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Goal Setting in Leadership and Motivation

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May not provide for trust building and team building ... Team Building. Role Clarity (BOS) Measurement. 4/13/09. Pfeiffer. 10. Self-Management ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Goal Setting in Leadership and Motivation


1
Chapter 7 - Goal Setting in Leadership and
Motivation
  • Introduction
  • Goal-Setting Theory
  • Application of Goal Setting
  • Goal Commitment
  • Self-Management
  • Closing Remarks

2
Introduction
  • Motivation and Performance Appraisal Steps
  • Identify critical aspects of effective job
    performance
  • Recognize effective performance when it is
    demonstrated
  • Set specific performance goals
  • Ensure the perceived consequences of goal
    attainment are positive
  • Allow employees to participate in solving
    problems preventing goal attainment of concern to
    both the employees and the supervisor

3
Goal-Setting Theory
  • Does it matter?
  • Setting goals?
  • Difficulty?
  • Specific?
  • Incentives?
  • Why important?
  • Direct effect on what people think and do (focus
    attention,direction)
  • Regulate energy expenditure, if goal accepted
    (effort)
  • Directed effort over time (persistence)

4
Application of Goal Setting
  • Superordinate Goals (vision/mission/intent/challen
    ging goals attached)
  • Specific Challenging Goals
  • Goal setting and MBO
  • Cost-related vs. behavioral measures?
  • BOS
  • Need to be comprehensive (systematic job
    analysis)
  • Need to avoid rater errors (training of raters)
  • Need to consider judgmental errors on
    cost-related measures (other factors?)
  • Need to consider goal attainment only may affect
    long term performance adversely

5
Goal Commitment
  • Perceived Consequences
  • Reinforcer must be made contingent on the desired
    behavior
  • Employee must perceive the relationship between
    the desired behavior and the reinforcer
  • Reinforcer must be administered soon after the
    desired behavior has occurred
  • Reinforcer must be valued by the employee
  • Feedback Systems
  • Must be based on behaviors over which the
    employee has control
  • Must be provided on a frequent and immediate
    basis
  • Specific goals must be set in relation to the
    feedback

6
Goal Commitment Continued
  • Pay Linked to Performance Appraisal
  • Is a relatively objective and logical way to
    allocate financial rewards
  • It establishes a performance-reward contingency
    for employee
  • Links compensation and appraisal decisions
  • Communicates employees value to organization
  • Supported by most managers

7
Goal Commitment Continued
  • Pay Linked to Performance Appraisal
  • Problems?
  • May encourage avoidance of difficult goals
  • May not reflect total performance (BOS and
    content validity)
  • May over emphasize individual rather than team
    performance
  • May not provide for trust building and team
    building
  • May create dual role for supervisors (judge and
    coach)
  • May be difficult to measure (need for BOS)
  • Requires that large amounts of money be given and
    must be linked to performance
  • May diminish interest in the task, but depends on
    the way in which the rewards are used and the
    activities involved

8
Goal Commitment Continued
  • Pay Linked to Performance Appraisal
  • Summary
  • Must be desired or valued by employee
  • Must be tied to all important facets of the job
  • Employees must perceive that money is tied to
    performance
  • Amount must be seen by employees as worthy of
    their efforts
  • Must be given soon after desired behavior or
    outcome has been realized
  • Employees must trust management to be fair and
    equitable

9
Goal Commitment Continued
  • Modeling
  • Accessibility
  • Team Building
  • Role Clarity (BOS)
  • Measurement

10
Self-Management
  • Assess problems
  • Set specific difficult goals
  • Monitor ways in which the environment facilitates
    or hinders goal attainment
  • Identify and administer reinforcers and punishers

11
Closing Remarks
  • Goals provide people with a sense of purpose, if
    set in the context of organizational
    vision/mission/goals
  • Feedback is relation to the goals is essential,
    if accepted by people being appraised
  • Goals should take into account
  • Setting specific goals leads to higher
    performance, if
  • Participation in goal setting is important to the
    extent that it leads to the setting of higher
    goals, more so than
  • Given the employees commitment and ability, the
    higher the goal, the higher the performance, if
  • Performance feedback is critical, if
  • Appraisal on overall level of performance is
    important, rather than
  • There must be some latitude for the individual to
    influence performance
  • Employees must not feel threatened about losing
    their jobs
  • Is most effective when supervisors

12
So What??
13
Chapter 8 Effective Coaching The Interplay
Between Formal and Informal Appraisals
  • Introduction
  • Characteristics of Effective Appraisals
  • Three Approaches to Conducting Formal Appraisal
  • Administrative Versus Developmental Objectives
    An Ongoing Controversy
  • Informal Day-to-Day Coaching
  • Team-oriented Appraisals
  • Closing Remarks

14
Chapter 9 Letting People Go with Class
  • Introduction
  • Organizational Justice
  • Impression Management
  • Perceived Fairness in Performance Appraisal
  • Terminating the Employee
  • Closing Remarks
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