Chapter 6

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Organizational Behaviour:

Understanding and Managing Life at


Work
Twelfth Edition

Chapter 6
Motivation in Practice

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Money as a Motivator (1 of 6)
• How important is pay for you?

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Money as a Motivator (2 of 6)
• Employees and managers seriously underestimate the
importance of pay as a motivator.

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Money as a Motivator (3 of 6)
• How effective is pay as a motivator?

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Money as a Motivator (4 of 6)
• The motivation theories suggest that pay is a very
important motivator.

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Money as a Motivator: Need Theories
• Pay can satisfy lower-level needs as well as social, self-
esteem, and self-actualization needs so it should have
good potential as a motivator.
• How can this potential be realized?

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Money as a Motivator: Expectancy
Theory
• If pay can satisfy a variety of needs, it should be highly
valent, and it should be a good motivator to the extent that
it is clearly tied to performance.

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Money as a Motivator (5 of 6)
• Financial incentives and pay-for-performance plans have
been found to increase performance and lower turnover.
• Both individual and team-based financial incentives have
been shown to have a positive effect on performance.
• Pay may well be the most important and effective
motivator of performance.

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Money as a Motivator (6 of 6)
• The ability to earn money for outstanding performance is a
competitive advantage for attracting, motivating, and
retaining employees.
• Providing employees with some portion of their pay that is
based on a measure of performance is known as variable
pay or pay for performance (PFP).

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Linking Pay to Performance on
Production Jobs (1 of 3)
• The prototype of all schemes to link pay to performance
on production jobs is piece-rate.
• Piece-rate refers to a pay system in which individual
workers are paid a certain sum of money for each unit of
production they complete.

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Linking Pay to Performance on
Production Jobs (2 of 3)
• Various schemes to link pay to performance on production
jobs are called wage incentive plans.
• The introduction of wage incentives usually leads to
substantial increases in productivity.
• One of the best examples of the successful use of a wage
incentive plan is the Lincoln Electric Company.

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Linking Pay to Performance on
Production Jobs (3 of 3)
• Not as many organizations use wage incentives as you
might expect.
• What accounts for the relatively low utilization of a
motivational system that has proven results?

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Potential Problems with Wage
Incentives
• Wage incentives have some potential problems when they
are not managed with care:
– Lowered quality
– Differential opportunity
– Reduced cooperation
– Incompatible job design
– Restriction of productivity

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Lowered Quality
• Wage incentives can increase productivity at the expense
of quality.
• Requires a system to monitor and maintain quality.

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Differential Opportunity
• A threat to the establishment of wage incentives exists
when workers have differential opportunities to produce at
a high level.
• If the supply of raw materials or the quality of production
equipment varies from workplace to workplace.

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Reduced Cooperation
• Wage incentives that reward individual productivity might
decrease cooperation among workers.
• Workers might hoard raw materials or refuse to engage in
peripheral tasks (e.g., keeping the shop clean).

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Incompatible Job Design (1 of 2)
• The way jobs are designed can make it very difficult to
implement wage incentives.
• On an assembly line it is almost impossible to identify and
reward individual contributions to productivity.

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Incompatible Job Design (2 of 2)
• Wage incentive systems can be designed to reward team
productivity.
• However, as the size of the team increases, the
relationship between any individual’s productivity and their
pay decreases.
• As team size increases the intended incentive effect is
reduced.

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Restriction of Productivity
• The artificial limitation of work output that can occur under
wage incentive plans.
• Workers come to an informal agreement about what
constitutes a fair day’s work and artificially limit their
output accordingly.
• This can decrease the expected benefits of the incentive
system.
• Why does restriction often occur under wage incentive
systems?

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Hypothetical Productivity Distributions
Exhibit 6.1 Hypothetical productivity distributions, with and
without wage incentives, when incentives promote
restriction.

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Reasons for Restriction of
Productivity
• Employees feel that increased productivity due to the
incentive will lead to reductions in the workforce.
• Employees fear that if they produce at an especially high
level, an employer will reduce the rate of payment to cut
labour costs.
• Restriction is less likely when a climate of trust and a
history of good relations exist between employees and
management.

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Linking Pay to Performance on White-
Collar Jobs (1 of 3)
• Objective indicators of individual performance on white-
collar jobs are often difficult to find.
• Performance in many such jobs is evaluated by the
subjective judgment of an individual’s manager.

