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Motivation and Reward Management

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Title: Motivation and Reward Management


1
Motivationand Reward Management
  • Kun András IstvánUniversity of Debrecen, Hungary
  • Faculty of Economics and Business Administration

2
The main question ishow to achieve high work
performance?
Work performance is affected by
  • Job characteristics and (physical) work
    environment
  • Abilities and skills
  • The willingness to perform

3
Misbeliefs on motivation
  • Motivation is the willingness to contribute to
    the oganisational goals
  • Motivation is a kind of ability
  • Motivation is connected directly to money
  • With motivation every job performance problem can
    be solved
  • Motivation depends on the employee

4
What is Motivation? (Robbins 2009)
  • The processes that account for an individuals
    intensity, direction and persistence of effort
    toward attaining a goal.
  • Intensity (effort) how hard a person tries
  • Direction what a person is trying to do (Is it
    one that benefits the organization?)
  • Persistence how long the effort is maintained

5
Motive and Motivation
MOTIVATION is a set of processes that moves a
person toward a goal. MOTIVE is a need or a want
that causes us to act (energises us).
Need Some internal state that makes certain
outcomes appear attractive.
6
Classic process of motivation
  • Effort a measure of intensity (how hard a person
    is trying)
  • The greater the tension, the greater the effort
    (Robbins)

7
Abilites, motivation and performance
  • ' A driving force within individuals by which
    they attempt to achieve some goal in order to
    fulfil some need or expectation' (Mullins, 1993)
  • Performance (a X m)
  • Job performance is a function of ability (a)
  • and motivation (m)

8
What is motivating?
  • Motivating others to have others doing efforts
    towards a goal. It usually means the
    sychronization of their goals or needs with the
    goals of the organisation.
  • Motivating ourselves setting the direction
    independently and then taking actions to ensure
    that we get there.

9
Source http//www.ineedmotivation.com/blog/wp-con
tent/uploads/2008/07/pp30580motivation-posters.jpg
10
Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation (Herzberg)
  • Intrinsic Motivation the source of motivation
    comes from inside the performer (from his/her
    beliefs, values, attitudes). Responsibility,
    autonomy etc.
  • Long-lasting effect (high persistency)
  • Extrinsic Motivation comes from outside of the
    performer. Money, promotion, coertion,
    punishment
  • Immediate and powerful, but usually not persistent

11
Intrinsic vs. Extrinsic Motivation (Lepper,
1988)
  • Intrinsic Motivation is when an individual takes
    on an activity
  • For its own sake
  • For the enjoyment it provides
  • For the knowledge gained
  • For the feelings of accomplishment it brings
  • Extrinsic Motivation is when an individual
    performs
  • In order to gain some kind of reward
  • In order to avoid some kind of punishment
    separate from the activity

12
Theories of motivation (Armstrong 2005)
  • Instrumentality theory rewards and punishments
    serve as the means of ensuring people behave in a
    desired way (operant conditioning Skinner
    taylorism).
  • Content (needs) theories explain the specific
    factors that motivate people (the content of
    motivation consists of needs). Not all needs are
    equally important at a given time, and goals and
    needs has a complex relationship). (Maslow,
    Herzberg?, McClelland?)
  • Process (cognitive) theories focuses on the
    psychological processes that affects motivation.
    (Expectancy, Goal, Equity theories)

13
Two ways of extrinsic motivation carrot and
stick
Source http//www.krishnade.com/blog/2010/drive/
14
Maslows Hierarchy of Needs
  • Five (later eight) major categories of needs
  • Applied generally
  • Hierarchy some needs are more fundamental than
    others.
  • A higher level of needs can be activated only if
    the below level is satisfied.
  • No level can be bypassed.
  • A level once satisfied looses its motivating
    power.

