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Topic 9

Topic 9. Motivating Others. Motivation.

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Topic 9

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  1. Topic 9 Motivating Others

  2. Motivation “Polls estimate that if companies could get 3.7 percent more work out of each employee, the equivalent of 18 more minutes of work for each eight-hour shift, the gross domestic product in the U.S. would swell by $355 billion, twice the total GDP of Greece.” ~The Gallup Organization

  3. Motivation is all about getting people to do things, and motivating others is a fundamental leadership skill. • People believe they could give as much as 15 percent or 20 percent more effort at work than they now do with no one, including their own bosses, recognizing any difference. • The top 15 percent of workers in any particular job produced from 20 to 50 percent more output than the average worker. • Creating highly motivated and satisfied followers depends, most of all on understanding others.

  4. Leader Motivation • Can leaders motivate or does motivation come from within? • Leaders can do certain things “to move” followers - - to facilitate work behavior. • Word motivation comes from Latin term “movere” which means to move.

  5. Motivation All definitions of motivation appear to have 3 commonalities (1) what energizes human behavior (2) what directs or channels such behavior (3) how this behavior is sustained or maintained

  6. Motivation • Motivation is the direction, intensity, and persistence of behavior. • Performance refers to the evaluation of the adequacy of behavior relative to some criteria such as goals. • Job satisfaction is one’s attitudes or feelings toward work.

  7. Satisfaction • Results in increased commitment to the organization which may or may not result in increased performance. • Increased commitment normally results in lower absenteeism, turnover, etc.

  8. Motivation and Job Satisfaction Motivation and job satisfaction are closely linked, but neither necessarily predicts performance because of the influence of other factors such as ksa’s and values.

  9. Motivation • Largely determined by the value of rewards and their contingency on performance • An increase in motivation results in increased effort which (hopefully) in turn increases performance.

  10. Satisfaction & Performance • NO relationship between satisfaction and performance (for people). • A contented cow may give more milk, but a happier worker is not necessarily a more productive worker.

  11. Review of Satisfaction Studies • Over many studies, the correlation between satisfaction and performance was found to be .04 • On a scale of -1.0 to +1.0, .04 is essentially zero

  12. McGregor’s Theory X and Y( regarding leader attitudes--- applicability to motivation ) • McGregor’s Theory X and Theory Y • Theory X – assumes that workers have little ambition, dislike work, want to avoid responsibility, and need to be closely controlled • Assumed that lower-order need dominated • Theory Y – assumes that workers can exercise self-direction, accept and actually seek out responsibility, and consider work to be a natural activity • Assumed that higher-order needs dominated • No evidence that either set of assumptions is valid • No evidence that managing on the basis of Theory Y makes employees more motivated

  13. Herzberg’s Two-Factor Theory • Components of the two-factor theory: • Motivators – satisfaction at work • Hygiene factors – dissatisfaction at work • The key to increasing followers’ effort levels according to the two-factor theory is to adequately satisfy the hygiene factors while maximizing the motivators for a particular job.

  14. Herzberg • Herzberg’s Motivation-Hygiene Theory • Intrinsic characteristics consistently related to job satisfaction • Motivator factors energize employees • Extrinsic characteristics consistently related to job dissatisfaction • Hygiene factors don’t motivate employees • Proposed dual continua for satisfaction and dissatisfaction

  15. Herzberg • Herzberg’s Motivation-Hygiene Theory • Theory enjoyed wide popularity • Influenced job design • Theory was roundly criticized • Subjects used in Herzberg’s research were not representative of the workforce.

  16. Motivation and Needs • Three-Needs Theory • There are three major acquired needs that are major motives in work. • Need for achievement (nAch) • The drive to excel and succeed • Need for power (nPow) • The need to influence the behavior of others • Need of affiliation (nAff) • The desire for interpersonal relationships

  17. Motivation • Individual Differences in Motivation - - Focus not on a universal set of needs but rather on unique differences among people in the strength of certain motives. • Achievement Orientation - - Individuals with a strong motive to achieve success prefer tasks of moderate difficulty, like to get feedback, and are satisfied by accomplishment.

