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BA105-1: Organizational Behavior Professor Jim Lincoln Week 8: Lecture Motivation and Job Design.

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Presentation on theme: "BA105-1: Organizational Behavior Professor Jim Lincoln Week 8: Lecture Motivation and Job Design."— Presentation transcript:

1 BA105-1: Organizational Behavior Professor Jim Lincoln Week 8: Lecture Motivation and Job Design

2 2 Agenda Today –Theories of motivation –Job design for motivation Thursday –Lecture windup; questions –Discuss NUMMI Adler paper NUMMI video –Discuss motivation issues in People Express –Go over exam

3 3 Rank-order (#1-#8) the following as to their importance to you as motivators in your job: Benefits Worthwhile Praise Pay Learning Security Feels good Skills An experiment

4 4 Now rank-order (#1-#8) the following as to their importance for others’ motivations ( imagine you were being paid for the accuracy of your predictions): Benefits Worthwhile Praise Pay Learning Security Feels good Skills An experiment

5 5 Choose Between: Job A: A moderately interest- ing and enjoyable job with high pay Job B: An extremely interes- ting and enjoyable job with only average pay Predicted % who Prefer A Actual % who Prefer A Sample Size United States 68381713 Canada 54332253 Sweden 4281100 Finland 4324678 MBAs 6245140 How important is money?

6 6 Theories of extrinsic motivation (What are the managerial implications?) Homo economicus (Theory X, Taylor, principal/agent) M=f(R) –People are rational but selfish, opportunistic, & risk- and effort- averse. They need strong incentives & close monitoring Expectancy/path-goal (Vroom) M = E(R i ) =  (p i )R i –People are rational and goal-directed. They map paths to the attainment of rewards. Extrinsic rewards motivate only when the perceived probability of attainment is high Learning theory (Skinner) –People are not rational or goal-directed. Random behavior that is rewarded is reinforced. Behavior that is punished is extinguished Equity theory: M = f(R s /E s - R o /E o ) –People benchmark the value of their extrinsic rewards on those of others. Perceived inequity may be motivating or demotivating

7 7 Theory X and Theory Y Douglas MacGregor: The Human Side of Enterprise, 1960 Theory X 1. People are motivated only by economic gain 2. People resist effort; tend to “soldier” on the job 3. People need clear, simple tasks and strong direction 4. People are selfish, individualistic, “look out for number one” Theory Y 1. People are motivated by many nonfinancial rewards 2. People need challenge, variety, feedback, closure in work 3. People attach meaning and value to work and worklife 4. People are highly social and sensitive to group norms

8 8

9 9 The pain of inequity Sitting on his back porch, with a view of a lake, his black Mercedes parked in the driveway, John Mariotti ponders the unfairness of life. "I see people I know couldn't carry my briefcase walking away with failure packages bigger than my net worth," says Mr. Mariotti, 57 years old, a former executive and now a Knoxville, Tenn., consultant who made more than $150,000 last year. Most people don't begrudge Bill Gates his billions. What seems to be more unnerving to high-wage earners is the belief that many of the new super-rich have stumbled into their wealth by being at the right place at the right time -- or, even more infuriatingly, have succeeded after failing at careers in law, medicine or big corporations. WSJ 8/3/1998

10 10 Theories of intrinsic motivation (What are the managerial implications?) Theory Y (McGregor, Marx) –People find meaning & fulfilment through work (intrinsic rewards) Motivation/hygiene (Herzberg) –Extrinsic rewards reduce dissatisfaction; intrinsic rewards motivate Hierarchy of needs (Maslow) –People have needs that both intrinsic and extrinsic rewards fulfil. Intrinsic rewards motivate only after a sufficient level of extrinsic reward is attained Cognitive dissonance (Festinger) –People as rationalizers: need consistency in cognitions & behavior Too much extrinsic reward makes work less intrinsically rewarding Too little extrinsic reward makes work more intrinsically rewarding

11 MASLOW’S NEEDS HIERARCHY APPLIED TO JOB DESIGN Pay/benefits Job security Friends at work Challenging work Recognition, respect

12 12 What exactly is motivating about money? “Status is of great importance in all human relationships. The greatest incentive that money has, usually, is that it is a symbol of success... The resulting status is the real incentive. Money can be an incentive to the miser only.” John F. Lincoln, CEO Lincoln Electric

13 13 Dilbert on cognitive dissonance

14 14 What makes a job intrinsically rewarding? Leadership –inspiring vision and charisma Culture and community –identification, commitment, respect Job tasks

15 15 What attributes of job tasks are intrinsically rewarding?

16 16 Classical job design (Taylorism): Efficiency & reliability through standardization and control Narrow scope Simple, repetitive tasks Rigid rules & specs Close, top-down supervision Low autonomy Low skill Fixed pay (by job or time) or individual incentive pay Long job ladders Efficiency at the expense of motivation!

17 17 Job redesign for motivation Classical (Taylorist) job design Job rotation –cross-train; pay for job skills Job enlargement (horizontal loading). Pull in: –support tasks –upstream and downstream production tasks Job enrichment (vertical loading). Pull down: –Authority, accountability, responsibility Switch to teams –Off-line problem-solving –On-line self-managing Industrial democracy –European supervisory boards; works councils; Saturn; People Express Low- Scope and Empowerment-High

18 18 What does the NUMMI case say about job redesign?

19 19 Managers ignore at their peril our tendency to seek intrinsic rationales for work activities. Human motivation has complex causes that may work in contradictory ways Managers need to think about those channels in designing job and reward systems Be clear about your own motivational assumptions before you begin designing job and reward systems. The theories of motivation managers carry in their heads can become self-fulfilling prophecies Efficiency and motivation are not contradictory goals in job design Takeaways


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