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Motivation Why Do People Do The Things They Do?

This document discusses several theories of motivation. It describes Maslow's hierarchy of needs theory which proposes that people are motivated to fulfill physiological, safety, social, esteem and self-actualization needs. It also discusses McGregor's Theory X and Theory Y assumptions about employee motivation, Herzberg's motivation-hygiene theory, and Alderfer's ERG theory which modified Maslow's hierarchy. Additionally, it summarizes McClelland's needs for achievement, power and affiliation and cognitive evaluation theory.

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Ritesh Ranjan
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
125 views34 pages

Motivation Why Do People Do The Things They Do?

This document discusses several theories of motivation. It describes Maslow's hierarchy of needs theory which proposes that people are motivated to fulfill physiological, safety, social, esteem and self-actualization needs. It also discusses McGregor's Theory X and Theory Y assumptions about employee motivation, Herzberg's motivation-hygiene theory, and Alderfer's ERG theory which modified Maslow's hierarchy. Additionally, it summarizes McClelland's needs for achievement, power and affiliation and cognitive evaluation theory.

Uploaded by

Ritesh Ranjan
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Motivation

Why do people do the


things they do?
• Motivation
– Willingness to exert high levels of effort
toward organizational goals,
conditioned by the effort’s ability to
satisfy some individual need.

• Need
– Some internal state that makes certain
outcomes appear attractive.
Motivation Process
• Unsatisfied need
• Tension
• Drive
• Search Behaviour
• Satisfied need
• Reduction of Tension
Why motivation?
Hierarchy of Needs Theory
• Maslow
• Physiological- hunger, thrust, shelter, sex, other
bodily needs
• Safety- security and protection from physical
and emotional harm
• Social- affection, belongingness, acceptance and
friendship
• Esteem - internal esteem factors - self respect,
autonomy, achievement
– Status, recognition and attention
• Self Actualization- the drive to become what
one is capable of becoming: growth, achieving
one’s potential and self-fulfillment
• one substantially satisfied, other becomes
dominant
• Recognize the level and satisfy unmet needs
• Lower order and higher order
• Lower order met from outside; higher order
from inside
• Influential, but week empirical support
Theory X and Theory Y
• Employees inherently dislike work and
whenever possible, will attempt to avoid it.
• Since employees dislike work, they must be
coerced, controlled, or threatened with
punishment to achieve goals.
• Employees avoid responsibilities and seek
formal direction whenever possible.
• Most workers place security above all other
factors associated with work and will display
little ambition.
Theory Y
• Employees can view work being as natural as
rest or play.
• People will exercise self direction and self
control if they are committed to the objectives.
• The average person can learn to accept, even
seek, responsibility.
• The ability to make innovative decisions is
widely dispersed throughout the population
and is not necessarily the sole province of those
in management positions.
Implications
• Theory Y - higher order needs dominate
• Theory X- lower order needs dominate
• Theory Y more valid than Theory X-
– participative decision making, responsible
and challenging jobs, good group relations
maximize motivation.
• No empirical support. Situational.
Motivation-Hygiene Theory
• Frederick Herzberg
• What do people want from their jobs.
– Relation to work basic and determines success or failure.

