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Title: ETM5221 Engineering Teaming: Application and Execution


1
ETM5221 Engineering Teaming Application and
Execution
  • Nicholas C. Romano, Jr.Nicholas-Romano_at_mstm.oksta
    te.eduPaul E. Rosslerprossle_at_okstate.edu

2
Week 5 April 30, 2002Motivation and Reward
3
Team Development The skills of effective team-work
REF Team Handbook
4
Some basic premises underlying work motivation
and reward
  • Managers often get what they assume about
    employees
  • The way out often leads back in
  • Most people are rational, acting in ways that
    they find rewarding and avoiding those they dont
  • The good (and bad) news is that reward systems
    work

5
Some basic difficulties with rewards
  • People arent pigeons
  • Can have a punitive effect
  • Powerful forces can run counter to managements
    intentions
  • Provide a poor substitute for better management
  • Motivate people to get rewards
  • Can undermine interest in task itself

6
An overall reward strategy
Intrinsic
Career - Growth - Development - Opportunities -
Security
Job Content - Buy in of results - Level of
responsibility - Meaningful work - Feedback
Environment - Culture - Balance work/life -
Relationships
Direct Financial - Base Salary -Variable pay -
short-term/long-term - Support programs
Indirect Financial - Benefits - Awards - Support
programs
Extrinsic
7
Incentives for knowledge sharing
Rewards
Financial rewards
Hard
Career advancement/security as reward
Soft
Access to information and knowledge as reward
8
Incentives for knowledge sharing
Rewards
Hard
Enhanced reputation as reward
Gratitude Flattery Recognition Cross-hierarchy
alliances Positive results of altruism
Soft
Personal satisfaction as reward
9
Merit pay incentives for professionals
  • Traditional Merit Pay Characteristics
  • merit pay granted as higher base salary (a raise)
  • usually based on individual performance only
  • New Merit Pay Characteristics
  • merit pay awarded as lump sum once per year (NOT
    a raise)
  • merit pay tied to both individual and
    organizational performance

10
Team Incentive Plan
  • Compensation plan where all team members receive
    an incentive bonus payment when production or
    service standards are met or exceeded

11
Gainsharing Plans
  • Programs under which both employees and
  • the organization share the financial gains
  • according to a predetermined formula
  • that reflects improved productivity
  • and profitability

12
Type of Monetary Rewards
Variable Programs Base Programs
Team-Based
Individual-Based
Market Based
Individual Incentives
13
Why do rewards (sometimes) fail to motivate?
  • Too much emphasis on monetary rewards
  • Rewards lack an appreciation effect
  • Extensive benefits become entitlements
  • Counterproductive behavior is rewarded
  • Too long a delay between performance and rewards

14
Why do rewards (sometimes) fail to motivate?
(contd.)
  • Too many one-size-fits-all rewards
  • Use of one-shot rewards with a short-lived
    motivational impact
  • Continued use of de-motivating practices such as
    layoffs, across-the-board raises and cuts, and
    excessive executive compensation

15
  • Yet when what management does is seen to some
    degree as dishonest, as forcing people to make
    difficult choices in favor of company goals, and
    as the creation of games which must be played to
    get ones reward, what is going on probably
    captures many of the meanings of manipulation.
    It seems likely that there exists a significant
    group of people who resent being motivated,
    resent being put on incentive. and resent what
    they see as treatment for laboratory rats in a
    maze.

Source William T. Morris, Work Your
Future Living Poorer, Working Harder, 1975, p.
127
16
Two primary theories
Reinforcement
Expectancy
  • Behaviors occur due to experience in
    reinforcement and objective measurement of value
    of past rewards
  • Adjusts behaviors due to anticipation and
    subjective weighing of future rewards

17
Motivation Theory in a nutshell
Force to perform f(VIE or Needs or Inequity or
Consequence)
Expectancy
Instrumentality
Valence
Performance
Outcome
Effort
Behaviorism
My Outcomes My Inputs
Others Outcomes Others Inputs

