EXPECTANCY THEORY (MOTIVATION THEORIES)
2nd ingredient
belief there is relationship between job performance and attainment of outcomes (instrumentality must increase reward practices, and supervisors)
human motivation
highly rational and conscious explanation -how people choose occupations and focus on tasks over others
rules for programs
- high incentives -rules -participants perceive variations in controlled aspect
expectancy theory
-cognitive theory -each person assumed to be rational decision maker who will expend effort on activities that lead desired rewards -know what they want from work -understand performance and rewards -relationship between effort and performance - 5 major parts: job outcome, valence, instrumentality, expectancy force -must see relationship between how hard they try and rfromance
4. expectancy
-perceived relationship between effort and performance -scaled as probability -one expectancy value (unlike many valences and instruments)
5. force
amount of effort/pressure within employee to be motivated -force = valence x instrumentality x expectancy -predictor of how motivated person is -must access validity -subjective assessment
2. valences
employee feelings about outcomes and defined in terms of attrativeness/anticipated satisfaction -positive, negative, neutral
increased work motivation
increased expectancy
individual effort and perfromance
no reltionship
3. instrumentality
perceived degree of relationship between performance and outcome attainment -employee's mind -same as = conditional -degree to which attainment of certain outcome is conditional on performance on job
1. job outcome
results experienced by wroking, no limit, rewards or positive experience
high expectancy
sales job
1st ingredient for motivation
valued outcomes