jobs thereby boosting their own motivation and engagement
job enrichment
entails modifying a job such that an employee has the opportunity to experience achievement, recognition, stimulating work -also called vertical loading
expectancy theory
holds that people are motivated to behave in ways that produced desired combinations of expected outcomes
moderators
identifying three person factors -knowledge and skill -growth need strength -context satisfactions
job design
refers to any set of activities that involve the alteration of specific jobs to interdependent systems of jobs with the intent of improving the quality of employee job experience and their on the job productivity
valence
refers to the positive or negative value people place on outcomes
Goal specificity
refers to the quantifiability of a goal
Distributive justice
reflects the perceived fairness of how resources and rewards are distributed
interactional justice
relates to the quality of the interpersonal treatment people receive when procedures are implimented
organizational justice
this reflects the extent to which people perceive that they are treated fairly at work
equity theory
this theory is a model of motivation that explains how people strive for fairness and justice in social exchanges or give and take relationships -based on comparing ratios of outcomes to inputs