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Motivating Employees To Improve Job Performance

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Motivating Employees To Improve Job Performance EMPLOYEE MOTIVATION (Book Definitions) Motivation: the psychological process that gives behavior purpose and direction. – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Motivating Employees To Improve Job Performance


1
Chapter 13
  • Motivating Employees To Improve Job Performance

2
EMPLOYEE MOTIVATION(Book Definitions)
  • Motivation the psychological process that gives
    behavior purpose and direction.
  • Alternative Definition
  • Motivation is an inner drive that directs
    individuals behavior towards goals.

3
EMPLOYEE MOTIVATION (continued)
  • Factors to Consider In the Motivation Job
    Performance Linkage
  • Individual motivational factors (Needs,
    satisfaction, expectations, goals)
  • Individual ability to get the job done
  • (Depends on availability of resources and
    capability of employees)
  • Its a waste of time trying to motivate workers if
    they dont have tools and capabilities.

4
EMPLOYEE MOTIVATION (continued)
  • Some situations dont make it easy to motivate
    people
  • Situational factors that help motivate - see
    below
  • Challenging and interesting work
  • Opportunity for participation and self management
  • Desired rewards

5
EMPLOYEE MOTIVATION (continued)
  • For Discussion Which of these factors has
    overriding importance in your worklife? Why?

6
Chapter Outline
  • I. Motivation Theories
  • Maslows Need Hierarchy Theory
  • Herzbergs Two-Factor Theory
  • Expectancy Theory
  • Goal-Setting Theory

7
MASLOWS NEEDS HIERARCHY THEORY
  • Maslows message was simply this people always
    have needs, and when one need is relatively
    fulfilled, others emerge in a predictable
    sequence to take its place.
  • (Preponent need is most motivating)

8
MASLOWS NEEDS HIERARCHY THEORY(continued)
  • Highest level
  • Self-actualization needs (being everything one is
    capable of becoming)
  • Esteem needs (Self-respect self-confidence)
  • Love needs (Social acceptance and affection)
  • Safety needs (Protection from the elements)
  • Physiological needs (Life-sustaining needs)
  • Lowest level
  • (Forms a pyramid of needs)

9
Maslows Hierarchy of Needs Theory
Source Data for diagram drawn from A. H. Maslow,
A Theory of Human Motivation, Psychological
Review, 50 (July 1943) 370-396.
10
MASLOWS NEEDS HIERARCHY THEORY(continued)
  • For Discussion Which level of needs primarily
    drives you at this point in your life? Explain.

11
HERZBERGS TWO-FACTOR THEORY OF
MOTIVATION(Satisfaction Motivation)
  • The elimination of dissatisfaction is not the
    same as truly motivating an employee. To satisfy
    and motivate employees, an additional element is
    required meaningful, interesting, and
    challenging work.

12
HERZBERGS TWO-FACTOR THEORY OF
MOTIVATION(Satisfaction Motivation)(continued)
  • Dissatisfiers come from the job context or
    situation
  • ( Money, fellow workers, superiors, etc.)
  • Satisfiers come from job content or the work
    itself
  • Achievement
  • Recognition
  • Work itself
  • Responsibility
  • Advancement
  • Growth

13
HERZBERGS TWO-FACTOR THEORY OF
MOTIVATION(Satisfaction Motivation)(continued)
  • For Discussion
  • 1. Describe the worst job you ever had. What
    roles did Herzbergs dissatisfiers and satisfiers
    play?
  • 2. Describe the best job you ever had. What
    roles did Herzbergs dissatisfiers and satisfiers
    play?

14
EXPECTANCY THEORY OF MOTIVATION
  • Expectancy theory assumes motivational strength
    is determined by perceived probabilities of
    success.
  • Expectancy ones belief or expectation that one
    thing will lead to another.

15
EXPECTANCY THEORY OF MOTIVATION(continued)
  • Three Key Perceptions in Expectancy Theory
  • 1. Perceived effort-performance probability
    (expectancy) - You have the tools and are capable
  • 2. Perceived value of rewards. (valence) - You
    value the reward
  • 3. Perceived performance-reward probability
    (instrumentality) - oragnziation recognizes
    youre doing a good job and gives you reward

16
A Basic Expectancy Model
17
Expectancy Equation
  • Expectancy Probability Xs Instrumentality
    Probability Xs Valence of Reward
    Motivational Force
  • For example
  • .4 x .3 x 3 .36 Motivational force
  • Expectacy Ranges from 0.0 to 1.0
  • Instrumentality Ranges from 0.0 to 1.0
  • Valence or Value of reward can be some number
    like plus or minus 10 where plus 10 is best
    reward you can think of and -10 is worst
    punishment you can think of.

18
Another way to get people motivated is found in
GOAL-SETTING THEORY
  • Goal setting process of improving individual or
    group job performance with formally stated
    objectives, deadlines, or quality standards.

19
GOAL-SETTING THEORY
  • How Goals Improve Performance
  • 1. Goals need to be
  • Specific
  • Difficult
  • Participatively set
  • 2. Goals motivate by
  • Directing attention
  • Encouraging effort
  • Encouraging persistence
  • Fostering goal-attainment strategies and
    action plans

20
A Model of How Goals Can Improve Performance
21
GOAL-SETTING THEORY(continued)
  • For Discussion
  • Goal-setting to just do your best. How do you
    interpret this advise in light of the model in?
  • How do you use goals to improve your performance
    at school, at work, in sports, or elsewhere?
    (Give a specific goal you have on grades on
    teams.?

researchers say it is a mistake to tell someone
22
Personal and Social Equity Theory of how people
are motivated
23
Chapter Outline (continued)
  • II. Motivation Through Job Design
  • Strategy One Fitting People to Jobs
  • Strategy Two Fitting Jobs to People

24
JOB DESIGN
  • Job design creating task responsibilities based
    upon strategy, technology, and structure.
  • Your limited as to how you can design a job by
    the organizations strategy.