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Linking Pay to Performance on White-
Collar Jobs (2 of 3)
• Merit pay plans are systems that attempt to link pay to
performance on white-collar jobs.
• Managers evaluate the performance of employees and
then recommend some amount of merit pay be awarded.
• There is some evidence that pay-for-performance merit
pay plans and bonus pay have a positive effect on job
performance, especially in jobs where performance is
more objectively measured.

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Linking Pay to Performance on White-
Collar Jobs (3 of 3)
• Although merit pay can improve performance, many merit
pay systems are ineffective.
• Individuals who work under such a system often do not
perceive a link between their job performance and pay.
• There is also evidence that pay is not related to
performance under some merit pay plans.
• In most organizations, seniority, number of employees,
and job level account for more variation in pay than
performance.

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Potential Problems with Merit Pay
Plans
• Merit pay plans have several potential problems if
employers do not manage them carefully:
– Low discrimination
– Small increases
– Pay secrecy

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Low Discrimination
• Managers might be unable or unwilling to discriminate
between good performers and poor performers.
• Subjective evaluations of performance are often distorted
by a number of perceptual errors.

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Small Increases
• Sometimes merit increases are too small to be effective
motivators.
• Some firms have replaced conventional merit pay with a
lump sum bonus that is paid out all at one time and not
built into base pay.
• There is some evidence that bonus pay has a stronger
effect on job performance than conventional merit pay.
• If bonuses are not carefully designed they might
encourage unethical behaviour.

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Pay Secrecy (1 of 3)
• Extreme secrecy surrounds salaries in most organizations.
• Pay secrecy can severely damage the motivational impact
of a well-designed merit plan.
• Many organizations fail to inform employees about the
average raise received by those doing similar work.

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Pay Secrecy (2 of 3)
• Managers overestimate the pay of their employees and
their peers and underestimate the pay of their superiors.
• These tendencies reduce satisfaction with pay, damage
perceptions of the linkage between performance and
rewards, and reduce the valence of promotion to a higher
level of management.

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A Manager’s Estimates of Pay Earned
by Boss, Peers, and Subordinates
Exhibit 6.2 A manager’s estimates of pay earned by boss,
peers, and subordinates.

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Pay Secrecy (3 of 3)
• Pay disclosure can increase performance and satisfaction
with pay if the system is properly designed and
implemented.
• If performance evaluation systems are inadequate and
poorly implemented, a more open pay policy will simply
expose the inadequacy of the merit system and lead
managers to evaluate performance in a manner that
reduces conflict.

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Using Pay to Motivate Teamwork (1 of 2)
• Some firms have either replaced or supplemented
individual incentive pay with plans designed to foster more
cooperation and teamwork.
• Organizations have to choose pay plans that support their
strategic needs.

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Pay Plans to Motivate Teamwork
• Each of the following plans has a different motivational
focus:
– Profit sharing
– Employee stock ownership plans (ESO Ps)
– Gainsharing
– Skill-based pay

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Profit Sharing (1 of 2)
• The return of some company profit to employees in the
form of a cash bonus or a retirement supplement.
• One of the most commonly used group-oriented incentive
systems.

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Profit Sharing (2 of 2)
• A major problem is that many factors beyond the control of
the workforce can affect profits no matter how well people
perform their jobs.
• In a large firm, it is difficult to see the impact of one’s own
actions on profits.
• Profit sharing works best in small firms that regularly turn
a profit.

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Employee Stock Ownership Plans (ESOPs)
(1 of 3)

• Incentive plans that allow employees to own a set amount


of a company’s shares and provide employees with a
stake in the company’s future earnings and success.
• They can increase employee loyalty and motivation.
• They align employees’ goals and interests with those of
the organization and create a sense of legal and
psychological ownership.

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Employee Stock Ownership Plans (ESOPs)
(2 of 3)

• Some evidence that ESO Ps improve employee retention


and profitability.
• They work best in small organizations that regularly make
a profit.
• In large organizations, it is difficult for employees to see
the connection between their efforts and company profits.

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Employee Stock Ownership Plans (ESOPs)
(3 of 3)

• Many other factors can influence the value of a company’s


stock besides employee effort and performance.
• They lose their motivational potential in a weak economy
when a company’s share price goes down.

