Uploaded by Islombek Ergashev

07People Motivating Workplace

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Creating Motivating Workplace
Chapter 7
1
Before Starting
 What happens to your life?
 Any little changes in you?
- Thinking
- Feeling
- Behavior
 What did we study in Chap. 6?
2
Key words of Chap. 6
3
Lessons of Chap. 7
Lesson 1: Job Design & Work Arrangements
Lesson 2: Pay & Reward Systems
Lesson 3: Employment Relationship & Careers
4
We are studying OB
5
Lesson 1
Job Design & Work
Arrangements
6
The Motivation Tools
Job
Design
Inputs:
Effort
Time
Education
Experience
Skills
Knowledge
Job behaviors
Performance:
Quantity
Quality
Level of
customer
service
Outcomes:
Pay
Job security
Benefits
Satisfaction
Pleasure
7
What Is Job Design?
• Define specific jobs for workers
8
What Is Job Design?
• Define specific jobs for workers
• Deciding what techniques, equipment, and
procedures should be used to perform those tasks
• Job design may increase motivation and encourage
good performance
9
Job Design: Early Approaches
 Scientific management
 Job enlargement
 Job enrichment
10
Scientific Management
• A set of principles and practices stressing job
simplification and specialization
• There is one best way to perform any job
• Management’s responsibility is to determine what
that way is
• Time and motion studies
11
Disadvantages of the Scientific Management
Method
• Loss of control
• Repetitive, boring tasks
• Meaningless, monotonous work
• High job dissatisfaction
• No opportunity to develop and acquire new skills
12
“Modern Times” by Charlie Chaplin
Watch a Video Clip
13
How to Make These Jobs More Motivating
14
How to Make These Jobs More Motivating
15
How to Make These Jobs More Motivating
16
Job Enlargement
Increasing the number of tasks an employee performs
but keeping all of the tasks at the same level of
difficulty and responsibility
• Horizontal job loading
• Job rotation
17
Job Enrichment
Designing jobs to provide opportunities for employee
growth by giving employees more responsibility and
control over their work
• Vertical job loading
• Empowerment
18
Enrichment Methods
• Allow employees to plan their own work schedules
• Allow employees to decide how the work should be
performed
• Allow employees to check their own work
• Allow employees to learn new skills
19
The Job Characteristics Model
 Integrated Model of Job
Design
 Developed by Greg
Oldham and Richard
Hackman in 60s
 Based on intrinsic
motivation theory
Five Core Dimensions
 Skill variety
 Task identity
 Task significance
 Autonomy
 Feedback
20
Job Diagnostic Survey
• Scales used to measure the five dimensions
• Allows for the computation of a job’s motivating
potential score (MPS)
MPS=(SV+TI+TS)/3x ATxFB
• Identifies the dimensions most in need of redesign
21
Sample Job Diagnostic Survey Profiles
22
Job Diagnostic Survey_Excercise
Job Dimension
Security Guard
Professor
Skill Variety
Task Identity
Task Significance
Average
Autonomy
Feedback
MPS
23
Ways to Redesign Jobs to Increase MPS
• Combine tasks so that an employee is responsible for
work from start to finish
• Group tasks into natural work units
• Allow employees to interact with customers or
clients (relational job design)
• Vertically load jobs to give employees more control
and higher levels of responsibility
• Open feedback channels
24
Job Dimensions and Psychological States
• Experienced meaningfulness of the work
• Experienced responsibility for work outcomes
• Knowledge of results
25
Work and Personal Outcomes
• High intrinsic motivation
• High job performance
• High job satisfaction
• Low absenteeism and turnover
26
Job Characteristics Model
27
Individual Differences
• Growth-need strength
• Knowledge and skills
• Satisfaction with the work context
28
Alternative Work Arrangements
 Flextime : Flexible work hours
 Job Sharing : Two or more individuals split a
traditional 40-hour-a week job
 Telecommuting : Working from home at least 2
days a week through virtual devices that are liked to
the employer's office
29
Job Crafting
 Job crafting : An employee-initiated approach
which enables employees to shape their own work
environment such that it fits their individual needs
by adjusting the prevailing job demands and
resources (Time & Bakker, 2020)

