Title: Theories of Motivation
1Theories of Motivation
An Overview of Some of the Popular Management
Theorists
2Alderfers ERG Theory
- Clayton P Alderfer proposed a hierarchy
involving three sets of needs - Existence needs satisfied by such factors as
food, air, water, pay, and working conditions. - Relatedness needs satisfied by meaningful social
and interpersonal relationships. - Growth needs satisfied by an individual making
creative or productive contributions. - Tested by Thematic Apperception Test
ERG Theory
3ERG Theory Relationships Among Frustration,
Importance, and Satisfaction of Needs
Frustration of growth needs
Importance of growth needs
Satisfaction of growth needs
Frustration of relatedness needs
Importance of relatedness needs
Satisfaction of relatedness needs
Frustration of existence needs
Importance of existence needs
Satisfaction of existence needs
4Chris Argyris (1923 -
- Influenced by the humanist approach of Abraham
Maslow and the socio-technical process of E.
Wight Bakke. - Indicated his feelings about how organizations
neglected human needs. - If treated like a child one will behave like a
child result is organizational mediocrity
Chris Argyris
Maturity Immaturity Continuum
5Chris Argyris Personality vs. Organization
- Certain organizational practices, such as the
division of labor, interfere with the development
of healthy human personalities. - These practices promote immature, not mature
behavior. - In an attempt to self-actualize, individuals run
into the obstacles posed by formal organizations. - The result is defensive behaviors, with
management reacting by becoming more autocratic
or by turning to sugar-coated human relations.
6Chris Argyris
7Albert Bandura
- Albert Bandura proposed a social cognitive
theory (social learning theory self-efficacy
theory) which refers to an individuals belief
that they are capable of performing a task. - Four ways self efficacy can be increased
- Enactive mastery if youve performed task in
the past, you can do it again - Vicarious modeling you become more confident
because you see someone else do the task - Verbal persuasion you become more confident
because someone convinces you that you have the
skills necessary to perform task - Arousal if you get psyched up then you
perform better
Social Learning Self-efficacy Social Cognitive
8Abraham Maslow
Maslow defined human needs as Physiological
the need for food, drink, shelter, and relief
from pain. Safety and security the need for
freedom from threat the security from
threatening events or surroundings. Belongingness,
social, and love the need for friendship,
affiliation, interaction, and love. Esteem the
need for self-esteem and for respect from
others. Self-actualization the need to fulfill
oneself by maximizing the use of abilities,
skills, and potential
Hierarchy of Needs
9Maslows Need Hierarchy
- Maslows theory assumes that a person attempts to
satisfy the more basic needs before directing
behavior toward satisfying upper-level needs. - Lower-order needs must be satisfied before a
higher-order need begins to control a persons
behavior. - A satisfied need ceases to motivate.
10Need Hierarchy
11David McClelland
Proposed Theory of Needs Need for Achievement
(nAch) drive to excel, to achieve in relation
to a set of standards Need for Affiliation (nAff)
the desire for friendly and close interpersonal
relationships Need for Power (nPow) need to
make others behave in a way in which they would
not have behaved otherwise (to have power over
them)
nAch nPow nAff
12McClellands Learned Needs Theory
Achievement (n Ach)
Affiliation (n Aff)
Power (n Pow)
13Douglas McGregor (1906-1964)
- Taught psychology at MIT.
- At Antioch College, McGregor found that his
classroom teaching of human relations did not
always work in practice. - From these experiences, his ideas evolve and lead
him to recognize the influence of assumptions we
make about people and our managerial style.
Douglas McGregor
14Theory X
- Management is responsible for organizing the
elements of productive enterprise money,
materials, equipment, people in the interest of
economic ends. - With respect to people, this is a process of
directing their efforts, motivating them,
controlling their actions, modifying their
behavior to fit the needs of the organization. - Without this active intervention by management,
people would be passive even resistant to
organizational needs. They must, therefore, be
persuaded, rewarded, punished, controlled their
activities must be directed. This is
managements task -- in managing subordinate
managers or workers. We often sum it up by
saying that management consists of getting things
done through other people.
15Theory X
- Behind this conventional theory there are several
additional beliefs less explicit, but
widespread - The average man is by nature indolent he works
as little as possible. - He lacks ambition, dislikes responsibility,
prefers to be led. - He is inherently self-centered, indifferent to
organizational needs. - He is by nature resistant to change.
- He is gullible, not very bright the ready dupe
of the charlatan and the demagogue.