18
Value Exchange Theory suggests a balance is
needed
Benefits
Career
Job
Compensation
Opportunity
Employee or Team Member Gives
Employer or Team Gives
19
Performance vs. Payout
Performance
High
Low
High
Overpaying Who designed this?!
Ideal Worth the investment
Payout
Underachieving Something is not working
Unstable Value Exchange Issue
Low
20
Motivation theory recap
  • Satisfaction with a reward is a function of both
    how much is received and how much the individual
    feels should be received
  • An individuals feelings of satisfaction are
    influenced by comparisons of what happens to
    others
  • Satisfaction is influenced by how satisfied
    employees are with both intrinsic and extrinsic
    rewards

21
Motivation theory recap (contd.)
  • People differ in the reward they desire and in
    the relative importance different rewards have
    for them
  • Some extrinsic rewards are satisfying because
    they lead to other rewards
  • Rewards must be valued and must be related to a
    specific level of job performance

22
People looking at people working
  • Many managers consider themselves to be already
    working to their full potential
  • Working people are seen as bored with and
    alienated from work, not working to their full
    potential, not caring . . .
  • This leads to a searching for ways to get working
    people to work harder and smarter
  • Popular approaches include job enrichment,
    involvement, training, reward

23
Some questionable assumptions
  • Job satisfaction drives productivity and
    performance
  • Most people want job enrichment, involvement
  • People can readily and easily change their
    attitudes and behaviors
  • People are alike in their wants, needs, and
    responses
  • Work is a central dimension
  • Managements job is to motivate

24
Job satisfaction drives productivity?
  • . . . the relationship is vague, ambiguous, and
    too weak to be useful.
  • Participations correlation with performance and
    satisfaction ranges from .08 to .25 (about 6
    variance explained

Source William T. Morris, Work Your Future
Living Poorer, Working Harder, 1975, p. 129
Source John Wagner III, Participations effects
on performance and satisfaction A
reconsideration of research evidence, Academy of
Management Review, Vol. 19, No. 2, 312-330.
25
All knotted up and intertwined
  • The behavior of working people . . . is an
    extremely complex phenomenon. It depends on a
    great many things which vary from the physical
    design of the task to the ideals and aspirations
    of the individual . . .

Source William T. Morris, Work Your
Future Living Poorer, Working Harder, 1975, p.
116-117
26
Most people want job enrichment, involvement
  • If most working people wanted their jobs
    enriched, they would be asking for it, and unions
    would be negotiating for it
  • Experience suggests only 15 of the work force
    responds well to this strategy

27
Most people want job enrichment, involvement
(contd.)
  • Some workers clearly prefer the simplicity of a
    repetitive task
  • Many more people exist than we may care to
    acknowledge who are well-motivated, highly
    productive, and satisfied in a regimented,
    autocratic setting.

28
Most people want job enrichment, involvement
(contd.)
  • Most job enrichment programs create enlarged
    jobs, not enriched ones
  • Base pay oftentimes remains unchanged
  • Technology limits many jobs enrichment or
    involvement potential
  • If involvement is situational, many managers seem
    unable to easily shift from one management style
    to another

29
Most people want job enrichment, involvement
(contd.)
  • Involvement might take more energy than most
    people are willing to spend, at least in their
    work environments.
  • Unanswered question is whether a significant
    percentage of the work force wants to participate
    long-term
  • Past the novelty of doing so

30
As for the Japanese
  • In its broad definition participation, is not
    practiced in Japan because Japanese culture
    itself precludes it

Source Richard Mazzini, Unexpected lessons from
visiting a Japanese company, Journal of
Management Inquiry, Vol. 1, No. 3, 214-219.
31
What about the experiments, the Greenfield plants?
  • Employee involvement experiments seem to follow
    the Hawthorne experience
  • They rarely involve the majority of working
    people throughout their life cycle.
  • Greenfield plants appear to be a possible
    exception
  • But their selection and placement processes
    screen out a great many.
  • And, many who do fit find their new working
    arrangement far from utopian.