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Gainsharing (1 of 2)
• A group pay incentive plan based on productivity or
performance improvements over which the workforce has
some control.
• Such plans often include reductions in the cost of labour,
material, or supplies.

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Gainsharing (2 of 2)
• When measured costs decrease, the company pays a
monthly bonus according to a predetermined formula that
shares the “gain” between employees and the firm.
• They are usually implemented using committees that
include extensive workforce participation.
• The most common gainsharing plan is the Scanlon Plan.

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The Scanlon Plan
• Stresses participatory management and joint problem
solving between employees and managers, and uses the
pay system to reward employees for cooperative
behaviour.
• Pay is used to align company and employee goals.
• Productivity improvements have been found following the
introduction of Scanlon-type plans.
• Perception that the plan is fair is critical.

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Skill-Based Pay (1 of 2)
• A system in which employees are paid according to the
number of job skills they have acquired.
• The idea is to motivate employees to learn a wide variety
of skills and work tasks.
• The more skills that are acquired, the higher the person’s
pay.

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Skill-Based Pay (2 of 2)
• Encourages employee flexibility in task assignments and
provides employees with a broader picture of the work
process.
• Especially useful for self-managed teams and in flexible
manufacturing.
• Training costs can be high.
• Skill-based pay plans have been found to increase
productivity, lower labour costs, and reduce the amount of
scrap.

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Using Pay to Motivate Teamwork (2 of 2)
• Research has found that group-based financial incentives
can have a positive effect on the collective efforts of
employees and business-unit outcomes.
• Team-based pay-for-performance programs have a
positive effect on behavioural, operational, and financial
outcomes.
• The effect of team-based financial incentives on
performance is strongest for smaller teams.

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Job Design as a Motivator
• Job design refers to the structure, content, and
configuration of a person’s work tasks and roles.
• It is an attempt to capitalize on intrinsic motivation.
• The goal of job design is to identify the characteristics that
make some tasks more motivating than others and to
capture these characteristics in the design of jobs.

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Traditional Views of Job Design
• From the beginning of the Industrial Revolution until the
1960s, the prevailing philosophy regarding the design of
most non-managerial jobs was job simplification.
• Organizations recognized that specialization was the key
to efficient productivity.

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Scientific Management (1 of 2)
• The zenith of job simplification occurred in the early 1900s
with Taylor’s principles of scientific management that
advocated:
– Extreme division of labour and specialization.
– Careful standardization and regulation of work
activities and rest pauses.

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Scientific Management (2 of 2)
• Jobs designed according to the principles of scientific
management are not intrinsically motivating.
• The motivational strategies consisted of close supervision
and piece-rate pay.
• Simplification helped workers achieve a reasonable
standard of living.

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Job Scope and Motivation (1 of 2)
• Job scope refers to the breadth and depth of a job.
• Breadth refers to the number of different activities
performed on the job.
• Depth refers to the degree of discretion or control the
worker has over how these tasks are performed.
• Jobs that have great breadth and depth are called high-
scope jobs.

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Job Scope as a Function of Job
Depth and Job Breadth
Exhibit 6.4 Job scope as a function of job depth and job
breadth.

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Job Scope and Motivation (2 of 2)
• Traditional views of job design were attempts to construct
low-scope jobs in which workers specialized in a single
task.
• The motivation theories suggest that high-scope jobs
provide more intrinsic motivation than low-scope jobs.

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Stretch Assignments
• One way to increase the scope of a job is to assign
employees stretch assignments.
• They offer employees opportunities to broaden their skills
by working on a variety of challenging assignments and
projects.

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Job Rotation
• Another approach for increasing the scope of an
individual’s job is job rotation.
• Employees are rotated to different tasks and jobs in an
organization.
• It can involve working in different functional areas and
departments.
• It can provide a variety of challenging assignments,
develop new skills and expertise, and prepare employees
for future roles.

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The Job Characteristics Model (1 of 2)
• The Job Characteristics Model proposes that there are
several “core” job characteristics that have a certain
psychological impact on workers.
• The psychological states induced by the nature of the job
lead to certain outcomes.
• Several factors called moderators influence the extent to
which these relationships hold true.

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The Job Characteristics Model (2 of 2)
Exhibit 6.5 The Job Characteristics Model.

Source: J. Richard Hackman & Greg R. Oldham, Work Redesign, 1st Ed., ©1980, p. 90.
Reprinted and electronically reproduced by permission of Pearson Education, Inc., New
York, NY.

