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MOTIVATION. By: Mrs. Belen Apostol. What is motivation. the force that causes an individual to behave in a specific way a highly motivated person works hard at a job; an unmotivated person does not. an internal process. Factors Contributing to Motivation. Willingness to do the job
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MOTIVATION By: Mrs. Belen Apostol
What is motivation • the force that causes an individual to behave in a specific way • a highly motivated person works hard at a job; an unmotivated person does not. • an internal process
Factors Contributing to Motivation • Willingness to do the job • Self confidence in carrying out the task • Needs Satisfaction
The Process of Motivation plus Needs Motivation which leads to readiness for the next needs leads to Action or Goal Oriented Activities Needs Satisfaction which results to
Theories of Motivation • Maslow’s needs hierarchy theory • Herzberg’s two-factor theory • Expectancy theory • Goal-setting theory
Maslow’s Needs Hierarchy Theory • Need - a physiological or psychological deficiency that a person feels the compulsion to satisfy. - can create tensions that can influence a person's work attitudes and behaviors.
Maslow’s Needs Hierarchy Theory • Physiological Needs – concerned with biological needs like food, shelter, clothing, etc. These needs take priority over the other needs. • Safety needs – include freedom from bodily harm and financial security. • Love needs – or social needs ; strive to secure love, affection and the need to be accepted by peers • Esteem needs – need for positive self-image and self respect and the need to be respected by others. • Self-Actualization needs – realization of one’s potential as a human being and becoming someone he could be.
Self Actualizing Manager • Characteristics of the Self-Actualizing Manager • Has warmth, closeness, and sympathy • Recognizes and shares negative information and feeling • Exhibits trust, openness, and candor • Does not achieve goals by power, deception, or manipulation • Does not project own feelings, motivations, or blame onto others • Does not limit horizons; uses and develops body, mind, and senses • Is not rationalistic; can think in unconventional ways • Is not conforming; regulates behavior from within
Herzberg’s Two-factor Theory • Two-factor theory • Hygiene factors or Dissatisfiers include salary, job security, working conditions, organizational policies, and technical quality of supervision. Although these factors do not motivate employees, they can cause dissatisfaction if they are missing. • Satisfiers or motivators include such things as responsibility, achievement, growth opportunities, and feelings of recognition, and are the key to job satisfaction and motivation.
Herzberg’s Two-factor Theory • Implications of Herzberg’s Theory • Satisfaction is not the opposite of dissatisfaction. • There is a need to think carefully about what motivates employees. • Problems with Theory • Assumption of job performance improving with satisfaction is weakly, at best, supported. • One person’s dissatisfier is another person’s satisfier
Expectancy Theory • an employee will be motivated to exert a high level of effort when he or she believes that: • Effort will lead to a good performance appraisal. • A good appraisal will lead to organizational rewards. • The organizational rewards will satisfy his or her personal goals.
Expectancy Theory • Relevance of Expectancy Theory to Managers • Employee expectations can be influenced by managerial actions and organizational experience. • Training increases employee confidence in their efforts to perform. • Listening provides managers with insights into employees’ perceived performance-reward probabilities.
Goal-Setting Theory • intentions to work toward a goal are a major source of work motivation. • Goals - tell employees what needs to be done and how much effort should be expanded. • The more difficult the goal, the higher the level of performance expected.