32
People are alike in their wants, needs, and
responses
  • We are a very long way from freeing ourselves
    from this systematic ignoring of individual
    differences. It is a model of working behavior
    which has a powerful appeal so powerful in fact
    that we tend to ignore the unhappy result. It
    simply doesnt work very well.

Source William T. Morris, Work Your
Future Living Poorer, Working Harder, 1975, p.
109
33
  • they assumed that, unlike the rest of the human
    race, working people were fairly clear in knowing
    what they wanted, would be willing to make an
    effort to get what they said they wanted, and
    would be happier if they succeeded.

Source William T. Morris, Work Your
Future Living Poorer, Working Harder, 1975, p.
111
34
The cultural background or context influences
responses
  • The cultural background of working people, the
    type of environment in which they live, the size
    of the work group in which they are a part all
    are clearly useful in predicting their response
    to work restructuring.

Source William T. Morris, Work Your
Future Living Poorer, Working Harder, 1975, p.
111
35
People easily and readily change attitudes and
behaviors
  • It is sufficiently difficult . . .to interest
    people in working harder, but it has often been
    done. It is much more difficult to interest
    people in working smarter, and this has seldom
    been done.

Source William T. Morris, Work Your
Future Living Poorer, Working Harder, 1975, p.
148
36
Work is the central dimension of most peoples
lives
  •  There is little evidence that working people,
    beyond the special few, find fulfillment in their
    work. Indeed, it has been suggested that they
    are able to remain mentally healthy only because
    they refuse to get overly involved in work which
    simply cannot be rewarding intrinsically, or
    self-actualizing. They are willing to work for
    other reasons, but letting work become a central
    aspect of their mental well-being just doesnt
    make sense to them.

(Source William Morris, Work Your
Future Living Poorer, Working Harder, 1975, p.
114)
37
  • The belief that we can get people interested in
    improving their own productivity is a very
    dubious one indeed, at least below the
    supervisory levelFrom the working persons point
    of view, increasing productivityis simply
    inconsistent with the adversary relationship

(Source William Morris, Work Your
Future Living Poorer, Working Harder, 1975, p.
126)
38
Managements job is to motivate
  • We have told ourselves for so long that one of
    the basic functions of management is to motivate
    people that . . . if it became clear that the
    reason some working people respond in the wrong
    way to management strategies is because they do
    not want to be motivated . . . by whatever
    system of rewards . . . managers decide to
    invent.

Source William T. Morris, Work Your
Future Living Poorer, Working Harder, 1975, p.
128
39
The cultural basis of teams
  • Information must be used for self-control and
    improvement, not punishment or micro-management
  • Authority must be equal to responsibility
  • Equitable compensation and equitable rewards for
    results must be available

Adapted from Sashkin, M. and K.J. Kiser, Putting
Total Quality Management to Work. 1993, San
Francisco Berrett-Kohler.
40
Cultural basis (contd.)
  • Cooperation, not competition, must be the basis
    for working together
  • Team members must know their jobs are secure, not
    easily or readily discarded at a moments notice
  • A climate of fairness as demonstrated by such
    things as trust, respect, integrity, and clear
    expectations must exist

41
Unfortunately, many teams operate in or under
  • Individual appraisal and reward systems that
    foster competitiveness
  • Decision processes that undermine authority
  • Lean and mean staffing strategies that erode a
    sense of security, ownership, and create a sense
    of inequity
  • Intense cost and time pressure that encourages
    making minimal commitments and cutting corners

42
In other words, management rewards A and hopes
for B
43
Common problems with feedback
  • Feedback is used to punish, embarrass, or put
    someone down
  • Those receiving the feedback see it as irrelevant
    to their work
  • Feedback information is provided too late to do
    any good

44
Six common problems with feedback (contd.)
  • People receiving feedback believe it relates to
    matters beyond their control
  • Employees complain about wasting too much time
    collecting and recording the data
  • Recipients complain about feedback being too
    complex or difficult to understand

45
Some tips forgiving good feedback
  • Relate feedback to existing performance goals and
    clear expectations
  • Give specific feedback tied to observable
    behavior or measurable results
  • Channel feedback toward key result areas
  • Give feedback as soon as possible

