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Motivation Questionnaires
Motivation to Manage
CLASS MEAN
35
HISTORICAL MEAN
34
ERG
CLASS MEAN
E
17
R
15
G
16
HISTORICAL MEAN
17
15
16
PROCESS THEORIES
Equity Theory
 Expectancy Theory
 Goal-Setting Theory (Ch. 6)

Equity Theory Concepts

Inputs


Outcomes


rewards employees receive from the organization
Referent Persons


employee contributions to the organization
comparison others
Outcome/Input (O/I) ratio
Outcomesself
= Outcomesother
Inputsself
Inputsother
Consequences Of Inequity
Under-reward
Anger
Perceived
Inequity
Tension
Motivation
to Change
Tension
Motivation
to Change
Dissatisfaction
Guilt
Over-reward
How People React to Perceived
Inequity (feeling under-paid)
Reduce inputs
 Increase outcomes
 Rationalize inputs or outcomes
 Change the referent person
 Leave (e.g., change jobs)

EXPECTANCY THEORY

Analyzes the parts of the Motivation
Process that the Leader must attend to
(cf., Path-Goal Theory of Leadership)

Has the greatest Breadth of popular
motivation theories
EXPECTANCY THEORY
E
P
(Expectancy)
P O
(Intrumentality)
What is the probability
What is the probability
that I can perform at the that my good performance
required level if
will lead to desired
I try?
outcomes?
Effort
Performance
Valence
What value do I place
on the potential
outcome?
Outcomes
MULTIPLICATIVE
RELATIONSHIP
If any of the three (Expectancy,
Instrumentality, or Valence) equal Zero,
then there is No Motivation.
Ranking Rewards
How do you think 1000 non-managers
ranked the following? (1 = highest)
_2_
_4_
_7_
_3_
_5_
_9_
_8_
_1_
10_
_6_
Work done being appreciated
Job security
Good working conditions
Feeling of being in on things
Good wages
Tactful discipline
Organization being loyal to employees
Interesting work
Sympathetic help with personal problems
Promotion and growth opportunities
Applying Expectancy Theory

Increase Expectancy:
 Enhance
employees’ skills
 Build up employees’ confidence

Increase Instrumentality
 Clearly

link rewards to performance
Increase Valences
 Find
jobs
out what employees want from their
How do we learn?

Classical Conditioning
 Learn
by experiencing two stimuli occurring
close in time

Operant Conditioning
 Learn

from consequences of behaviors
Social Learning
 Learn
by observing others
Classical Conditioning

Involuntary reflexes
 Behavior
is “elicited”
Neutral Stimulus becomes
“conditioned” through association
with an “unconditioned” one
 Thus, the formerly neutral stimulus
now elicits the response previously
elicited only by the “unconditioned”
stimulus

Operant Conditioning

Voluntary Behavior
 Behavior
is “emitted”
Associations learned among
Stimulus, Response, and
Consequence
 The focus is on learning to obtain
positive outcomes and avoid
negative ones
 Behavior is “Shaped” through small,
reinforced steps

Social Learning
Also called “Modeling” and
“Vicarious Learning”
 Observe someone else (the Model)
 Consequences to Model are
important
 Can be considered a sub-category of
Operant Conditioning

MAJOR ELEMENTS OF
REINFORCEMENT
THEORY

Stimulus
 Supervisor

requests faster work
Response
 Employee
increases or decreases speed or
does nothing

Consequence
 Positive
Reinforcement, Negative Reinf.
(Avoidance), Extinction, Punishment
BEHAVIORAL CONSEQUENCES
To Motivate
Employees to
Continue Desired
Behaviors
To Motivate
Employees to Cease
Undesirable
Behaviors
Positive Reinforcement
(Good outcome if you
continue)
Extinction
(No outcome whether you
continue or not)
Negative Reinforcement
(Bad outcome if you don’t
continue)
Punishment
(Bad outcome if you don’t
stop)
Spacing or Timing of Reinforcements
SCHEDULES OF REINFORCEMENT
Fixed
Variable
Fixed Interval
Variable Interval
Passage of
Time
Fixed Ratio
Variable Ratio
Number of Times
Behavior Occurs
Basis for Determining Frequency of Reinforcement
SCHEDULES OF
REINFORCEMENT:
EXTINCTION
The less predictable Reinforcement was in
the past, the more difficult behavior is to
extinguish (Resistance to Extinction)
--Intermittent (Partial) Schedules are more
resistant than Continuous (100%)
--Variable Schedules are more resistant than
Fixed