Goal-Setting Theory • A Model of How Goals Can Improve Performance
Techniques of Motivation • Motivation through job design; • Motivation through rewards; • Motivation through employee participation; and • Motivation Through Quality-of-Work-Life Programs
Motivation Through Job Design • Job Design - the delineation of task responsibilities as dictated by organizational strategy, technology, and structure • Two strategies of Job Design: • Fitting People to Jobs • Fitting Jobs to People
Motivation Through Job Design • Two strategies of Job Design: • Fitting People to Jobs • Improving the motivation of routine-task personnel • Realistic job previews: Honest explanations of what a job actually entails • Job rotation: Moving people from one specialized job to another • Limited exposure: Using an incentive such as contingent time off (CTO) to motivate performance
Motivation Through Job Design • Two strategies of Job Design: 2. Fitting Jobs to People • Job enlargement: Combining two or more specialized tasks (horizontal loading) to increase motivation • Job enrichment: Redesigning a job to increase its motivating potential by introducing planning and decision-making responsibility (vertical loading)
Motivation Through Job Design • Five Core Dimensions of Work • Skill variety: The variety of activities required in carrying out the work • Task identity: The completion of a “whole” and identifiable piece of work • Task significance: How much impact the job has on the lives of other people • Autonomy: The freedom, independence, and discretion that one has to do the job • Job feedback: How much performance feedback the job provides to the worker
Motivation Through Job Design • How Job Enrichment Works
Motivation Through Rewards • Classification of Rewards: • Extrinsic Rewards • Intrinsic Rewards
Motivation Through Rewards • Extrinsic Rewards • Payoffs granted to the individual by other people • Money, employee benefits, promotions, recognition, status symbols, and praise • Improving Performance with Extrinsic Rewards • Rewards must satisfy individual operative needs. • Cafeteria compensation: A plan that allows employees to select their own mix of benefits • Employees must believe effort will lead to reward. • Rewards must be equitable. • Rewards must be linked to performance.
Motivation Through Rewards • Intrinsic Rewards • Self-granted and internally experienced payoffs • Sense of accomplishment, self-esteem, and self-actualization
Motivation through Employee Participation • Participative Management - The process of empowering employees to assume greater control of the workplace • Setting goals • Making decisions • Solving problems • Designing and implementing organizational changes
Motivation through Employee Participation • Three approaches to participation • Quality control circles • Open-book management (OBM) • Self-managed teams
Motivation through Employee Participation • Quality Control (QC) Circles • Voluntary problem-solving groups of five to ten employees from the same work area who meet regularly to discuss quality improvement and ways to reduce costs • Assume responsibility for recommending, implementing, and evaluating solutions to quality problems • Voluntary participation that taps into the creative potential of every employee
Motivation through Employee Participation • Open-Book Management (OBM) • Sharing a company’s key financial data and statements with all employees and providing the education that will enable them to understand how the company makes money and how their actions affect its success and bottom line • Benefits of OBM • Displays a high degree of trust in employees • Creates strong commitment to employee training • Teaches patience when waiting for results
Motivation through Employee Participation • The Four STEP Approach to Open-Book Management • Step 1: Share financial data with employees. • Step 2: Teach employees the business model. • Step 3: Empower employees to make decisions. • Step 4: Pay employees a fair share of profits through bonuses and incentive compensation.
Motivation through Employee Participation • Self-Managed Teams (Autonomous Work Groups) • High performance teams (with assigned membership) assume traditional managerial duties such as staffing and planning as part of their normal work routine. • Self-management fosters creativity, motivation, and productivity.
Motivation through Employee Participation • Keys to Successful Employee Participation Programs • Building Employee Support for Participation • A profit-sharing or gain-sharing plan • A long-term employment relationship with good job security • A concerted effort to build and maintain group cohesiveness • Protection of the individual employee’s rights
Motivation through Quality-of-Work-Life Programs • Flexible Work Schedules • Alternatives • Family Support Services • Wellness Programs • Sabbaticals
Motivation through Quality-of-Work-Life Programs Flexible Work Schedules • Flextime: A work schedule that allow employees to choose their own arrival and departure times within specified limits • Benefits • Better employee-supervisor relations • Reduced absenteeism • Selective positive impact on job performance (improves productivity for some jobs, but not for others)
Motivation through Quality-of-Work-Life Programs Flexible Work Schedules
Motivation through Quality-of-Work-Life Programs Alternatives • Expanded concept of flextime • Reduced time, paid leaves, telecommuting • Compressed workweeks: 40 or more hours in fewer than five days • Semipermanent and permanent part-time: work weeks with fewer than 40 hours. • Job sharing: complementary scheduling that allows two or more part-timers to share a single full-time job
Motivation through Quality-of-Work-Life Programs • Family Support Services • Top family-friendly benefits • Dependent care flexible spending accounts • Flextime • Family leave above required no. of leaves • Telecommuting on a part-time basis • Compressed workweeks
Motivation through Quality-of-Work-Life Programs • Wellness Programs • Employer-provided programs to help employees cope with stress and burnout Sabbaticals • Giving long-term employees extended periods of paid time off to refresh themselves and bolster their motivation and loyalty