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Core Job Characteristics
• There are five core job characteristics that have
particularly strong potential to affect worker motivation:
– Skill variety
– Task identity
– Task significance
– Autonomy
– Job feedback

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Skill Variety
• The opportunity to do a variety of job activities using
various skills and talents.
• It corresponds to job breadth.

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Autonomy
• The freedom to schedule one’s own work activities and
decide work procedures.
• It corresponds to job depth.

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Task Significance
• The impact that a job has on other people.

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Task Identity
• The extent to which a job involves doing a complete piece
of work, from beginning to end.

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Feedback
• Information about the effectiveness of one’s work
performance.
• People are not motivated for long if they do not know how
well they are doing.

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Job Diagnostic Survey
• The Job Diagnostic Survey (JDS) is a questionnaire to
measure the core job characteristics.
• Individuals report the amount of the various core job
characteristics contained in their jobs.
• An overall measure of the motivating potential of a job can
be calculated from scores on the core job characteristics.

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Motivating Potential Score
• The motivating potential score (MPS) of a job is calculated
using the following formula:

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Critical Psychological States (1 of 2)
• Jobs that are higher on the core job characteristics are
more intrinsically motivating because of their effect on
three psychological states:
– Experienced meaningfulness of the work
– Experienced responsibility for outcomes of the work
– Knowledge of the actual results of the work activities

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Critical Psychological States (2 of 2)
• Jobs that are high on skill variety, task significance, and
task identity are perceived as more meaningful.
• Jobs that are high on autonomy provide for greater
personal responsibility for work outcomes.
• Jobs that are high on performance feedback provide
workers with knowledge of the results of their work
activities.

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Outcomes
• The presence of the critical psychological states leads to a
number of outcomes that are relevant to both the
individual and the organization:
– High intrinsic motivation
– High-quality productivity
– Satisfaction with higher-order needs
– General satisfaction with the job
– Reduced absenteeism and turnover

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Moderators (1 of 2)
• Jobs that are high in motivating potential do not always
lead to favourable outcomes.
• Three moderator or contingency variables intervene
between job characteristics and outcomes:
– Knowledge and skill
– Growth need strength
– “Context” satisfactions

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Moderators (2 of 2)
• Job-relevant knowledge and skill required to perform jobs
high in motivating potential.
• Growth need strength refers to the extent to which people
desire to achieve higher-order need satisfaction by
performing their jobs.
• Workers who are dissatisfied with the context factors that
surround their job (e.g., pay) will be less responsive to
challenging work than those who are reasonably satisfied
with context factors.

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Research Evidence (1 of 3)
• Workers respond more favourably to jobs that are higher
in motivating potential.
• All five job characteristics are related to work outcomes.
• Among the psychological states, the strongest support is
for experienced meaningfulness of the work, less support
for experienced responsibility, and no support for the role
of knowledge of results.
• Evidence for the role of growth needs and context
satisfaction is weak or contradictory.

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Job Enrichment
• The design of jobs to enhance intrinsic motivation, quality
of working life, and job involvement.
• Job enrichment involves increasing the motivating
potential of jobs via the arrangement of their core job
characteristics.

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Job Involvement
• A cognitive state of psychological identification with one’s
job and the importance of work to one’s total self-image.
• All of the core job characteristics are positively related to
job involvement.
• Employees who are more involved in their job have higher
job satisfaction and organizational commitment, and are
less likely to consider leaving their organization.

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Job Enrichment Procedures
• Many job enrichment schemes include the following:
– Combining tasks
– Establishing external client relationships
– Establishing internal client relationships
– Reducing supervision or reliance on others
– Forming work teams
– Making feedback more direct

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Combining Tasks
• This involves assigning tasks that might be performed by
different workers to a single individual.
• Should increase the variety of skills employed and might
contribute to task identity.

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Establishing External Client
Relationships
• This involves putting employees in touch with people
outside the organization who depend on their products or
services.
• Might involve the use of new interpersonal skills, increase
the identity and significance of the job, and increase
feedback about one’s performance.

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Establishing Internal Client
Relationships
• This involves putting employees in touch with people who
depend on their products and services within the
organization.
• Advantages are similar to those that result from
establishing external client relationships.

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Reducing Supervision or Reliance on
Others
• This increases the autonomy and control one has over
their own work.
• Management might permit clerical employees to check
their own work for errors instead of having someone else
do it.

