Motivation PDF
Motivation PDF
Motivation PDF
▪ What is motivation?
▪ Compare and contrast the:
▪ Early theories of motivation
▪ Contemporary theories of motivation
▪ Discuss current issues in motivation.
▪ Some suggestions for motivating employees.
What is Motivation?
- The processes that account for an individual’s willingness to exert high
levels of effort to reach organizational goals, conditioned by the effort’s
ability to satisfy some individual need.
Source: Abraham H. Maslow, Robert D. Frager, Robert D., and James Fadiman, Motivation and
Personality, 3rd Edition, © 1987. Adapted by permission of
Pearson Education, Inc., Upper Saddle River, NJ.
Early Theories of Motivation
Maslow’s Hierarchy of Five Human Needs:
1. Goal-setting theory
2. Reinforcement theory
3. Job design theory
4. Equity theory
5. Expectancy theory
Contemporary Theories
I. Goal Setting Theory:
- Says that specific goals increase performance and that
difficult goals, when accepted, result in higher
performance than do easy goals.
● working toward a goal is a major source of job
motivation, studies on goal setting have demonstrated that
specific and challenging goals are superior motivating
forces.
● goal-setting theory says that motivation is maximized
by difficult goals, whereas achievement motivation is
stimulated by moderately challenging goals.
Contemporary Theories
Goal Setting Theory:
Contemporary Theories
V. Expectancy Theory
- states that an individual tends to act in a certain way
based on the expectation that the act will be followed by
a given outcome and on the attractiveness of that
outcome to the individual.
- Key to the theory is understanding & managing employee
goals and the linkages among and between effort,
performance, and rewards
● Effort: employee abilities and training/development
● Performance: valid appraisal systems
● Rewards (goals): understanding employee needs
Contemporary Issues
Simplified Expectancy Model:
Contemporary Issues
1. Cross-cultural Challenges
- Motivational programs are most applicable in cultures
where individualism and quality of life are cultural
characteristics.
▪ Uncertainty avoidance of some cultures inverts
Maslow’s needs hierarchy.
▪ The need for achievement (nAch) is lacking in other
cultures.
▪ Collectivist cultures view rewards as “entitlements”
to be distributed based on individual needs, not
individual performance.
Current Issues in Motivation
2. Cross-cultural Consistencies
- Interesting work is widely desired, as is growth,
achievement, and responsibility.
. - Characteristics of professionals
● Strong and long-term commitment to their field of
expertise.
● Loyalty is to their profession, not to the employer.
● Have the need to regularly update their knowledge.
● Don’t define their workweek as 8:00 am to 5:00 pm.