Title: Motivation in Organizations
1Chapter-4
- Motivation in Organizations
2Motivation
- a set of processes that arouse, direct and
maintain human behaviour toward attaining some
goal
3Components (fig 4.2)
- Arousal- drive or energy behind our actions
- Direction-choices that we make in pursuing some
goal - Maintaining- conditions that suggest continuance
of our actions
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5Key points
- Motivation and job performance are not
synonymous-motivation is one of the several
determinants of performance - Motivation is multifaceted-several motives may be
operative at the same time - People are motivated by more than just
money-goals, other than financial goals, are
operative at work
6Maslows Hierarchy of needs
- Theory specifying that there are five human
needs that are arranged so that lower level, more
basic needs must be satisfied before higher level
needs become activated(p137)
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8Maslows Hierarchy of Needs
- Deficiency needs- If these needs are not met
people will not develop either physically or
psychologically - Physiological Needs- biological drives such as
the need for food, air, water and shelter. - Safety Needs- need for a secure environment, free
from threats of physical or psychological harm - Social Needs-needs to be affliative,I.e., to have
friends and to be loved and accepted by other
people
9Maslows theory(continued)
- Growth Needs- gratification of these needs helps
a person to reach her/his full potential - Esteem Needs- need to develop self-respect and to
gain the approval of others. - Self-actualization needs- need to discover who we
are and to develop ourselves to our fullest
potential
10Maslows Theory
- Evaluation of the Theory- This theory has not
received much empirical support - other research has failed to confirm that there
are five categories of needs - needs do not have to be satisfied in the order
prescribed in the hierarchy
11Alderfers theory
- Asserts that there are three basic human needs
that are not necessarily activated in any
specific order - Existence needs- correspond to Maslows
physiological and safety needs - Relatedness needs- correspond to Maslows social
needs - Growth needs- corresponds to Maslow's esteem and
self actualization needs - Evaluation- fits better with research evidence
12Managerial Applications of Need Theory
- Makes sense to help people satisfy their
needs, especially if self actualization will
bring about greater creativity on the job
13Managerial Applications of Need Theory
- Promote a healthy work force- satisfy employees
physiological needs by providing incentives for
mental and physical health - Provide financial security- an important safety
need - go beyond traditional forms of compensation
- address issue of job security, including out
placement services - Promote opportunities to socialize- organize
events that help to satisfy social needs - Recognize employees accomplishments- award
programs satisfy esteem needs
14Goal Settings
- a process of determining specific levels of
performance for workers to attain - -one of the most important motivational forces in
organization
15Locke and Lathams Goal setting Theory
- Having a goal serves as a motivator because it
influence - peoples beliefs about their ability to perform
the task- Self Efficacy - the degree to which people invest themselves in
the task. - Goal commitment is determined by the extent to
which an individual desires to attain the goal
and believes that he has a reasonable chance of
doing so
16Managers Guidelines for setting Effective
Performance Goals
- Assign specific goals
- Assign difficult but acceptable Performance
goals - Provide feed back concerning goal attainment
17Assign specific goals
- People perform at higher levels when asked to
meet a specific, high-performance goal than when
asked simply to do your best or when no goal at
all is assigned - improve output, reduce absenteeism,
decrease accidents
18Assign difficult- but acceptable performance goal
- People will internalize the goal if it is
perceived as challenging but attainable - involve employees in goal setting process
19Provide feedback concerning goal attainment
- Inform individual about how closely s/he is
approaching the performance goal - without feedback, workers do their jobs blindly
20Motivating by being Fair
- Organizational justice- peoples perception of
fairness in organizations,consisting of
perceptions regarding how decisions are made
concerning the distribution of outcomes
21Motivating by being Fair
- Procedural Justice- focus is on the process used
to resource allocation decisions - Equity theory- focus is on the perceived fairness
of the outcomes themselves
22Two types of organizational justice
23Adams Equity Theory
- People strive to maintain a ratio of their own
outcomes(rewards) to their own inputs(contribution
s) equal to the outcome/input ratio of others
with whom they compare themselves
24Adams Equity Theory
- Outcomes-the rewards such as salary and
recognition, that employees receive from their
jobs - Inputs-peoples contributions to their jobs, such
as their experience, qualifications or amount of
time worked - outcome others outcome
- Input others input
25Overpayment inequity
- The condition ,resulting in feelings of guilt,
in which the ratio of ones outcomes to ones
input is more than the corresponding ratio of
comparison person - - individual may raise her inputs or lower his
outcomes - Outcomes gt Others outcome
- Input Input
26Underpayment inequity