16Theory Y
- Management is responsible for organizing the
elements of productive enterprise money,
materials, equipment, people in the interest of
economic ends. - People are not by nature passive or resistant to
organizational needs. They have become so as a
result of experience in organizations. - The motivation, the potential for development,
the capacity for assuming responsibility, the
readiness to direct behavior toward
organizational goals are all present in people.
Management does not put them there. It is a
responsibility of management to make it possible
for people to recognize and develop these human
characteristics for themselves. - The essential task of management is to arrange
organizational conditions and methods of
operation so that people can achieve their own
goals best by directing their own efforts toward
organizational objectives.
17Theory X Theory Y
- Work is inherently distasteful to most people.
- Most people are not ambitious, have little desire
for responsibility, and prefer to be directed. - Most people have little capacity for creativity
in solving organizational problems. - Motivation occurs only at the physiological and
safety levels. - Most people must be closely controlled and often
coerced to achieve organizational objectives.
- Work is as natural as play, if the conditions are
favorable. - Self-control is often indispensable in achieving
organizational goals. - The capacity for creativity in solving
organizational problems is widely distributed in
the population. - Motivation occurs at the social, esteem, and
self-actualization levels, as well as
physiological and security levels. - People can be self-directed and creative at work
if properly motivated.
18Frederick Herzberg (1923-2000)
- His research emphasized job enrichment (depth)
rather than job enlargement - Job context (hygiene factors) needed to be
optimal to prevent job dissatisfaction. These
factors (according to Herzberg) did not motivate. - Job content (motivators) factors that did lead
to motivation - Money (according to Herzberg) could motivate if
it was seen as a reward for accomplishment but
if money was given without regard for merit, then
it was a hygiene factor.
Frederick Herzberg
19Motivation and Hygiene Factors
HYGIENE FACTORS ENVIRONMENT
MOTIVATORS WHAT THEY DO
Achievement Recognition for Accomplishment Challen
ging Work Increased Responsibility Growth and
Development
Policies and Administration Supervision Working
Conditions Interpersonal Relations Money, Status,
Security
20Herzbergs Two-Factor Theory
Intrinsic factors
Extrinsic factors
Factors within the job context
Factors within the job content
- Achievement
- Increased responsibility
- Recognition
- Pay
- Status
- Working conditions
Dissatisfiers Hygiene factors
Satisfiers Motivators
21Traditional and Herzberg Views of Satisfaction -
Dissatisfaction
I. TRADITIONAL
High job satisfaction
High job dissatisfaction
II. HERZBERGS TWO-FACTOR VIEW
High job satisfaction
Low job satisfaction
- Motivators
- Feeling of achievement
- Meaningful work
- Opportunities for advancement
- Increased responsibility
- Recognition
- Opportunities for growth
Low job dissatisfaction
High job dissatisfaction
- Hygienes
- Pay
- Status
- Job security
- Working conditions
- Fringe benefits
- Policies and procedures
- Interpersonal relations
22Frederick Herzberg
23Motivation and Hygiene Factors
THE JOB SURROUNDINGS AND THE HYGIENE FACTORS
SUPERVISION
WORKING CONDITIONS
RESPONSIBILITY
ACHIEVEMENT
BENEFITS
THE JOB ITSELF AND THE MOTIVATOR FACTORS
COMPANY POLICY AND ADMINIS- TRATION
INTER- PERSONAL RELATION- SHIPS
WORK ITSELF
RECOGNITION
GROWTH
ADVANCEMENT
SECURITY
STATUS
SALARY
24A Comparison of the Content Theories
Maslow (need hierarchy) Self-actualization Este
em Belongingness, social, and love Safety
and security Physiological
- Herzberg
- (two-factor theory)
- The work itself
- Responsibility
- Advancement
- Growth
- Achievement
- Recognition
- Quality of inter-
- personal relations
- among peers, with
- supervisors, with
- subordinates
- Job security
Alderfer Growth Relatedness Existe
nce
McClelland Need for achievement Need
for power Need for affiliation
Higher order needs
Motivators
Hygiene conditions
Basic needs
25Work Design
- Richard Hackman, Edward Lawler, and Greg Oldhams
work extended Herzbergs notions by adding a
situational (it depends) dimension - Key job characteristics
- Depending on an individuals growth-need
strength, these characteristics could be
amplified to make the job more meaningful. -
26Job Characteristics Model
Outcomes (Personal and Work)
Critical Psychological State
Core Job Characteristics
Skill Variety Task Identity Task Significance
Meaningfulness of Work
High Internal Work Motivation High Quality Work
Performance High Satisfaction with Work Low
Absenteeism and Turnover
Responsibility for Outcomes
Autonomy
Knowledge of Results of Work
Feedback About Job
Employee Growth Need
27Motivation Expectancy Theory Victor Vroom
- The expectancy theory of Victor Vroom helps
explain the choosing process among individuals in
terms of the value (valence) of the reward and
the expectancy of receiving the reward.
