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Ch.9 Motivation 1. Review Chapter 9 2. Review Slide Deck (Canvas) 3. Review Lecture Notes (Canvas) 4. Watch Case Videos – S.A.S. and Google 9-1 Learning Objectives • Explain what motivation is and why managers need to be concerned about it • Describe from the perspectives of expectancy theory and equity theory what managers should do to have a highly motivated workforce • Explain how goals and needs motivate people and what kinds of goals are especially likely to result in high performance Learning Objectives • Identify the motivation lessons that managers can learn from operant conditioning theory and social learning theory • Explain why and how managers can use pay as a major motivation tool The Nature of Motivation • Motivation: Psychological forces that determine the direction of a person’s behavior in an organization, a person’s level of effort, and a person’s level of persistence • Direction of a person’s behavior is, the many possible behaviors a person could engage in • • Effort - how hard people work Persistence - whether, when faced with roadblocks and obstacles, people keep trying or give up The Nature of Motivation • Intrinsically motivated behavior: Behavior that is performed for its own sake • Extrinsically motivated behavior: Behavior that is performed to acquire material or social rewards or to avoid punishment • Prosocially motivated behavior: Behavior performed to benefit or help others The Nature of Motivation Outcome Input • Anything a person gets • Anything a person from a job or an organization • Pay, job security, autonomy, accomplishment contributes to his or her job or organization • Time, effort, skills, knowledge, work behaviors Figure 9.1 - The Motivation Equation Expectancy Theory • Formulated by Victor H. Vroom • Motivation will be high when workers believe: • • High levels of effort will lead to high performance High performance will lead to the attainment of desired outcomes Figure 9.2 - Expectancy, Instrumentality, and Valence Figure 9.3 - Expectancy Theory Need Theories • Theories of motivation that focus on what needs people are trying to satisfy at work and what outcomes will satisfy those needs Table 9.1 - Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs Maslow’s Hierarchy of needs 5-13 Herzberg’s Motivation-Hygiene Theory • Focuses on outcomes that lead to higher motivation and job satisfaction, and those outcomes that can prevent dissatisfaction • Motivator needs relate to the nature of the work itself and how challenging it is • Hygiene needs are related to the physical and psychological context in which the work is performed McClelland’s Needs for Achievement, Affiliation, and Power • Need for achievement: A strong desire to perform challenging tasks well and meet personal standards for excellence • Need for affiliation: Extent to which an individual is concerned about establishing and maintaining good interpersonal relations, being liked, and having the people around him get along with each other • Need for power: Extent to which an individual desires to control or influence others Equity Theory • Focuses on people’s perceptions of the fairness (or lack of fairness) of their work outcomes in proportion to their work inputs • Equity: Justice, impartiality, and fairness to which all organizational members are entitled • Inequity: Lack of fairness Table 9.2 - Equity Theory Equity Theory • Underpayment inequity: Exists when a person perceives that his own outcome–input ratio is less than the ratio of a referent • Overpayment inequity: Exists when a person perceives that his own outcome–input ratio is greater than the ratio of a referent Ways to Restore Equity • When people experience underpayment inequity they may be motivated to: • Lower their inputs by reducing their working hours, putting forth less effort on the job, or being absent • Increase their outcomes by asking for a raise or a promotion • When people experience overpayment inequity, they may try to restore equity by changing their perceptions of their own or their referent’s inputs or outcomes Goal Setting Theory • Focuses on identifying the types of goals that are effective in producing high levels of motivation and performance and explaining why goals have these effects • Goals must be specific and difficult • Specific goals are often quantitative • Difficult goals are hard but not impossible to attain • Goals motivate people to contribute more inputs to their jobs • Goals cause people to put forth high levels of effort Learning Theories • Focus on increasing employee motivation and performance by linking outcomes that employees receive to the performance of desired behaviors and the attainment of goals • Learning: A relatively permanent change in person’s knowledge or behavior that results from practice or experience Operant Conditioning Theory • Operant conditioning: People learn to perform behaviors that lead to desired consequences and learn not to perform behaviors that lead to undesired consequences • Managers can motivate organizational members by linking the performance of specific behaviors to the attainment of specific outcomes Operant Conditioning Theory Positive reinforcement Negative reinforcement • Giving people outcomes they desire when they perform organizationally functional behaviors • Eliminating undesired outcomes when people perform organizationally functional behaviors • pay, praise, promotion • manager’s constant nagging or criticism, unpleasant assignments, threat of losing one’s job Operant Conditioning Theory • Extinction: Curtailing the performance of a dysfunctional behavior by eliminating whatever is reinforcing them • Punishment: Administering an undesired or negative consequence when dysfunctional behavior occurs Social Learning Theory • Takes into account how learning and motivation are influenced by people’s thoughts and beliefs and their observations of other people’s behavior • Vicarious or observational learning: Occurs when a learner is motivated to perform a behavior by watching another person perform and be reinforced for doing so Social Learning Theory • Self-reinforcement: Any desired or attractive outcome or award that a person can give himself or herself for good performance • Self-efficacy: A person’s belief about his or her ability to perform a behavior successfully Pay and Motivation • Expectancy theory: Pay is an outcome that has high valence for many people • Need theory: Pay is used to satisfy many needs • Equity theory: Pay is given in proportion to inputs • Goal setting theory: Pay is linked to attainment of goals • Learning theory: Outcomes (pay), should be contingent on the performance of organizationally functional behaviors Merit Pay and Performance • Merit pay plan • • A compensation plan that bases pay on performance Individual, group, organizational performance Salary Increase or Bonus? • Managers can distribute merit pay to people in the form of a salary increase or a bonus • Salary levels are based on performance levels, cost-of-living increases • Bonus plans have more motivational impact than salary increases • The amount of the bonus can be directly and exclusively based on performance Salary Increase or Bonus? • Employee stock option: A financial instrument that entitles the bearer to buy shares of an organization’s stock at a certain price during a certain period of time or under certain conditions • Stock options are not used much to reward past individual performance but, rather, to motivate employees to work in the future for the good of the company Examples of Merit Pay Plans • Piece-rate pay: Employee’s pay is based on the number of units that the employee produces • Commission pay: Employee’s pay is based on a percentage of sales that the employee makes • Scanlon plan: Focuses on reduced expenses or cutting costs • Profit sharing: Employees receive a share of an organization’s profits