• When they felt exceptionally good and bad about their


jobs- detailed descriptions.
• Achievement, recognition, work itself, responsibility,
advancement, growth
• company policy and administration, supervision,
relationship with supervisor, work conditions, salary,
relationship with peers, personal life, relationship with
subordinates, status, security.
• Feeling good different from feeling
bad.
• Satisfaction’s opposite is not
dissatisfaction
• No satisfaction; no dissatisfaction.
• Intrinsic factors related to
satisfaction; extrinsic related to
dissatisfaction.
• Removing dissatisfiers would placate
not motivate
Criticism
• Procedure limited by methodology- when things go
well, credit to themselves, when to go wrong, blame
outside things.
• Inter rater reliability
• Theory of job satisfaction and not motivation.
• No overall measure of satisfaction used.
• Inconsistent with previous research by ignoring
situational variables.
• Relationship between satisfaction and productivity-
assumption.
• Vertical expansion of job to allow greater responsibility
in planning and controlling their work.
ERG Theory
• Clayton Alderfer
• Revised need hierarchy
• Existence- basic material requirements-
physiological and safety
• Relatedness- desire to maintain important
interpersonal relationships- social and
external part of esteem needs
• Growth- intrinsic desire for personal growth-
intrinsic part of esteem and self actualisation
• More than one need may be
operating at one time
• if higher order need not met,
desire to have more of lower
order need
• culture difference
• individual difference- education,
cultural environment, family
background etc.
McClleland’s Theory of Needs
• Achievement- the drive to excel, to achieve in relation to a set of
standards, to strive to succeed.
• Power- need to make others behave in a way that they would not
have behaved otherwise.
• Affiliation- desire for friendly and close interpersonal
relationships.
• High achievers- differentiate from others by desire to do things
better, seek personal responsibility for problem solving, rapid
feedback and set moderately challenging goals.
• Need for power- to have impact, to be influential, to control
others, being in charge, competitive and status oriented situations
and prestige and influence rather than effective performance.
• Affiliation - to be liked and accepted by others. friendship,
cooperative , relationships with high degree of mutual
understanding.
• Projective tests
• High achievers- personal responsibility,
feedback and intermediate degree of risk- more
successful- highly motivated- own business,
divisional heads
• Not necessarily good managers as it is the need
to achieve for himself/herself
• High need for power and low need for
affiliation - best managers
• Higher you rise, higher the power motive
• Training
Cognitive Evaluation Theory
• Allocating extrinsic rewards for
behaviors that have been
previously intrinsically rewarded
tends to decrease the overall level
of motivation.
• Whither pay for performance
• dull jobs, interesting jobs
Goal Setting Theory
• specific and difficult goals lead to higher performance
• Do your best?
• specific goals produce higher level of output.
• if ability and acceptance of goals are constant; more
difficult the goal, higher the output.
• feedback- improved performance
• self generated feedback better than externally generated
feedback.
• participative vs. assigned goals
• mixed performance
• Increases acceptance
• More difficult goals would be agreed to.
• Goal commitment- goals are public, internal
locus of control, national culture, self set
• Self efficacy- belief that she is capable of
performing a task.
• Difficult task, negative feedback
• Reasonably independent, seek challenging goals
and performance is considered important.
• Intentions lead to motivation, but may not lead
to job satisfaction.
Reinforcement Theory
• Behaviour is a function of its
consequences
– feelings, attitudes, expectations
ignored.
Equity Theory
• People make comparisons of their job inputs and outcomes
relative to others
• equitable, just
• inequitable- tension- motivation for corrective
• Referent
• Self inside; self outside, other inside, other outside
• information and attractiveness of referent; gender, length of
service, level in the organisation and education or
professionalism
• same sex comparisons; in less segregated jobs- more cross sex
comparisons
• short tenure- self outside
• long tenure- other inside
• educated and professional- other outside
• Under rewarded, equitable , over
rewarded
• Change inputs
• change outcomes
• distort perception of self
• distort perception of others
• choose a different referent
• leave the job.
• efforts, experience, education, competence
• salary levels, raises, recognition.
• given payment by time, over rewarded employees will
produce more than equitably paid employees
• given payment by quantity of production, over rewarded
employees will produce fewer, but higher quality units
than will equitably paid employees.
• Given payment by time, under rewarded employees will
produce less or poorer quality of output.
• given payment by quantity, under rewarded employees
would produce a larger number of low quality units .
• overpayment tolerable
• Open sharing of info on allocation decisions,
consistent and unbiased procedures,
• Conflicting equity signals, definitions,
weightage, over time, additions etc.
• Not all the people equity sensitive- benevolent
types
• Other rewards
• Distributive justice- amount, allocation
-employee satisfaction
• Procedural justice- process- organizational
commitment, trust in boss, intention to quit.
Expectancy Theory
• Perform strength of a tendency to act in a certain way depends on the
strength of an expectation that the act will be followed by a given outcome
and on the attractiveness of that outcome to the individual.
• Effort-performance relationship
• Performance reward relationship
• Reward-personal goals relationship
• Effort performance relationship- deficient skills, loyalty, initiative, courage
etc. taken into account, boss does not like me.
• Weak performance reward relationship- seniority, cooperative attitude,
ingratiation,
• Reward-personal goals relationship- need based, different for different
employee.
• Same person different circumstances- not done
• Limited use, where the relationships are clearly perceived
• Performance = ability x motivation x opportunity
Final model
• Motivation happens when opportunity,
individual effort, ability, objective performance
evaluation system leads to performance leads to
organisational rewards high n Ach- internal
rewards, equity comparison, personal goals,
dominant needs met, goal directed behaviour.
Culture Bound Models

• Security needs, Social needs


• Desire for interesting work,
Growth, Achievement,
responsibility everywhere
Applications
• Need Theories
– promote a healthy workforce
– provide financial security
– Outplacement services, training etc.
– provide opportunity to socialize
– recognize employee’s accomplishments
• Goal Setting Theory
– assign specific goals
– assign difficult but acceptable performance goals
– provide feedback concerning goal attainment
• Equity Theory
– avoid underpayment
– two tier wage structure- to be avoided
– overpayment should be avoided
– present info about outcomes in a
thorough and socially sensitive manner
• Expectancy Theory
– clarify people’s expectancy that effort
would lead to performance
– problems taken care of
– administer positively valent rewards
• cafeteria style benefit plans
• Clearly link valued Rewards and Performance
– pay for performance plans - differential payments
based on quantity and quality
– piece rate incentive systems
– sales commissions
– bonuses
– based on repairs
– profitability and customer satisfaction vs.. sales
– verbal recognition, ESOP,
• Job Design
– jobs can be created to increase people’s interest in doing
them.
• Job Enlargement
– expanding content to include more variety and a greater
number of tasks at the same level.
– Horizontal job loading, same skills, same responsibility
– may not be long lasting
• Job Enrichment
– giving employees a high degree of control over their work,
planning and organization, implementing and evaluating
– more jobs, more tasks at higher skill level and responsibility,
vertical job loading
– not for everyone
• Job characteristics model
– skill variety, task identity, task significance- experienced
meaningfulness of the work
– autonomy- experienced responsibility for outcome of the
work
– feedback-knowledge of actual results
– employee growth need strength
– high internal work motivation, high quality work
performance, high satisfaction with the work, low
absenteeism and turnover
– Motivating potential score- skill variety + task identity +
task significance / 3 x autonomy x feedback
– combine tasks, open feedback channels, establish client
relationship, load jobs vertically
– autonomy- hire better employees and performance is
expected
Motivation Techniques and
Programmes
MBO
• Management By Objectives
• a programme that encompasses specific goals,
participatively set, for an explicit time period,
with feedback on goal progress.
• participatively set goals - tangible, verifiable,
measurable (SMART - GOALS)
• Peter Drucker, in 1950s goals to motivate rather
than control.

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