Ob 7
Ob 7
Theories of Motivation
• Individual Needs
• Situation outside individual
• Opportunities to fulfill those needs
Early Theories of Motivation
• Relatedness needs:
– To be recognized and feel secure as part of a group, a
family, a culture
• Growth needs:
– To progress toward one's ideal self.
Alderfer’s ERG Theory
• Basic Premise:
• That specific and difficult goals, with self-generated feedback,
lead to higher performance
• Difficult Goals:
• Focus and direct attention
• Energize the person to work harder
• Difficulty increases persistence
• Force people to be more effective and efficient
• Creativeness
• Relationship between goals and performance depends
on:
• Goal commitment (the more public the better!)
• Task characteristics (simple, well-learned)
• Culture (best match is in North America)
Goal Setting Theory
• Effectiveness of goals
• Public
• Self set
• Simple and understandable
Implementation: Management by
Objectives
• MBO is a systematic way to utilize goal-setting.
• Goals must be:
• Tangible
• Verifiable
• Measurable
• Corporate goals are broken down into smaller,
more specific goals at each level of organization.
• Four common ingredients to MBO programs:
• Goal specificity
• Participative decision making
• Explicit time period
• Performance feedback
Bandura’s Self-Efficacy Theory
• Enactive mastery
• Most important source of efficacy
• Gaining relevant experience with task or job
• Vicarious modeling
• Increasing confidence by watching others perform the task
• Most effective when observer sees the model to be similar to
him- or herself
• Verbal persuasion
• Motivation through verbal conviction
• self-fulfilling prophecies (Pygmalion and Galatea effects)
• Arousals
• Getting “psyched up” – emotionally aroused – to complete
task
• Can hurt performance if emotion is not a component of the
task
Reinforcement Theory
Overall
perception of
what is fair in
the workplace.
Vroom’s Expectancy Theory