Title: PERSONNEL
1PERSONNEL
- Motivation, Conflict Management Stress Burnout
2Motivation
- The act or process of motivating (Motive -
something (as a need or desire) that causes a
person to act)
- 3 common fallacies that need to be recognized
avoided
- Attitudes produce behavior
- Opposite actually occurs People respond in given
ways based on their environment life
experiences
- Work is a process for which the worker receives
either a reward or a punitive action carrot
stick theory
- When the carrot is removed the worker will no
longer produce whether or not there is a stick
- Fear or implied threat can be an effective
motivator
- May increase performance in short term, but is
self-defeating
3 Motivation
- 5 factors that motivation can be attributed to
- Need internal state that makes certain outcomes
viable
- Tension unfulfilled needs lead to increased
tension
- Drive people strive to meet the unfulfilled
needs
- Search Behavior fulfillment of need must be
within the persons grasp or motivation to
complete task decreases greatly
- Satisfied Need need is met and tension is reduced
4Motivation - Content vs. Process Theories
- Content derived from internal characteristics of
people
- Process look at how an individual behavior is
directed maintained
5Theories of Motivation Content Theories
- Theory of Needs Abraham Maslow
- Based theory on 2 underlying assumptions
- Deficit Principle a Satisfied Need is not a
motivator
- Progression Principle a Need does not become
activated until the next lower level is already
satisfied
- Physiological needs basic needs
- Food, water, warmth, clothing
- Safety needs
- Freedom from environmental threats of a physical,
psychological, or economic nature (fringe
benefits, job security)
- These needs can never be satisfied only met for
a moment
- Social Affiliation needs
- Friendship, love, affection, acceptance by
formal or informal groups
- Esteem needs
- Self-respect, titles, status symbols, power,
prestige, promotion
- Self-actualization needs
- Learning, competence, achievement, creativity,
success
6Content Theories Maslows Theory of Needs
- The hierarchy of these needs is arranged with
survival needs at the bottom self-actualization
needs at the top
- As each level is met, beginning at the bottom,
new needs in the hierarchy surface seek to be
satisfied
- Reality is that individual differences exist with
wants needs
- People put different priorities on needs may
choose to satisfy higher-order needs prior to
lower-order
- Maslows Assumption people try to fulfill their
needs in a fixed order
7Content Theories David McClellands Theory
- Workers are motivated by needs that are acquired
or developed as a result of individual life
experiences
- 3 basic needs that all people have learned
- Need for Achievement
- Need for Power
- Need for Affiliation
8Content Theories David McClellands Theory
- Need for Achievement individuals with a high
need of this will seek job having individual
responsibility for results, challenging but
attainable goals for themselves feedback on
their performance - They have a need to excel will seek out
situations where there is an element of risk or
even a possibility of failure (jobs in
professional athletics, DI, director of sports
medicine clinics) - They need a challenge
9Content Theories David McClellands Theory
- Need for Power these individuals enjoy being
in charge place more importance on making
others conform to their expectations on gaining
public recognitions than they do in competence at
a particular task - The need to influence others behavior for the
good of the organization predominates
10Content Theories David McClellands Theory
- Need for Affiliation these individuals are
motivated by the need for close interpersonal
relationships, companionship, social approval
in the workplace - Interested in the morale of their
patients/assistants than in completing a task on
time
- Often, these individuals will avoid confrontation
rather than making an unpopular decision (work in
one-on-one situations)
11Content Theories David McClellands Theory
- Problems with this theory
- The gap between employees psych needs demands
must be good
- The greater the interaction of job needs, the
more committed the employee will be
- Tasks must be delegated to workers who find them
stimulating fulfilling
- High achievement needs people should have
responsibilities of achieving well-defined tasks
- Employers must assess a potential employees
psych needs during hiring process
- Kuhl said to redefine areas as Flirt (sex
affiliation), Flow (achievement hunger), Fight
(aggression power)
12Content Theories Two-Factor Theory Frederick
Herzberg
- Built on Maslows work
- Performed research to find out what made workers
happy unhappy with their jobs
- 2 factors that influence motivation levels
- Intrinsic factors that had to do with the
nature of the job itself
- Achievement, recognition, the work itself,
responsibility, advancement, possibility for
growth
- If all these were at adequate levels, job
satisfaction increased if absent there was only
mild dissatisfaction
- Extrinsic factors that relate to the work
setting
- Supervision, company policy administration,
working conditions, relationships w/ supervisors,
peers subordinates, salary, status, job
security, personal life - If all were present, the employee was neutral
about the job if absent the employee was
dissatisfied with job
13Content Theories Intrinsic Extrinsic Rewards
14Content Theories Edward Decis Theory
- Defined Herzbergs intrinsic factors as those
things that are rewards in themselves (remaining
current with certification by pursuing
educational competence arent detrimental to
