Psychology in the Workplace
- 1144 reads
Join with a free account for more service, or become a member for full access to exclusives and extra support of WorldSupporter >>
Lecture 6 Nanxi Yan
Motivation to Work
What Does It Mean to Be a Good Performer?
Task Performance (+)
Ø Job-specific, unique to one’s job Ø
Citizenship behavior (+)
Ø Job-general
Ø Directed towards individuals
Ø Directed towards the organization
Counterproductive behavior (-)
Ø Job-general
Ø Targeted to other individuals or the organization
Ø Can be minor or major
Where Does Job Performance Come From?
! Assuming people have the knowledge, skills, abilities, and personality to perform the job, what else….?
• Commitment (Next Lecture)
• Motivation
Motivation: a brief history
[note: deze afbeelding uit het college is door de WorldSupporter redactie verwijderd wegens vermoedelijke inbreuk op het auteursrecht]
tivation pertains to control
Human beings generally want to be effective – at exerting control and establishing what is true and real (Bandura, 1977; Higgins, 2011)
Motivation can be automatic and non-conscious (Chartrand & Bargh, 1996)
[note: deze afbeelding uit het college is door de WorldSupporter redactie verwijderd wegens vermoedelijke inbreuk op het auteursrecht]
Motivation: A set of forces that originates both within and outside an employee, and determines the direction, intensity, and persistence of work effort.
[note: deze afbeelding uit het college is door de WorldSupporter redactie verwijderd wegens vermoedelijke inbreuk op het auteursrecht]
Job performace = (motivation x ability) – situational constraints
Motivation theories
• Self-Determination Theory
• Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs
• Herzberg’s Motivation-Hygiene Theory
• McClelland’s Learned Needs Theory
• Social Justice Theories (e.g., Equity Theory)
• Reinforcement Theory and Behavior Modification
• Social Learning Theory
• Goal Setting Theory
• VIE (Expectancy) Theory
Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs Theory
[note: deze afbeelding uit het college is door de WorldSupporter redactie verwijderd wegens vermoedelijke inbreuk op het auteursrecht]
! Employer needs to know at what need level individual worker is operating
! Group of workers may all be functioning at different need levels
! Fits person-as-machine metaphor
Herzberg’s Motivator-Hygiene Theory
[note: deze afbeelding uit het college is door de WorldSupporter redactie verwijderd wegens vermoedelijke inbreuk op het auteursrecht]
McClelland’s Learned Needs Theory
Proposes that people acquire dominant needs through their life experiences (influenced by culture, society etc.)
Need for Achievement (nAch): The desire to perform challenging tasks well and to meet one’s own high standards.
Need for Affiliation (nAff): The desire to establish and maintain good relations with others. Need for Power (nPow): The desire to exert emotional and behavioral control or influence over others.
Measuring McClelland’s Needs
Needs are measured with the Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
Conclusions about Content Theories
! Restrict explanations of motivation to a particular set of factors and how these motivate people (-)
! Intuitively appealing but lack empirical support (i.e., research evidence) (-)
! Identify concepts useful for gaining a better understanding of motivation (+)
! Valuable starting point for examining cultural and individual differences in motivation (+)
Motivating with the Basic Needs
1. Ask employees what their needs are à McClelland says needs are different for different people.
2. Satisfy lower order needs first. à Maslow says higher order needs won’t motivate people as long as lower order needs stay unsatisfied.
3. Expect people’s needs to change. à Once lower order needs are satisfied, different motivators.
4. Create opportunities for employees to satisfy higher-order needs, as lower order needs are satisfied. Take-away? Your motivation strategy really depends on the workforce you are managing!
Process Theories
1. Social Justice Theories (e.g., Equity Theory)
2. Reinforcement Theory and Behavior Modification
3. Social Learning Theory
4. VIE Theory
5. Goal Setting Theory
A goal = a desired outcome
Vroom’s VIE theory
! Valence: Strength of person’s preference for particular outcome.
! Instrumentality: Perceived relationship between performance & attainment of a certain outcome.
! Expectancy: Perceived relationship between effort and performance.
Motivating with the VIE Theory
Steps in Motivating Employees:
! Find out what employees want from their jobs
• So you understand whether the rewards you offer are attractive.
! Link rewards to individual performance in a clear way
• So that employees understand the relationship between the two.