46
Some tips forgiving good feedback (contd.)
  • Give positive feedback for improvement, not just
    final results
  • Focus feedback on performance, not personalities
  • Base feedback on accurate and credible information

47
Individual appraisal or team appraisal or both?
  • Individual level appraisal helps reduce social
    loafing
  • But ignores interaction and synergy that
    characterize excellent team performance
  • Team performance assessment provides information
    helps to identify problems, develop capabilities,
    and create joint accountability

48
Other key questions
  • What is rated?
  • Behavior, competency, outcome, or all three?
  • Who provides the rating?
  • Manager, project leaders, team leader, other team
    members, customers, self, coworkers
  • How is the rating used?
  • Development, evaluation, self-regulation
    (self-control)

49
Performance appraisal methods for types of teams
50
Evaluation alternatives
  • Forced distribution - 10 receive an A, 40 B,
    40 C, 10 D
  • Norm-based
  • Criterion-based
  • Benchmark-based

51
Evaluation Alternatives (continued)
  1. Negotiated- Establish goals that, if
    accomplished, earn a high rating
  2. Team-based - Each team member receives rating
    assigned to team
  3. Individual-based in team environment Each team
    member receives rating based on individual
    performance

52
Evaluation Alternatives (contd.)
  1. Trait-based Rating based on exhibiting certain
    traits such as hard working
  2. Non-judgmental - Everyone receives a high (or
    medium or low) rating
  3. Participative Team members determine other team
    members ratings
  4. Open Individual ratings and pay are publicly
    posted

53
Increasing the probability that pay for
performance works
  • Make pay for performance an integral part of the
    organizations basic strategy
  • Base incentive determinations on objective
    performance data
  • Have all employees actively participate in the
    development, implementation, and revision of the
    performance-pay formulas

54
Increasing the probability that pay for
performance works (contd.)
  • Encourage two-way communication so problems with
    the pay-for-performance plan will be detected
    early
  • Build the pay-for-performance plan around
    participative structures

55
Increasing the probability that pay for
performance works (contd.)
  • Reward teamwork and cooperation whenever possible
  • Actively sell the plan to supervisors and middle
    managers who may view employee participation as a
    threat to their traditional notion of authority
  • If annual cash bonuses are granted, pay them in a
    lump sum to maximize their motivational impact

56
Increasing the probability that pay for
performance works (contd.)
  • Remember that money motivates when it comes in
    significant amounts, not occasional nickels and
    dimes

57
How to increase the probability that team-based
pay works
  • Prepare employees with interpersonal skills
    training
  • Dont introduce team-pay until teams are running
    smoothly.
  • Blend individual and team incentives
  • Start by rewarding teamwork behaviors and then
    evolve to incentives for team results
  • Make sure each team member has a clear line of
    sight to key team results

58
Link rewards to incentives
  • What gets rewarded gets measured
  • Rewards incentives systems focus on company
    goals objectives
  • Eg., Customer satisfaction, Improved quality
  • Employees encouraged to excel when
    rewards/incentives consistent w/measures
  • Quantify performance before implementing
    rewards/incentives program

59
A warning
  • The weakness of simple explanations and the
    general failure of simplistic strategies for
    increasing productivity present an overwhelming
    array of data to which it is time we attended . .
    . The simple, effective, easily formulated
    approach is not a very likely prospect, and the
    related data says this quite strongly. Human
    behavior in work situations is an extremely
    involved affair, and the best strategy is to be
    highly suspicious of the simple strategy.

Source William T. Morris, Work Your
Future Living Poorer, Working Harder, 1975, p.
116-117
60
A delicate matter and difficult challenge
excepting in rare instances, the difficulties
of securing the means of offering incentives, of
avoiding conflicts of incentives, and of making
effective persuasive efforts, are inherently
great and that the determination of the precise
combination of incentives and of persuasion that
will be both effective and feasible is a matter
of great delicacy. Indeed, it is so delicate and
complex that rarely, if ever, is the scheme of
incentives determinable in advance of
application, It can only evolve(Chester Barnard,
The Functions of the Executive, p. 158)
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