their athletes vs. those that dont keep current
and may harm others) - Hypothesized that most people need seek
stimulation in their external environment if no
external then internal creates illusions of
external (ATR can produce resentment from lack
of care from others)
15Theories of Motivation Process Theories
- Equity Theory J. Stacey Adam
- Workers compare their efforts rewards with
others in a similar situation
- Based on assumption that people wish to be
treated equal
- Each person establishes a ratio of what they
input into a job with what they receive (hours
salary) compare to others
- Workers who perceive inequity can respond by
changing inputs, outputs, change jobs
16Theories of Motivation Process Theories
- Vrooms Expectancy Theory
- 3 factors (variables)
- Expectancy - belief that a person will actually
achieve a specific outcome
- Instrumentality belief that rewards other
outcomes will occur as a result of successful
performance
- Valance value a person assigns to specific
outcomes
17Process Theories Vrooms Expectancy Theory
- Defined factors in terms of 3 areas
effort-performance linkage, performance-reward
linkage, attractiveness
- Effort-performance linkage perception of how
hard the achievement of a behavior will be
(passing exam) the probability of actually
achieving the behavior - Performance-reward linkage belief that taking
action will get the desired results (relationship
between what you do what you get)
- Attractiveness importance a worker places on a
preferred outcome that the worker does not yet
have but wants (promotion, money, etc)
18Conflict Management
- Type of competition in which the parties to the
conflict are aware of the directly opposite
nature of their positions in which each side
wishes to continue to hold its position - Frustration where one or more goals is blocked by
competing goals
- Conflict is not necessarily negative to
growth.
- Reassessment of position
- Conflict is usually personal.
- People do engage in conflicts specifically
because they do take them personally
- Disruptive conflict may sabotage an
organization.
- When psychological energy that should be directed
at the job is spent on plotting acting out
plots, the organization suffers
19Conflict Management
- Causes communication difficulties,
organizational structures, other psychological
social factors
- 3 mechanisms that can cause disagreements to
become open conflicts
- Competition for scarce resources
- The use of threatening, antagonistic power
strategies
- Personal characteristics of the group members
20Conflict Management
- Competition someone will succeed, someone else
will fail
- Contrasts cooperation an individuals success
that leads to group success
- Threats, punishments, bullying tactics
- These usually increase hostility, counteractions,
and unwillingness to compromise
21Conflict Management
- Roles of an organization
- Must define roles to reduce competition
- Mandatory roles that are basic to employment
- Allowable roles that are not a required part of
the job but that a worker chooses to do
- Disallowed roles that may not be done
- Job descriptions can help with this
- Defensiveness must lessen this to reduce
conflict
- Management must assess the causes of defensive
behavior
- Management must show equality professionalism
- Management must remember that defensive people do
not listen well have a need to express
frustration anger
- Management must control their own defensive
feelings when dealing with defensive people
22Conflict Management Resolution
- Feedback positive problem-centered
(constructive criticism)
- Make it a win-win situation. Integrate
situations from both sides, if feasible.
- Other?
23Stress Burnout Management
- The bodys response is both physiological and
psychological
- Positive Negative Stressors
- General Adaptation Syndrome (GAS)
- Alarm, resistance, exhaustion
- Occupational Stress
- 5 determinants of stress in the workplace
- Factors intrinsic to a job (too much or too
hard)
- Role in the organization (ambiguity, conflict,
responsibilities)
- Career development (job security status)
- Relationships at work
- Organizational structures and climate (decision
making process)
24Stress Burnout Management
- Individual personal characteristics play a part
in determining the amount of stress
- Characteristics? Outside stresses?
- Different employees have differing levels of the
characteristics
25Stress Burnout Management
- Signs symptoms of overload at work
- Job dissatisfaction
- Lower self-esteem
- Low motivation
- Escapist activity
- Physical symptoms
- Other?
26Stress Burnout Management
- Burnout emotional physical exhaustion due to
too much work or frequent frustration at work
syndrome encompassing emotional exhaustion,
depersonalization, reduced personal
accomplishment - Symptoms fatigue, illnesses, migraines, ulcers,
feelings of helplessness resignation,
irritability, sleeplessness, withdrawal,
depression, high blood pressure, smoking,
drinking, illicit drug use, distancing, paranoia,
inflexibility of thinking
27Stages of Burnout
- Job contentment (honeymoon period)
- Job disappointment (1st symptoms may appear
here)
- Job disillusionment - anger resentment
- Job despair being trapped, inescapable
- Work redefined new profession
28Stress Burnout Management
- Be proactive
- Acknowledge when under stress
- Physical exercise
- Good diet
- At the end of the day, leave all behind
- Time management
- Set realistic achievable goals
- Take vacations
- Develop social support systems
- Being a perfectionist may cause problems, but
perform to the best of your abilities
- Quantity of work is not always better than quality