15
Maslows Hierarchy of Needs(original model)
16
Jekaterina Zenkova
17
Maslows hierarchy with 8 needs
Cognitive knowledge, meaning, to explore,self
awarenessAesthetic beauty, form, symmetry,
order.
Self-transcendence to connect to something
beyond the ego, or to help others find
self-fulfillment and realize their potential.
Self-trancendence
Self-actualization
Cognitive Needs
Aesthetic Needs
Esteem Needs
Social Needs
Safety Needs
Physiological Needs
18
Two-Factor Theory of Herzberg
(extrinsic)
(intrinsic)
Hygiene factors affectjob dissatisfaction
Motivator factors affectjob satisfaction
  • Quality of supervision
  • Pay
  • Company policies
  • Physical working conditions
  • Relations with others
  • Job security
  • Promotional opportunities
  • Opportunities for personal growth
  • Recognition
  • Responsibility
  • Achievement

High
High
Job Dissatisfaction
Job Satisfaction
0
19
Herzbergs Two-Factor Theory
  • Managers who seek to eliminate factors that can
    create job dissatisfaction may bring about peace
    but not necessarily motivation.
  • If a manager wants to motivate people on their
    jobs, she or he should emphasize factors
    associated with the work itself or outcomes
    directly derived from it.
  • Satisfaction and dissatisfaction are not related
    (not equal, nor opposite)
  • Managers should provide opportunities for
    employees to maximise the satisfiers (motivators)
  • Keep the Hygiene factors (demotivators) to a
    minimum
  • Underlies that both financial (hygiene) and
    non-financial (motivator) rewards should be
    provided.

20
Satisfiers Motivators Intrinsic Factors
Percentage frequency for factors affecting
extreme satisfaction (1,753 events)
21
Dissatisfaction Hygiene Extrisic Factors
Percentage frequency for factors affecting
extreme dissatisfaction (1,844 events)
22
McGregors Theory X and Theory Y
  • Theory X
  • Inherent dislike for work and will attempt to
    avoid it
  • Must be coerced, controlled or threatened with
    punishment
  • Will avoid responsibilities and seek formal
    direction
  • Place security above all factors and will display
    little ambition
  • Theory Y
  • View work as being as natural as rest or play
  • Will exercise self-direction and self-control if
    committed to objectives
  • Commitment to objectives is directly related to
    the rewards associated with their achievement
  • Can learn to accept, even seek, responsibility
  • Can make innovative decisions on their own

23
McClelland's Theory of Needs
  • Need for achievement (nAch) - drive to excel
  • Need for power (nPow) - the need to make others
    behave in a way they would not have behaved
    otherwise
  • Need for affiliation (nAff) - the desire for
    friendly and close interpersonal relationships

24
McClelland's Theory of Needs
  • High achievers prefer jobs with personal
    responsibility, feedback, and intermediate
    degree of risk.
  • High achievers are not necessarily good managers.
  • Affiliation and power closely related to
    managerial success
  • Employees can be trained to stimulate their
    achievement need.

25
What motivates a university student?(based on a
motivation concept by Hunt J. W.)
women
men
Comfort
Structu-red work
Personal relations
Respect, status
Power
Self-actualiza-tion
26
Expectancy Theory
27
Expectancy Theory
  • Effort-performance relationship
  • the probability perceived by the individual that
    exerting a given amount of effort will lead to
    performance.
  • Performance-reward relationship
  • the degree to which the individual believes that
    performing at a particular level will lead to the
    attainment of a desired outcome.
  • Reward-personal goals relationship
  • the degree to which organisational rewards
    satisfy an individuals personal goals or needs
    and the attractiveness of those potential rewards
    for the individual.