Task crafting : Changing up Responsibilities

Relationship crafting : Changing up interactions

Cognitive crafting : Changing up your mindset
30
Exercise for lesson 1
1. What is scientific management for job design?
2. What is job enlargement?
3. What is job enrichment?
4. What are the core dimensions of job characteristics
model?
5. What is job crafting?
31
Lesson 2
Pay & Rewards Systems
32
The Motivation Tools
Job
Design
Performance
Appraisal
Inputs:
Effort
Time
Education
Experience
Skills
Knowledge
Job behaviors
Performance:
Quantity
Quality
Level of
customer
service
Outcomes:
Pay
Job security
Benefits
Satisfaction
Pleasure
33
Performance Appraisal
• Encourage high levels of employee motivation
and performance (feedback)
• Provide accurate information to be used in
managerial decision making (reward or job
assignment)
34
Information Provided to Employees
 Level of contribution
 Accuracy of tasks and direction
Performance appraisals
give employees feedback
that contributes to
intrinsic motivation!
35
Information Functions
Developmental purposes
Evaluative,
decision-making purposes
36
Developing a Performance Appraisal System
Choice 1: The mix of
formal and informal appraisals
Choice 2: What factors to evaluate
Choice 3: Methods of appraisal
Choice 4: Who appraises performance
37
Factors to Evaluate
Traits
Behaviors
Results
38
Factors to Evaluate
Young
Research
Engineers
Research
Team
leaders
Results
Skill
Ability
Behavior
Attitude
39
Methods of Appraisal
Objective:
Subjective:
Numerical
counts
based on facts
Perceptions
based on traits,
behaviors, and
results
40
Graphic Rating Scale
41
Behaviorally Anchored Rating Scale
42
Behavioral Observation Scale
43
Who Appraises Performance?
 Supervisors
 Subordinate
 Self-appraisals
appraisals
 Customer/client
appraisals
 Multiple raters
 Peer appraisals
360-degree appraisal
44
Problems and Biases
 Harshness, leniency,
 Stereotypes
and average tendency
 Primacy effect
biases
 Contrast effect
 Knowledge-of-predictor
 Halo effect
bias
 Similar-to-me effect
45
The Motivation Tools
Job
Design
Performance
Appraisal
Pay &
Rewards
Inputs:
Effort
Time
Education
Experience
Skills
Knowledge
Job behaviors
Performance:
Quantity
Quality
Level of
customer
service
Outcomes:
Pay
Job security
Benefits
Satisfaction
Pleasure
46
Pay Systems: Different Elements
Basic & Variable elements
47
Basic Salary
 Job-based : According to job grades
 Seniority-based : Automatic yearly increase
 Skill-based : According to skill(or qualification)
grades
48
Variable Pay Programs
Also known as “Pay for performance”
 Piece-rate pay : According to production volume
 Merit pay: Based on performance appraisal ratings
 Bonus : Big amount, not cumulative
 Profit-sharing
 Employee stock ownership
49
Variable Pay at Different Levels
 Individual
 Team or group
 Department
 Company
50
Exercise for lesson 2
1. What is performance appraisal?
2. What is developmental purpose of performance
appraisal?
3. What is 360 degree feedback?
4. What is job-based pay?
5. What is pay-for-performance?
51
Lesson 3
Employment
Relationships & Careers
52
Homework #6
Choose a topic among the following 3 topics.
Make a presentation material more than 10 ppt slides
Submit thru telegram, Monday Dec. 26, noon.
• Job Design
• Pay-for-performance
• 360 degree feedback
53
Mid-term Exam.
• Take-home
• Questions are released next Monday Dec. 26.
• Submit the answer sheet till 5 pm. Monday,
Jan. 5, 2023.
• Questions are open questions for short essays.
54
Your Concept of Workplace
 What is a workplace for you?
 A kind of family?
 Just for money making?
 Is it a stepping-stone for the next career?
 Do you want to stay in an organization as long as
possible?
55
Psychological Contract
Employee and employer have an exchange
relationship.
They have expectations about their obligations and
rights, legal as well as psychological.
Psychological contract influence a lot the employee
behaviors.
56
Psychological Contract
Contributions
(Perception, expectation)
Employee
Employer
Compensations
(Perception, expectation)
57
Sources of Information
 Direct communication from coworkers and
supervisors
 Written documents
 Observations of what actually transpires in the
organization
58
Types of Psychological Contracts
Transactional
Contracts:
Short term
Narrow and specific
Limited promises
and obligations
Relational
Contracts:
Long term
General and evolving
Extensive and
broad promises
and obligations
59
Multiple Psychological Contracts
Contingent(Transactional)
Regular
(Relational)
60
Effects of Psychological Contract
 Job design and reward system become elements
of psychological contract.
 Once the contract established, the employees
and the employer want to maintain the contract.
 However, the breach of contract happens for a
variety of reasons, particularly in this turbulent
society.
61
Consequences of Broken Contracts
• Poor motivation and performance
• Negative moods and emotions
• Job dissatisfaction
• Intent to quit
8-62
Transition of Psychological Contracts
• From “relational” to “transactional”
• However, many employees are not prepared for
that.
• In transactional contract or relationship,
individuals must be more proactive and
entrepreneurial.
8-63
Motivation in the Long Run
• Motivation problem must be dealt with within a
broader context in the long view.
• Employer should support career development
of their employees even beyond the current
organizational boundary.
• Boundaryless career
64
Career Support
• Identify long-term career goals of employees
• Provide training or coaching opportunities for
the future careers
• Sometimes encourage to spin off from the main
business and to start a new business.
8-65
Chapter Review
1.
Close your book and notes.
2. Take a blank sheet and try to write down on the
sheet the key words you’ve learnt today, as many as
possible, without any reference.(2 min.)
3. Now, look at your notes and lecture slides of
today’s class. (3 min.)
4. Select three key words you’d like to memorize from
today’s lessons.
Thank You Very Much!
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