Organizational Behavior by Mcshane, S. (8th edition) a summary
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Organizational Behavior
Chapter 6
Applied Performance Practices
Money is much more than an object of compensation for an employee’s contribution to organizational objectives.
Money relates to our needs and our self-concept.
It generates a variety of emotions.
Money is a symbol of achievement and status, a motivator, and an influence on our propensity to make ethical or risky decisions.
To some extent, the influence of money on human thoughts and behavior occurs nonconsiously.
The meaning of money varies considerably form one person to the next.
The meaning and effects of money differ between men and women.
The meaning of money varies across cultures.
The motivational effect of money is due more to its symbolic value than to what it can buy.
Membership- and seniority-based rewards
Sometimes called pay for pulse.
Sample rewards | Advantages | Disadvantages |
Fixed pay | May attract applicants | Doesn’t directly motivate performance |
Most employee benefits | Minimized stress of insecurity | May discourage poor performers from leaving |
Paid time off | Reduces turnover | ‘golden handcuffs’ may undermine performance |
Job status-based rewards
Companies measure job worth through job evaluation.
Job evaluation: systematically rating the worth of jobs within an organization by measuring the required skill, effort, responsibility, and working conditions.
Sample rewards | Advantages | Disadvantages |
Promotion-based pay increase | Tries to maintain internal equity | Encourages hierarchy, which may increase costs and reduce responsiveness |
Status-based benefits | Minimizes pay discrimination | Reinforces status differences |
| Motivates employees to compete for promotions | Motivates job competition and exaggerated job worth |
Competency-based rewards
Skill-based pay plans are a more specific variation of competency-based rewards in which people receive higher pay determined by their mastery of measurable skills.
Sample rewards | Advantages | Disadvantages |
Pay increase based on competency | Improves workforce flexibility | Relies on subjective measurement of competencies |
Skill—based pay | Tends to improve quality | Expensive |
| Is consistent with employability |
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Performance-based rewards
Individual rewards
Team rewards
Gainsharing plan: a team-based reward that calculates bonuses from the work unit’s cost savings and productivity improvement.
Organizational rewards
Employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs): a reward system that encourages employees to buy company stock. Usually at a discounted price.
Stock options: a reward system that gives employees the right to purchase company stock at a future date at a predetermined price.
Profit-sharing plan: a reward system that pays bonuses to employees on the basis of the previous year’s level of corporate profits.
Sample rewards | Advantages | Disadvantages |
Commissions | Motivates task performance | May weaken job content motivation |
Merit pay | Attracts performance-oriented applicants | May distance reward giver from receiver |
Gainsharing | Organizational rewards create an ownership culture | May discourage creativity |
Profit sharing | Pay variability may avoid layoffs during downturns | Tends to address symptoms, not underlying causes of behavior |
Stock options |
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Link rewards to performance
Ensure that rewards are relevant
Companies need to align rewards with performance within the employees control. The more employees see a ‘line of sight’ between their daily actions and the reward, the more they are motivate to improve performance.
Reward systems also need to correct for situational factors.
Use team rewards for interdependent jobs
Team rewards work better than individual rewards when employees work in highly interdependent jobs, because it is difficult to measure individual performance in these situations.
Also encourages cooperation.
Tend to support employee preferences for team-based work.
Ensure that rewards are valued
Ask employees what they value.
Watch out for unintended consequences
Job design: the process of assigning task to a job, including the interdependency of those tasks with other jobs.
A job is a set of tasks performed by one person.
Job design and work efficiency
Job specialization: the result of a division of labor, in which work is subdivided into separate jobs assigned to different people.
Each resulting job includes a narrow subset of tasks, usually completed in a short cycle time.
Potentially improves work efficiency.
Scientific management
Scientific management: the practice of systematically partitioning work into its smallest elements and standardizing tasks to achieve maximum efficiency.
Problems with job specialization
It affects employee attitudes and motivation.
It affects output quality, but in two opposing ways
Motivator-hygiene theory: Herzberg’s theory stating that employees are primarily motivate by growth and esteem needs, not by lower-level needs.
Employees experience job satisfaction when they fulfill growth and esteem needs (motivators)
Employees experience dissatisfaction when they have poor working conditions, low job security, and other factors categorized as lower-order needs (hygienes).
Only characteristics of the job itself motivate employees, whereas hygiene factors merely prevent dissatisfaction.
Job characteristics model: a job design model that relates the motivational properties of jobs to specific personal and organizational consequences of those properties.
Core job characteristics → critical psychological states → .outcomes
Skill variety, task identity, task significance → meaningfulness → work motivation
Autonomy → responsibility → growth satisfaction
Feedback from job → knowledge of results → work effectiveness→ general satisfaction
Core job characteristics
Five core job characteristics. Under the right conditions, employees are more motivated and satisfied when jobs have higher levels of these characteristics.
Critical psychological states
The five core job characteristics affect employee motivation and satisfaction through three critical psychological states.
Individual differences
Growth need strength, an individual’s need for personal growth and development.
Social and informational processing job characteristics
Task interdependence: the extent to which team members must share materials, information, or expertise in order to perform their jobs.
And feedback from others.
The other cluster of job characteristics missing from the job characteristic model relates the the information processing demands of the job.
Job rotation
(Extreme) training employees on all assembly stations and rotating them through different jobs every three or four hours.
Three potential benefits of job rotation.
Job enlargement
The practice of adding more tasks to an existing job.
But won’t affect motivation, performance of job satisfaction. These benefits result only when skill variety is combined with more autonomy and job knowledge.
Job enrichment
The practice of giving employees more responsibility for scheduling, coordinating, and planning their own work.
One way to increase job enrichment is by combining highly interdependent tasks into one job. Natural grouping.
One other ways is establishing client relationships.
Empowerment: a psychological concept in which people experience more self-determination, meaning, competence, and impact regarding their role in the organization.
Supporting empowerment
Employees are much more likely to experience self-determination when working in jobs with a high degree of autonomy and minimal bureaucratic control.
More meaningfulness when working in jobs with high level of task identity and task significance
More self-confidence when working in jobs that allow them to receive feedback about their performance and accomplishments
More empowered in organizations in which information and other resources are easily accessible.
And organizations that demonstrate a commitment to employee learning.
Requires corporate leaders to trust employees and be willing to take the risks that empowerment creates.
Self-leadership: specific cognitive and behavioral strategies to achieve personal goals and standards through self-direction and self-motivation.
Self-leadership strategies
Personal goal setting → constructive thought strategies → designing natural rewards → self monitoring → self-reinforcement
Personal goal setting
Setting self-determined goals
Constructive thought strategies
Two constructive (positive) thought strategies about that work and its accomplishments
Designing natural rewards
One way to build natural rewards into the job is to alter the way a task is accomplished.
Self-monitoring
The process of keeping track at regular intervals of one’s progress toward a goal by using naturally occurring feedback.
Self-reinforcement
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This is a summary of the book Organizational Behavior by Mcshane, S (8th edition). This book is about psychology at the workplace. It contains for instance ways to increase employee satisfaction and workplace dynamics. The book is used in the course 'Labor and and
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