28
Simple Numeric Example on Expectancy Theory
  • Assumptions
  • A given project-work needs some effort
  • little effort has an opportunity cost of 100
  • great effort has an opportunity cost of 200
  • With little effort, the chance to be successful
    is 50, with great effort it is 80.
  • If the project succeeds, the company gives us a
    500 bonus, if it fails, we get nothing.
  • Our discount rate is 10 to the time of
    rewarding.
  • Is it any worth making a great effort (are we
    motivated)?
  • The expected present value of the greater effort
    0.8(500/1.1)-0.5 (500/1.1) 136.36
  • The motivation in terms of money
    136.36-10036.36

29
Goal-Setting Theory
  • Goal Setting Theory is based on people being
    motivated if they set their own targets
  • Specific goals lead to increased performance.
  • Difficult (but achievable) goals, when accepted,
    result in higher output than easy goals.
  • Self-generated feedback is a more powerful
    motivator than externally generated feedback.
  • Influences on goal-performance relationship
  • Commitment
  • Task characteristics
  • (National and/or organisational) culture

30
Management by Objectives (MBO)
  • Converts overall organizational objectives into
    specific objectives for work units and
    individuals
  • Common ingredients
  • Goal specificity
  • Participation in decision making
  • Explicit time period
  • Performance feedback

31
Equity Theory
  • People are better motivated if treated equitably
  • Employees weigh what they put into a job
    situation (input) against what they get from it
    (outcome).
  • Then they compare their input-outcome ratio with
    the input-outcome ratio of relevant others.

32
Possible inputs and outputs
  • INPUTS
  • Performance
  • Education
  • Organisational Level
  • Tenure/Seniority
  • Demographic features
  • OUTPUTS
  • Social Reward
  • Benefits
  • Recognition
  • Actual Pay
  • Perks

33
Equity Theory
34
Choices when perceived inequity
  1. Change their inputs
  2. Change their outcomes
  3. Distort perceptions of self
  4. Distort perceptions of others
  5. Choose a different referent
  6. Leave the field

35
Forms of justice
36
Expectancy-based Extended Model of Motivation
Porter and Lawler
37
Job satisfaction
  • The (individual) attitudes and feelings people
    have about their work. Positive and favourable
    attitudes towards the job indicate job
    satisfaction.
  • Morale a group variable related to the degree to
    which group members feel attracted to their group
    and desire to remain a member of it.

38
Factors affecting job satisfaction
  • Intrinsic and
  • extrinsic motivating factors,
  • Quality of supervision,
  • Social relationships within the workgroup,
  • Work performance.
  • Empirical findings (Purcell et al.)
  • career opportunities,
  • job influence,
  • teamwork,
  • job challenge.

39
Job satisfaction and performance
  • Common belief positive correlation
  • Empirical evidence no or very little correlation
  • High performace can produce job satisfaction, but
    job satisfaction is unlikely to produce high
    performance
  • Satisfied workers are not necessarily productive
    workers and productive workers are not
    necessarily satisfied ones.
  • BUT performance improvement can be achieved by
    giving people the opportunity to perform, and
    rewarding them according to their goals (needs).

40
Why then job satisfaction is important?
  • Motivation increases job performance,
  • Job satisfaction does not.
  • BUT
  • People want to be satisfied with their work, and
    if they are not satisfied,
  • they will leave the job, even if they are
    motivated to high performance.

41
Modifiers of satisfaction-performance relation
(Alan Wilson, Jacob Frimpong 2004)
42
The Job Characteristics Model
  • Proposes that any job can be described in terms
    of five core job dimensions
  • Skill variety
  • Task identity
  • Task significance
  • Autonomy
  • Feedback

43
The Job Characteristics Model
44
Motivating Potential Score (MPS)
Skill variety Task Identity Task significance
MPS
3
x Autonomy x Feedback
45
How can jobs be Redesigned?
  • Job Rotation or Cross-training the periodic
    shifting of an employee from one task to another
  • Job Enlargement increasing the number and
    variety of tasks
  • Job Enrichment increasing the degree to which
    the worker controls the planning, execution and
    evaluation of the work

46
Guidelines for Enriching a Job
47
Implications for Managers
  • Recognize individual differences
  • Use goals and feedback
  • Allow employees to participate in decisions that
    affect them
  • Link rewards to performance
  • Check the system for equity

48
Reward management
49
Rewarding Employees
  • Major strategic rewards decisions
  • What to pay employees
  • How to pay individual employees
  • What benefits to offer
  • How to construct employee recognition programs

50
What to pay
  • Need to establish a pay structure
  • Balance between
  • Internal equity the worth of the job to the
    organization
  • External equity the external competitiveness of
    an organizations pay relative to a pay elsewhere
    in its industry
  • A strategic decision with trade-offs

51
Definition of Reward Management
  • This management discipline is concerned with the
    formulation and implementation of strategies and
    policies, the purposes of which are to reward
    employees fairly, equitably and consistently in
    accordance with their value to the organisation.
  • It deals with design, implementation and
    maintenance of reward systems (processes,
    practices, procedures) that aim to meet the needs
    of both the organisation and its stakeholders.