25
JOB DESIGN - LIMITS
  • Technology may require more or less expertise -
    or may cause you to have to survive in a bad
    environment (oil rig)
  • Organizational structure can effect job design
    (large sales territory sparsely settled
    territory, makes you travel a lot.)

26
JOB DESIGN(continued)
  • Strategy One Fitting People to Jobs
  • Realistic job previews (you have to fit this
    job even when its bad)
  • Job rotation
  • Limited exposure
  • Contingent time off rewarding people with early
    time off when they get the job done.
  • ( Productivity quality often go up - people can
    earn time off.)

27
JOB DESIGN(continued)
  • Strategy Two Fitting Jobs to People
  • Job enlargement combining two or more
    specialized tasks to increase motivation. (Also
    called horizontal job loading.)
  • Job enrichment redesigning jobs to increase
    their motivating potential. (Also called
    vertical job loading.)

28
JOB DESIGN(continued)
  • For Discussion Describe your present (or past)
    job and explain how it could be horizontally or
    vertically loaded.

29
Strategy Two FITTING JOBS TO PEOPLEUse various
types of JOB ENRICHMENT
  • Comprehensive rebuilding of jobs using the Job
    Characteristics model.
  • Core Job Characteristics
  • Skill variety
  • Task identity
  • Task significance
  • Autonomy
  • Feedback from job

30
JOB ENRICHMENT(continued)
  • Critical Psychological States
  • Feeling that work is meaningful
  • Feeling of responsibility for outcomes
  • of the work
  • Knowledge of the actual results of the
  • work

31
JOB ENRICHMENT(continued)
  • Team Exercise Brainstorm the perfect job a
    person could have and describe it in terms of the
    core job characteristics and critical
    psychological states. (Note You can build upon
    a job you have heard about or create an entirely
    new job.)

32
Chapter Outline(continued)
  • III. Motivation Through Rewards
  • Extrinsic Versus Intrinsic Rewards
  • Employee Compensation
  • Improving Performance with Extrinsic Rewards

33
MOTIVATION THROUGH REWARDS
  • Rewards the material and psychological payoffs
    for working.
  • Extrinsic rewards payoffs granted to the
    individual by other people (e.g., money,
    benefits, recognition, praise).
  • Intrinsic rewards self-granted and internally
    experienced payoffs (e.g., a sense of
    accomplishment).

34
MOTIVATION THROUGH REWARDS(continued)
  • Team Competition Brainstorm a list of as many
    workplace extrinsic rewards as possible in ten
    minutes.

35
MOTIVATION THROUGH REWARDS(continued)
  • For Discussion Describe a situation in which
    you got an intrinsic reward from working. What
    can managers do to foster situations like that?

36
MOTIVATION (Extrinsic Rewards)EMPLOYEE
COMPENSATION PLANS
  • Non-incentive
  • Hourly Wage
  • Annual salary
  • Incentive
  • Piece rate
  • Sales commission
  • Merit pay
  • Profit sharing
  • Gain sharing
  • Pay-for-knowledge
  • Stock options

37
EMPLOYEE COMPENSATION PLANS(continued)
  • Other
  • Cafeteria compensation (Life-cycle benefits)
  • Employees select their own benefits from a list.
  • What you pick changes as your stages of life
    change.

38
EMPLOYEE COMPENSATION PLANS(continued)
  • For Discussion
  • 1. From a managerial standpoint, which type of
    pay plan is best? Why?
  • 2. Which pay plan would you prefer? Why?

39
Chapter Outline(continued)
  • IV. Motivation Through Employee
    Participation
  • Quality Control Circles
  • Self-Managed Teams
  • Keys to Successful Employee Participation Programs

40
PARTICIPATIVE MANAGEMENT
  • Participative management the process of
    empowering employees to assume greater control of
    the workplace.
  • Quality control circles voluntary
    problem-solving groups committed to improving
    quality and reducing costs.
  • Self-managed teams high-performance teams that
    assume traditional managerial duties such as
    staffing and planning.

41
PARTICIPATIVE MANAGEMENT(continued)
  • Keys to Successful Employee Participation
    Programs
  • 1. A profit-sharing or gain-sharing plan.
  • 2. A long-term employment relationship with
  • good job security.
  • 3. A concerted effort to build and maintain
  • group cohesiveness.
  • 4. Protection of the individual employees
    rights.

42
PARTICIPATIVE MANAGEMENT(continued)
  • For Discussion Are these four factors a
    package deal, meaning could one or two missing
    factors ruin a participative management program?

43
Chapter Outline(continued)
  • V. Other Motivation Techniques for a Diverse
    Workforce
  • Flexible Work Schedules
  • Family Support Services
  • Sabbaticals

44
No Brainers on Motivating
  • Pick those with correct ability (HRM)
  • Give them tools and training (HRM, good Mgmt)
  • Have good evaluation system
  • Choose correct rewards (Maslow, Herzberg,
    Expectancy theory)
  • Be equitable (Equity theory
  • (effort/rewards of person1)(effort/rewards
    of person 2)
  • Design jobs well ( i.e. job characteristic model)

45
Individual Motivation and Job Performance
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