  18. Contemporary Theories of Motivation (cont.) • Three-Needs Theory (cont.) • Need for power (nPow) • Need to make others behave in a way that they would not have behaved otherwise • Need for affiliation (nAff) • Desire for friendly and close interpersonal relationships • Best leaders tend to be high in the need for power and low in the need for affiliation (agree or disagree???).

  19. Vroom’s Expectancy Theory • Expectancy theory maintains that leadership practitioners will be able to motivate followers if they understand the process followers use to determine whether certain behaviors will lead to valued rewards.

  20. Vroom’s Expectancy Theory • People will be motivated to do a task if three conditions are met: • They perform the task adequately--- if they put forth enough effort (effort-to-performance expectancy). • They will be rewarded if they do it (performance-to-outcome expectancy). • They value the reward (valence).

  21. Motivation and Goal Setting(Locke and Latham) • Goals are the most powerful determinants of task behavior. • Consistent aspects of goal setting: • Goals that were both specific and difficult resulted in consistently higher effort and performance when contrasted to “do your best” goals. • Goal commitment is critical. • Followers exerted the greatest effort when goals were accompanied by feedback.

  22. Goal Setting • A leader’s implicit and explicit expectations about goal accomplishment can affect the performance of followers and teams.

  23. Adam’s Equity Theory • Followers are said to be most motivated when they believe that what they put into an activity or a job and what they get out of it are roughly equivalent to what others put into and get out of it. • Followers presumably reach decisions about equitable relationships by assigning values to the four elements shown below: Personal outcomes Reference group outcomes = Personal inputs Reference group inputs

  24. Adams’ Equity Theory • Based on two premises: • We compare ourselves to others • If we don’t like the results of the comparison, we take action

  25. Adam’s Equity Theory Self’s OutcomesOther’s Outcomes Self’s Inputs Other’s Inputs

  26. Motivation and Perception • Equity Theory • Proposes that employees perceive what they get from a job situation (outcomes) in relation to what they put in (inputs) and then compare their inputs-outcomes ratio with the inputs-outcomes ratios of relevant others. • If the ratios are perceived as equal then a state of equity (fairness) exists. • If the ratios are perceived as unequal, inequity exists and the person feels under- or over-rewarded. • When inequities occur, employees will attempt to do something to rebalance the ratios (seek justice).

  27. Motivation and Perception (cont’d) • Equity Theory (cont’d) • Employee responses to perceived inequities: • Distort own or others’ ratios. • Induce others to change their own inputs or outcomes. • Change own inputs (increase or decrease efforts) or outcomes (seek greater rewards). • Choose a different comparison (referent) other (person, systems, or self). • Quit their job. • Employees are concerned with both the absolute and relative nature of organizational rewards.

  28. Job Satisfaction • Affectivity- Some people have a predisposition for negative affectivity (unhappy, pessimistic view of events) or positive affectivity (upbeat, optimistic perspective); leaders may have little influence on the satisfaction of people at either extreme.

  29. Motivation—Summary Comments • Some motivational theories are particularly useful in certain situations but are not as applicable in others. • Leaders who are knowledgeable about different motivational theories are more likely to choose the right theory for a particular follower and situation, and often have higher-performance and more satisfied employees as a result.

  30. Summary • Most performance problems can be attributed to unclear expectations, skill deficits, resource/ equipment shortages, or a LACK OF MOTIVATION

  31. Summary • Leaders can use various motivational theories (or pick and choose parts of theories) to understand and improve followers’ satisfaction or to recognize situations beyond their control.

  32. Verbal Shorthand • “Motivate” • We don’t motivate anyone • We help create the conditions by which they motivate themselves

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