52
Philosophy of Reward Management
  • Strategic sense long-term focus it must be
    derived from the business strategy
  • Total Reward approach considering all approaches
    of reward (financial or not) as a coherent whole
    integration with other HRM strategies
  • Differential reward according to the contribution
  • Fairness, equity, consistency, transparency

53
Economic theories (partially) explaining pay
levels
  • Supply and Demand labor market factors
  • Efficiency wage theory attraction of better
    employees, motivation, reducing fluctuation leads
    to high wages
  • Human Capital theory productivity differences
  • Principal Agent Theory inequality in the
    information leads to agency costs
  • The effort bargain collective bargaining

54
Total Reward (Armstrong 2009)
  • All types of reward
  • Non-financial as well as financial,
  • Indirect as well as direct,
  • Extrinsic as well as intrinsic.
  • Each element is developed, implemented and
    treated as an integrated and coherent whole.

55
Components of Total Reward (Armstrong 2009)
56
The 4Ps of Reward
  • Pay
  • Salary, bonus, shares, etc.
  • Praise
  • Positive feedback, commendation,
    staff-of-the-year award, etc.
  • Promotion
  • Status, career elevation, secondment, etc.
  • Punishment
  • Disciplinary action, withholding pay, or
    criticism, etc

57
Derivation of Total Reward
58
Strategic Reward Management
  • Where do we want our reward practices to be in a
    few years time? (vision)
  • How do we intend to get there? (means)

59
Reward Strategy
  • A declaration of intent that defines what the
    organisation wants to do in the longer term to
    develop and implement reward policies, practices
    and processes that will further the achievement
    of its business goals and meet the needs of the
    stakeholders.
  • It gives a framework to other elements of reward
    management.

60
The structure content of a Reward strategy
  • Environment analysis
  • Macro-level social, economical, demographic
  • Industrial level
  • Micro-level competitors
  • Analysis of the inner environment strategy,
    job evaluation, financial conditions
  • Gap-analysis
  • Guiding principles
  • Broad-bush reward strategy
  • Specific reward initiatives

61
Job-evaluation
  • A systematic process
  • For defining the relative worth/ size of jobs/
    roles within an organisation
  • For establishing internal relativities
  • For designing an equitable grade structure and
    grading jobs in the structure
  • To give an input for reward considerations

62
Dimensions of job evaluation
  • Relative or measured to an absolute scale
  • Relative compares jobs to one another within the
    company
  • Absolute compares to an independent, external
    measure
  • Analytical or non-analytical (global)
  • Analytical measures factors or elements of the
    jobs
  • Non-analytical measures the job as a whole

63
Types of Job Evaluation (Armstrong 2009)
Analytical job evaluation (point-factor rating or
analytical matching) decisions on the relative
value or size of jobs are based on an analysis of
the degree to which various defined elements or
factors are present in the form of demands on the
job holder
Non-analytical job evaluation (job classification
or ranking) whole jobs are described and
compared to slot them into a defined grade or
place them in a rank order or without analysing
them into their elements
Market pricing jobs are placed in pay
structures entirely on the basis of
external relativities, ie market rates (NB a
method of pricing jobs but not job evaluation as
usually defined)
64
Wage gaps
  • Wage gaps can occur in companies using
    international benchmarking in job evaluation. The
    cause is simple
  • The market of top managers is usually
    international they earn international wages, or
    they leave the firm
  • The market of workers with little or no
    qualification is local in (nearly) every case
    they earn local wages.
  • In poor countries this can lead to enermous wage
    gaps between the top and bottom employees.