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Forming Work Teams
• Teams can be formed when a product or service is too
large or complex for one person to complete alone or to
complete an entire product.
• This can result in the development of a variety of skills and
increase the identity of the job.

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Making Feedback More Direct
• Permit workers to be identified with their “own” product or
service so that if a customer encounters problems, the
customer can contact the worker directly.
• It is usually used in conjunction with other job design
aspects that permit workers to be identified with their
“own” product or service.

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Potential Problems with Job
Enrichment
• Job enrichment can encounter a number of challenging
problems:
– Poor diagnosis
– Lack of desire or skill
– Demand for rewards
– Union resistance
– Supervisory resistance

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Poor Diagnosis
• Problems with job enrichment can occur when it is
instituted without a careful diagnosis of the needs of the
organization and the particular jobs in question.
• An especially likely error involves increasing job breadth
or what is known as job enlargement.

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Job Enlargement
• Increasing job breadth by giving employees more tasks to
perform at the same level while leaving the other crucial
core characteristics unchanged.
• Workers are given more boring, fragmented, routine tasks
to do.

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Lack of Desire or Skill
• Some workers do not desire enriched jobs.
• Some workers might lack the skills and competence
necessary to perform enriched jobs effectively.
• Enrichment might entail substantial training costs for
poorly educated or trained workers.
• It might be difficult to train some workers in certain skills
required by enriched jobs (e.g., social skills).

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Demand for Rewards
• Workers who experience job enrichment often expect
greater extrinsic rewards, such as pay, to accompany their
redesigned jobs.
• This is because enriched jobs often require the
development of new skills and entail greater responsibility.

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Union Resistance
• North American unions have traditionally not been
enthusiastic about job enrichment.
• Companies and unions have begun to dismantle
restrictive contract provisions regarding job design.
• Fewer job classifications mean more opportunities for
flexibility by combining tasks and using team approaches.

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Supervisory Resistance (1 of 2)
• Job enrichment can fail due to unanticipated effects on
other jobs or parts of the organizational system.
• Enrichment increases the autonomy of employees and it
might “dis-enrich” the supervisor’s job.
• This will not help facilitate a smooth implementation of job
redesign.

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Supervisory Resistance (2 of 2)
• Some organizations have eliminated direct supervision of
workers performing enriched jobs.
• In other cases the supervisor becomes a trainer and
developer of individuals on enriched jobs.

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Work Design
• Acknowledges that both the job and the broader work
environment consists of a wider variety of work design
characteristics than the Job Characteristics Model.

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Work Design Characteristics
• Work design characteristics refer to attributes of the task,
job, and social and organizational environment.
• Three categories:
– Motivational characteristics
– Social characteristics
– Work context characteristics

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Motivational Characteristics
• Includes task characteristics which are similar to the core
job characteristics of the Job Characteristics Model.
• Knowledge characteristics refer to the kinds of knowledge,
skill, and ability demands required to perform a job.
• Note the distinction between task variety and skill variety.

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Social Characteristics
• The interpersonal and social aspects of work:
– Social support
– Interdependence
– Interaction outside of the organization
– Feedback from others

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Work Context Characteristics
• Refers to the context within which work is performed:
– Ergonomics
– Physical demands
– Work conditions
– Equipment use

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Research Evidence (2 of 3)
• Each category of work design characteristics is related to
work attitudes and behaviours.
• The social characteristics are more strongly related to
some outcomes (e.g., turnover intentions) than the
motivational characteristics.
• Overall, work design characteristics have a large and
significant effect on employee attitudes and behaviours.

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Relational Job Design
• Adam Grant developed a relational approach to job design
that he calls the relational architecture of jobs.
• Focuses on the structural properties of work that shape
employees’ opportunities to connect and interact with
other people.

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Relational Architecture of Jobs (1 of 2)
• The basic idea is to motivate employees to make a
difference in other people’s lives or what is known as
prosocial motivation.
• Prosocial motivation refers to the desire to expand effort to
benefit other people.

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Relational Architecture of Jobs (2 of 2)
• This can be done by designing jobs so that employees
have opportunities to interact and communicate with the
people affected by their work so that they see the benefits
and significance of their work for others.
• Research has found that re-designing jobs to emphasize
the relational aspects improves employee motivation and
performance.