! Make sure that there are no major obstacles between their effort and their performance
Goal Setting Theory
[note: deze afbeelding uit het college is door de WorldSupporter redactie verwijderd wegens vermoedelijke inbreuk op het auteursrecht]
Self-efficacy :
Belief in one’s capacity to perform a specific task or reach a specific goal
Developed and influenced by:
§ Mastery experiences (success)
§ Social persuasion
§ Physiological states
§ Modeling
[note: deze afbeelding uit het college is door de WorldSupporter redactie verwijderd wegens vermoedelijke inbreuk op het auteursrecht]
Applications of Goal Setting Theory: SMART goals
Specific
Measurable
Attainable
Result oriented
Time bound
Motivating with Goal-Setting Theory
1. Pay attention to goal-setting theory! Research suggests that it is among the most important and useful single approaches to motivating performance!
2. Assign them specific, challenging goals.
3. Make sure that workers truly accept organizational goals.
4. Provide frequent, specific, performance-related feedback
Managing motivation
Can managers/organizations, indeed shape employee motivation?
! Do implicit or unconscious influences affect work motivation?
! What about the motivation NOT to work?
! Procrastination
! Solution aversion
! Job (re-)design
Situational Influences: Conscious and nonconscious
Call Center Performance Nonconscious
Goal:
“Poster” condition: M = 18.68
(No Poster): M = 14.74
Conscious Goal
“Do your best”: M = 14.48
Specific (difficult) goal: M = 18.94
Goal Commitment
! Higher persistence, overcoming obstacles
! After taking goal-directed action, there are opposite effects of interpreting it as reinforcing one’s commitment (+) vs. making progress (-)
! Implementation Intentions: Strong effects of simple plans
If situation X occurs, then I will perform behavior Y
Motivation to NOT work: Predicting Procrastination
Neuroticism (+) Agreeableness (-) Extraversion (-) Impulsiveness (++) Sensation seeking (++) Boredom proneness (++) Fear of failure (+) Self-efficacy (--) Self-esteem (-) Self-handicapping (++) Depression (+)
Solution Aversion
! Don’t like the solution? Deny a problem exists!
! “Motivated Disbelief”
[note: deze afbeelding uit het college is door de WorldSupporter redactie verwijderd wegens vermoedelijke inbreuk op het auteursrecht]
How can you motivate employees ?
1. Ensure that workers’ abilities match the job (ability)
2. Make jobs attractive and consistent with worker’s motives and values (commitment)
3. Facilitate self-efficacy
4. Define clear, challenging goals (goal setting)
5. Provide necessary resources to do the job (opportunity)
6. Create social support system (recognition) • Know what kind of recognition makes a difference • Recognize others’ contributions often • Personalize recognition
7. Use rewards for good performance 8. Job characteristics model
9. Job (re-)design
The Job Characteristics Model
! A comprehensive approach to making work more interesting (i.e., motivating). ! Core job dimensions include: 1. skill variety 2. task identity 3. task significance 4. autonomy 5. feedback
Job (re)design
Scientific Management: A set of principles and practices designed to increase the performance of individual workers by stressing job simplification and specialization (p. 20). § Job simplification: The breaking up of the work that needs to be performed in an organization into the smallest identifiable tasks. § Job specialization: The assignment of workers to perform small, simple tasks.
Job enlargement: Increasing the number of tasks an employee performs but keeping all of the tasks at the same level of difficulty and responsibility; also called horizontal job loading.
Job enrichment: Increasing an employee’s responsibility and control over his or her work; also called vertical job loading.
Autonomous work group (p. 522) Specific kind of production team that has control over a variety of functions.
Cross-Cultural Issues in Motivation ! Hofstede’s cultural theory " Cultures differ on 5 dimensions • Collectivism/individualism • Uncertainty avoidance • Masculinity/femininity • Power dimensions • Long-term vs. short-term orientation " Application to motivation measurement
Generational Differences & Work Motivation ! Generation ! Defined by group members who share birth years & significant life events ! e.g., Baby Boomers, Generation Xers, Milliennials, Gen Z
Generational Differences (cont'd) ! Younger employees appear to be more “me” oriented ! Younger workers may be less about “pride in work” and more about ”meaning” and “purpose” ! Work becomes less idealized as workers age
There are several ways to navigate the large amount of summaries, study notes en practice exams on JoHo WorldSupporter.
Do you want to share your summaries with JoHo WorldSupporter and its visitors?
Field of study
JoHo can really use your help! Check out the various student jobs here that match your studies, improve your competencies, strengthen your CV and contribute to a more tolerant world
1343 |
Add new contribution