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Motivation - Organizational Behaviour - Lecture Slides, Slides of Organization Behaviour

Main topics of Organizational Behavior course are: Communications, Conflict, Creativity, Cross Cultural, Decision Making, Diversity, Groups and Teams, Organization Learning, Leadership, Motivation, Organization Culture. Key points of this lecture are: Motivation, Organizational Goals, Ability, Performance, Intrinsic and Extrinsic Motivation, Type of Activity, Content and Process, Maslow's Pyramid, Physiological, Self-Actualization

Typology: Slides

2012/2013

Uploaded on 08/31/2013

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Motivation
Definitions
Content models
Process models
Putting it into action
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Motivation

  • Definitions
  • Content models
  • Process models
  • Putting it into action

What is Motivation?

  • “Willingness to exert effort to reach

organizational goals”

  • The force that starts, sustains, and directs

activity

Need Tension Drive Search Sat. ReductionTension

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Intrinsic vs. Extrinsic Motivation

Type of Activity Motivation Freedom Human Value Work Extrinsic^ Constrained^ ??? Play Intrinsic^ Freely Chosen^ Distraction Leisure Intrinsic Freely Chosen Self-Fulfillment

  • Where does our motivation come from?
    • Extrinsic = external rewards
    • Intrinsic = rewards from the task itself
  • Application to domains of human activity

Content vs. Process

  • Content
    • What motivates us?
  • Process
    • How are we motivated?

Maslow’s Pyramid

Physiological

Safety

Social

Esteem

Self-Actualization

Herzberg’s Two Factor Model

  • Ideas developed through work with engineers and scientists
  • Job satisfaction and job dissatisfaction are separate, not two ends of a single scale
  • One group of factors prevents dissatisfaction, but does not cause satisfaction
  • Another group of factors cause satisfaction
  • Question: does satisfaction lead to performance?
    • Traditionally, we said Yes
    • However, performance may cause satisfaction
    • But, satisfaction is related to turnover

McClelland - Needs

  • Three basic human needs
    • Achievement
    • Power
    • Affiliation
  • N Ach  performance
  • Tested on large scale basis
    • N Ach (children’s stories)
    • National performance (utility usage)

Theories X and Y

Little ambition Dislike work Avoid responsibility

Self-directed Enjoy work Accept responsibility

Theory X Theory Y

Process Models

  • Behavior modification
  • Goal setting
  • VIE
  • Equity Theory
  • Job Characteristics Model

Behavior Modification

  • Basic psychological theory
    • Pavlov
    • Skinner
  • Behavior is a function of its consequences
  • Some say….assumes that people have little

free will

How it Works

Contingency

Apply

Withhold

Consequenc Reward e Punishment Positive Reinforcement

Negative Reinforcement

Punishment

Extinction

Schedules of Reinforcement

FIXED INTERVAL Reinforcement occurs at fixed intervals of time: the bimonthly paycheck.

FIXED RATIO Reinforcement occurs after a set number of behaviors: piece rate pay.

VARIABLE INTERVAL Reinforcement occurs at random intervals of time: the supervisor visits the employee, on no fixed or set schedule, to praise at that time.

VARIABLE RATIO Reinforcement occurs after a random number of behaviors: gambling, especially slot machines.

Goal Setting

  • Goals lead to performance
  • Specific goals lead to higher performance than general goals
  • Performance increases in proportion to goal difficulty -- but goals should be attainable
  • Goals must be accepted
  • Goals should be linked to feedback and rewards

What is a Good Goal?

  • Specific
  • Measurable
  • Attainable
  • Realistic, rewarded
  • Timely
  • Feedback
  • Integrated, Intermediate
  • Challenging, clear