Victor Vroom
28Expectancy Theory
29Expectancy Theory
- Lyman Porter and Edward Lawler extended Vrooms
work with their model of expectancy.
30Expectancy Theory (Lyman W. Porter Edward E.
Lawler III)
Revised Diagram of the Theoretical Model
SOURCE Managerial Attitudes and Performance,
1968, Richard D. Irwin Inc.
31Principles of Expectancy Theory
- V1 S(V2 x I)
- The valence associated with various first-level
outcomes is a sum of the multiplication of the
valences (V2) attached to all second-level
outcomes with their respective instrumentalities
(I) - M f(V1 x E)
- Motivation is a multiplicative function of the
valence for each first-level outcome (V1) and the
perceived expectancy (E) that a given behavior
will be followed by a particular first-level
outcome - P f(M x A)
- Performance is considered to be a multiplicative
function of motivation (the force) and ability
32Process Theories of MotivationExpectancy Theory
(continued)
- Management practices
- Managers need to focus on employee expectations
for success. - Managers must actively determine which
second-level outcomes are important to employees. - Managers should link desired second-level
outcomes to the organizations performance goals.
33Expectancy Theory Example
Valences of second- level outcomes (in
parentheses)
Instrumentalities (how much performance outcome
and second-level outcome are associated
Performance outcome (valences x instrumentalities)
Expectancy (probability of performance
given effort)
Day off (6)
0.6
Finishing budget on time (6.9)
Recognition/compliment from boss (3)
1.0
Mention of performance in personnel record (1)
0.3
0.4
2.76
Day off (6)
0.2
Finishing budget on required day but after
deadline (3.2)
Recognition/compliment from boss (3)
Motivation
0.7
0.7
2.24
Mention of performance in personnel record (1)
-0.1
1.0
.20
Day off (6)
0.0
Finishing budget on day after deadline (.20)
Recognition/compliment from boss (3)
0.2
Mention of performance in personnel record (1)
-0.4
34Equity Theory
- Equity theory is not a new one but focuses on how
individuals perceive their reward or pay compared
to what others are receiving. - Issues of social justice and distributive justice
are involved in the theories of Stacy Adams and
Elliot Jaques.
Elliot Jacques
35Process Theories of MotivationEquity Theory
- Employees compare their efforts and rewards with
those of others in similar work situations. - Individuals, who work in exchange for rewards
from the organization, are motivated by a desire
to be equitably treated at work. - Equity exists when employees perceive that the
ratios of their inputs (efforts) to their
outcomes (rewards) are equivalent to the ratios
of other similar employees. - Inequity exists when these ratios are not
equivalent.
36The Equity Theory of Motivation
OP ORP IP IRP
Compares his/her input/outcome ratio to reference
persons (RP) inputs (I) and outcomes (O)
A person (P) with certain inputs (I) and
receiving certain outcomes (O)
equity
and perceives
or
inequity
OP ORP IP IRP
lt
or
OP ORP IP IRP
inequity
gt
IP Inputs of the person OP Outcomes of the
person IRP Inputs of reference person ORP
Outcomes of reference person
37Managing Across Cultures
- Geert Hofstede (1928 - ) describes cultural
differences in different countries. - Individualism vs. collectivism (group
orientation) - Power Distance The level of preference for
equality or inequality within groups - Uncertainty avoidance The preference for risk
vs. structure. - Masculinity (assertiveness) vs. femininity
(tender values). - Long term vs. Short term orientation.
Geert Hofstede Courtesy of Prof. Hofstede
38Last Thoughts from Peter Drucker
- I would hope that American managersindeed,
managers worldwidecontinue to appreciate what I
have been saying almost since day one that
management is so much more than exercising rank
and privilege its so much more than making
deals. Management affects people and their
lives, both in business and in many other aspects
as well. The practice of management deservers our
utmost attention it deserves to be studied