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Job Crafting (1 of 7)
• Job crafting involves self-initiated changes that employees
make in their job demands (e.g., workload) and job
resources (e.g., variety) to improve the fit or match
between characteristics of their job and their personal
abilities and needs.

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Job Crafting (2 of 7)
• Job crafting consists of four dimensions or types of job
crafting behaviours:
– Increasing social job resources
– Increasing structural job resources
– Increasing challenging job demands
– Decreasing hindering job demands

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Increasing Social Job Resources (3 of 7)
• Increasing social job resources involves asking for
feedback, advice, and support from supervisors and
colleagues.

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Increasing Structural Job Resources (4 of 7)
• Increasing structural job resources involves behaviours to
increase job characteristics such as autonomy and skill
variety.

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Increasing Challenging Demands (5 of 7)
• Increasing challenging job demands involves behaviours
such as asking for more responsibilities and volunteering
for special projects.

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Decreasing Hindering Demands (6 of 7)
• Decreasing hindering job demands involves behaviours to
minimize physical, cognitive, and emotional demands
such as reducing one’s workload or work-family conflict.

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Job Crafting (7 of 7)
• Individual differences and job characteristics predict job
crafting behaviours.
• Job crafting is positively related to job satisfaction, work
engagement, and job performance, and negatively related
to job strain and burnout.
• Increasing structural job resources is the most important
dimension for predicting work outcomes.

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Job Crafting
Exhibit 6.8 Job crafting.

Source: Based on Rudolph, C. W., Katz, I. M., Lavigne, K. N., & Zacher, H. (2017). Job
crafting: A meta-analysis of relationships with individual differences, job characteristics, and
work outcomes. Journal of Vocational Behavior, 102, 112–138.

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Management by Objectives
• An elaborate, systematic, ongoing program designed to
facilitate goal establishment, goal accomplishment, and
employee development.

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The Management by Objectives
Process (1 of 2)
• Objectives for the organization as a whole are developed
by top management and diffused down through the
organization.
• Organizational objectives are translated into specific
behavioural objectives for individual members.
• The nature of the interaction between managers and
individual workers in an MBO program is important.

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The Management by Objectives
Process (2 of 2)
• MBO manager-employee interactions:
– The manager meets with individual workers to develop
and agree on employee objectives which can include
job performance and personal development objectives.
– There are periodic meetings to monitor employee
progress in achieving objectives.
– An appraisal meeting is held to evaluate the extent to
which the agreed upon objectives have been
achieved.
– The MBO cycle is repeated.

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Research Evidence (3 of 3)
• Research evidence shows that MB O programs result in
productivity gains.
• A number of factors are associated with the failure of MBO
programs:
– Lack of commitment from top management.
– An overemphasis on measurable objectives at the
expense of more qualitative objectives.
– Excessive short-term orientation.
– Performance review becomes an exercise in
browbeating or punishing employees for failure to
achieve objectives.

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Flexible Work Arrangements as
Motivators for a Diverse Workforce
• Many organizations have modified traditional working
schedules and offer their employees flexible work
arrangements.
• Flexible work arrangements are work options that permit
flexibility in terms of “where” and/or “when” work is
completed.
• The purpose is to meet diverse workforce needs and
promote job satisfaction and help employees manage
work and non-work responsibilities and achieve a better
work-life balance.

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Flexible Work Arrangements
• Some of the most common flexible work arrangements:
– Flex time
– Compressed workweek
– Job and work sharing
– Telecommuting

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Flex Time
• An alternative work arrangement that provides flexibility in
terms of when employees work.
• Arrival and quitting times are flexible.
• Flex time is well suited to meeting the needs of a diverse
work-force and is most frequently implemented in office
environments.

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Flex Time: Research Evidence
• Employees prefer it compared to fixed hours.
• Work attitudes are more positive.
• A positive effect on productivity, job satisfaction, and
satisfaction with work schedule and lower employee
absenteeism.

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Compressed Workweek (1 of 2)
• An alternative work arrangement that provides flexibility in
terms of when work is performed.
• Employees work fewer than the normal five days a week
but still put in a normal number of hours per week.
• The most common compressed workweek is the 4-40
system.