65
Types of Job Evaluation
Non-analytical Evaluation Analytical Evaluation
Whole job ranking Points rating
Paired comparisons Proprietary schemes
Job classification
66
Job Evaluation Scoring (Armstrong 2009)
Factor Level 1 Level 2 Level 3 Level 4 Level 5 Level 6
Expertise 20 40 80 100 120
Decisions 20 40 60 100 120
Autonomy 20 40 80 100 120
Responsibility 20 40 80 100 120
Interpersonal skills 20 40 60 80 120
60
80
60
60
100
Total score 360
67
Components of Total Remuneration
  • Base pay Base pay is the fixed compensation paid
    to an employee for performing specific job
    responsibilities.  It is typically paid as a
    salary, hourly (or in some situations piece
    rate). There is a tendency towards market
    orientation and the increasing role of
    qualifications.
  • Contingent pay Individual contingent pay relates
    financial rewards to the
  • individual performance, organisation or team
    performance,
  • competence,
  • service,
  • contribution or
  • skill of individual employees.
  • Consolidated pay built into the base pay
  • Variable pay provided in the form of cash
    bonuses (increasing role nowadays).
  • Employee benefits Elements of remuneration given
    in addition to the various forms of cash pay.

68
Contingent pay
  • Individual contingent pay is a good motivator
    (but to what extent?) for those who receive it.
  • It attracts and retains better workers.
  • It makes labour related expenditures more
    flexible.
  • It can demotivate those who dont receive it
    (depends on performance measurement)
  • Can act against quality and teamwork.

69
Types of individual contingency pays
  • Performance-related increases basic pay or
    bonuses related to assessment of performance
  • Competence related Pay increases related to the
    level of competence
  • Contribution-related pay is related both to
    inputs and outputs
  • Skill-based pay is related to acquisition of
    skills
  • Service-related pay is related to service-time

70
Team based pay
  • Pay is related to team performance
  • It can encourages teamwork, loyalty and
    co-operation
  • It can be demotivating on individual level
    (encourages social loafing)

71
Organisaton-wide schemes
  • Profit-Sharing Plans organization-wide programs
    that distribute compensation based on an
    established formula designed around profitability
  • Gain Sharing compensation based on sharing of
    gains from improved productivity
  • Employee Stock Ownership Plans (ESOPs) plans in
    which employees acquire stock, often at
    below-market prices

72
Employee benefits
  • Attractive and competitive total remuneration
  • Provide for the personal needs
  • Increase commitment toward the organisation
  • Tax-efficient

73
Main types of Employee benefits
  • Pension schemes
  • Personal (and family) security different types
    of insurances
  • Financial assistance loans, house purchase
    schemes, discount on company services
  • Personal needs holidays, child care, recreation
    facilities, career breaks
  • Company cars and petrol
  • Intangible benfits quality of working life
  • Other benefits mobile phones, notebooks
  • Cafeteria systems

74
The Hungarian Three Pillar Pension System
  • First pillar Mandatory Tax-financed Public
    Universal Pension
  • Second Pillar Mandatory Private Pension Funds
  • Third pillar Funded Voluntary Pension
  • Health Insurane Funds
  • Tax allowance after expenditures on certain goods

75
Definition of the psychological contract
  • The perceptions of both parties to the
    employment relationship, organization and
    individual, of the reciprocal promises and
    obligations implied in that relationship
  • The state of the psychological contract is
    concerned with whether the promises and
    obligations have been met, whether they are fair
    and their implications for trust.

76
The Psychological Contract Framework (David Guest)
77
Total remuneration in recession
  • It a good chance to rethink and renew the
    remuneration system
  • Share of contingeny payment should increase
  • Empoyer benefits, that dont need short term
    expenditure will increase
  • Company car
  • Saturday-year (freetime)
  • Share-options

78
Thank you for your attention!
  • andras.kun_at_econ.unideb.hu
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