- The condition,resulting in feelings of anger,
in which the ratio of ones outcomes to ones
input is less than the corresponding ratio of the
comparison person - -individual may decrease his/her inputs or
increase his/her outcomes - Outcome lt Others outcome
- Input Inputs
27Perceptual resolution of Inequity
- Change how you think about the situation
28Procedural justice
- Making decisions fairly
- For the outcomes to be fair, the procedures
must be fair
29Procedural justice
- Structural side of procedural justice-
determining how decisions need to be made for
them to be considered fair - give people a say in how decisions are made
- provide an opportunity for errors to be
corrected-appeal process - apply rules and policies consistently
- make decisions in an unbiased manner
30Procedural Justice
- Social side of procedural Justice- quality of
interpersonal treatment received at hands of
decision maker - Interactional Justice- perceived fairness of the
interpersonal treatment used to determine
organizational outcomes - -informational justification-thoroughness of the
information received about the decision - -social sensitivity-amount of dignity and respect
demonstrated when presenting an undesirable
outcome
31Motivating by Altering expectancies
- Expectancy theory- characterizes people as being
rational beings who think about what they must do
to be rewarded and how much that reward means to
them before they actually perform their jobs. - Basic elements-
- Expectancy
- Instrumentality
- valence
32Expectancy
- Belief that ones effort will influence ones
performance positively
33Instrumentality
- Beliefs regarding the likelihood of being
rewarded according to his/her own level of
performance
34Valence
- Value a person places on the rewards s/he expects
to receive from an organization
35Valence
- Valence- How much you desire an outcome?
- If you desire an outcome-positive valence
- If you dont like an outcome- negative valence
- If you are indifferent towards an outcome- Zero
valence
36Instrumentality
- Relation between performance and out come
- your perception of what level of performance
would lead to the out come
37Expectancy
- Relation between the effort you make for that
level of performance - How do you perceive the relation of how much
effort you need to put in for that level of
performance.
38Expectancy theory(contd)
- Combining all the three components- motivation is
a multiplicative function of the three elements - If any component is zero, overall level of
motivation is also zero
39Expectancy Theory (contd)
- Other determinants of job performance-
motivation is only one of several important
determinants - Skills and abilities-determine person-job-fit
- Role perceptions-what employees believe their
jobs duties to be - Opportunities- chance to perform the job
40Managerial Applications of Expectancy theory
- Clarify peoples expectancies that effort leads
to performance- train, make desired performance
attainable and help employee to attain level of
performance - Administer rewards with a positive valence-
carrot must be tasty. Cafeteria style benefit
plan- incentive system in which worker can select
fringe benefits s/he wants from a menu of
alternatives - Clearly link valued rewards and performance-
enhance beliefs about instrumentality by
specifying what behaviour leads to what rewards
41Motivating by Structuring Jobs to make them
Interesting
- Job enlargement-expansion of the content of a
job to include more tasks at the same level. - Does not increase responsibility nor skills
needed to do job-horizontal job loading - May help to improve job performance, but its
effect may not be lasting
42Job enrichment
- Gives employees a high degree of control over
their work, from planning and organization
through implementation and evaluation. - Employees determine how to do their jobs-
vertical job loading - although successful in many organizations,
popularity is limited by difficulty in
implementation and lack of employee acceptance
43Motivating by structuring jobs to make them
interesting
- Job characteristics model- affect motivation,
satisfaction and performance - Core dimensions
- Skill variety
- Task Identity
- Task significance
- Autonomy
- Feed back
44Core job Dimensions
- Skill Variety- extent to which a job requires
worker to use different skills and talents - Task Identity- extent to which an entire piece of
work is completed from the beginning to end - Task Significance- impact of job on others
- Autonomy-amount of discretion to do job as
desired - Feed back- information about performance
effectiveness
45Critical psychological states- beliefs engendered
by core dimensions
- Experienced meaningfulness-importance and value
of job - stems from skill variety, task identity and
significance - Personal responsibility and accountability- stems
from autonomy - Knowledge of results- stems from feedback
46Job characteristics Model
- Does the model apply to every one?model is
especially effective in describing behaviour of
people who are high in growth need strength - Putting it all together
- 1. Job Diagnostic Survey(JDS)- questionnaire used
to measure the core dimensions present in a given
job
47Putting it all together(contd)
- Motivating potential Score(MPS)- mathematical
index describing the degree to which a job is
designed to motivate people - MPS Skill varietytask identitytask
significance x autonomy x feedback - 3
- Evidence for the model-most empirical tests have
supported many aspects of the model
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