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Compressed Workweek (2 of 2)
• Potential roadblocks to implementation:
– Reduced customer service
– Negative effects of fatigue

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Compressed Workweek: Research
Evidence
• People who have experienced it tend to like it.
• Workers often report an increase in fatigue following its
introduction.
• Research shows a positive effect on job satisfaction and
satisfaction with work schedule but no effect on
absenteeism or productivity.

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Job and Work Sharing
• Job sharing is an alternative work arrangement in which
two part-time employees divide the work of a full-time job.
• Work sharing involves reducing the number of hours
employees work to avoid layoffs when there is a reduction
in normal business activity.
• Many companies implement work sharing programs to
save jobs and avoid layoffs during difficult economic
times.

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Job and Work Sharing: Research
Evidence
• Work sharing cuts costs, saves jobs, avoids layoffs and
allows organizations to retain skilled workers.
• Job sharing can result in coordination problems if
communication is not adequate.
• Job sharers must make a concerted effort to communicate
well with each other as well as with superiors, co-workers,
and clients.

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Telecommuting (1 of 3)
• An alternative work arrangement that provides employees
with flexibility in terms of where they perform their job.
• Employees are able to work at remote locations but stay in
touch with their offices through the use of information and
communication technology, such as a computer network,
voice mail, and electronic messages.

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Telecommuting (2 of 3)
• Many organizations had to offer telecommuting to their
employees and many employees were forced to
telecommute for the first time or to a greater extent than
they ever had during the COVID-19 pandemic.
• Hybrid models in which employees divide their working
time between a home or remote office and their
organization office is expected to become the norm.

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Telecommuting (3 of 3)
• With telecommuting, organizations can hire the best
person for a job, regardless of where they live in the world,
through distant staffing.
• Distant staffing enables employees to work for a company
without ever having to come into the office or even be in
the same country.
• Organizations can hire workers from anywhere in the
country and workers do not have to relocate to work in
other cities and provinces.

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Telecommuting: Research Evidence (1 of 5)

• Telecommuting has a small but positive effect on


perceived autonomy and lower work-family conflict.
• It has a positive effect on job satisfaction and job
performance and results in lower stress and turnover
intentions.
• It does not have detrimental effects on the quality of
workplace relationships or one’s career prospects.

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Telecommuting: Research Evidence (2 of 5)
• A greater frequency of telecommuting is associated with a
greater reduction in work-family conflict and stress.
• The positive effects of telecommuting are mostly due to an
increase in perceived autonomy.
• More frequent telecommuting can have a negative effect
on relationships with co-workers.

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Telecommuting: Research Evidence (3 of 5)
• A recent study did not find a difference in the number of
promotions between telecommuters and non-
telecommuters but did find that telecommuters
experienced lower salary growth and the extent of
telecommuting was negatively related to promotions and
salary growth.
• A greater extent of telecommuting was positively related to
more promotions when telecommuting was the norm in a
work unit.

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Telecommuting: Research Evidence (4 of 5)
• The effect of extensive telecommuting on career success
depends on work context factors.
• Those who only occasionally telecommuted obtained the
greatest career benefits.
• The increased time spent telecommuting during the COVID-19
pandemic contributed to the negative aspects of telecommuting
such as feelings of isolation, loneliness, and increased feelings
of exhaustion and stress.

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Telecommuting: Research Evidence (5 of 5)
• Working from home during the pandemic contributed to
various health problems such as stress and a sedentary
lifestyle as well as a decline in overall mental well-being.
• Telecommuting is likely to continue to be a popular flexible
work arrangement and in the future workers will be able to
work for multiple organizations from anywhere in the
world.

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Motivation Practices in Perspective (1 of 4)
• What motivational system should an organization use?

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Motivation Practices in Perspective (2 of 4)
• The motivational system used by an organization has to fit
with the organization’s culture and other management
practices.

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Motivation Practices in Perspective (3 of 4)
• The choice of motivational practices requires a thorough
diagnosis of the organization and the needs and desires of
employees.
• The most effective approach will depend on:
– Employee needs (e.g., money, challenge)
– The nature of the job (e.g., individual, group work)
– Organizational characteristics (e.g., strategy, culture)
– Desired outcome (e.g., job performance, retention)

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Motivation Practices in Perspective (4 of 4)
• Motivational systems that make use of a variety of
motivators (e.g., performance-based pay, job enrichment)
used in conjunction with one another are likely to be the
most effective.

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Contingency Factors and Motivational
Practices
Exhibit 6.10 Contingency factors and motivational practices.

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