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What motivates you at work?



 
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What motivates you at work? #1 (permalink) Sat Aug 23, 2008 14:20 pm   What motivates you at work?
 

Hi everybody

There are people from all over the world who not only visit, but also actively participate on this site. Many of you are no longer students, but are working. Is your job challenging and interesting? What motivates you as an employee? What demotivates you? What sort of incentives does your employer provide?

Here is an interesting article from Harvard Business Publishing:
Quote:
One More Time: How Do You Motivate Employees?
Key ideas from the Harvard Business Review article by Frederick Herzberg

THE IDEA
___________________________________________________________________________________________

Imagine your workforce so motivated that employees relish more hours of work, not fewer, initiate increased responsibility themselves, and boast about their challenging work, not their paychecks or bonuses.

An impossible dream? Not if you understand the counterintuitive force behind motivation—and the ineffectiveness of most performance incentives. Despite media attention to the contrary, motivation does not come from perks, plush offices, or even promotions or pay. These extrinsic incentives may stimulate people to put their noses to the grindstone—but they’ll likely perform only as long as it takes to get that next raise or promotion.

The truth? You and your organization have only limited power to motivate employees. Yes, unfair salaries may damage morale. But when you do offer fat paychecks and other extrinsic incentives, people won’t necessarily work harder or smarter.

Why? Most of us are motivated by intrinsic rewards: interesting, challenging work, and the opportunity to achieve and grow into greater responsibility.

Of course, you have to provide some extrinsic incentives. After all, few of us can afford to work for no salary. But the real key to motivating your employees is enabling them to activate their own internal generators. Otherwise, you’ll be stuck trying to recharge their batteries yourself—again and again.
The Idea in Practice

How do you help employees charge themselves up? Enrich their jobs by applying these principles:
• Increase individuals’ accountability for their work by removing some controls.
• Give people responsibility for a complete process or unit of work.
• Make information available directly to employees rather than sending it through their managers first.
• Enable people to take on new, more difficult tasks they haven’t handled before.
• Assign individuals specialized tasks that allow them to become experts.

The payoff? Employees gain an enhanced sense of responsibility and achievement, along with new opportunities to learn and grow—continually.

Example: A large firm began enriching stockholder correspondents’ jobs by appointing subject-matter experts within each unit—then encouraging other unit members to consult with them before seeking supervisory help. It also held correspondents personally responsible for their communications’ quality and quantity. Supervisors who had proofread and signed all letters now checked only 10% of them. And rather than harping on production quotas, supervisors no longer discussed daily quantities.

These deceptively modest changes paid big dividends: Within six months, the correspondents’ motivation soared—as measured by their answers to questions such as “How many opportunities do you feel you have in your job for making worthwhile contributions?” Equally valuable, their performance noticeably improved, as measured by their communications’ quality and accuracy, and their speed of response to stockholders.

Job enrichment isn’t easy. Managers may initially fear that they’ll no longer be needed once their direct reports take on more responsibility. Employees will likely require time to master new tasks and challenges.

But managers will eventually rediscover their real functions, for example, developing staff rather than simply checking their work. And employees’ enthusiasm and commitment will ultimately rise—along with your company’s overall performance.


What do you think of the article above? Do you agree? Disagree? Why?
.
Yankee
I'm a Communicator ;-)


Joined: 16 Apr 2006
Posts: 8265
Location: USA

What motivates you at work? #2 (permalink) Sat Aug 23, 2008 15:41 pm   What motivates you at work?
 

I have read quite a few articles similar to the one above before.

I have been working for over 5 years now. It's really difficult to say what motivates the people the most.

I have always felt that it largely depends on the individuals. Some people always have money on their minds. The only thing that keeps them going is money. These are the people that harp on endlessly about the small hike in salaray they got, even if it's because of economic slowdown or something that the company couldn't be held responsible for. And if the monetory benefits are good, they are happy. These people can even poison other employees' minds with their negative talk.

There are also people who want to avoid responsibilities as much as possible. They just want to come to the office, do their work quietly and go home. They do jobs just for the sake of it. They are not very much bothered about money or promotion, as long as they have the job.

Then there are people who really want to prove something. They are very passionate about work. They are also particular about the kind of work they do. They want people to recognize their work and feel important. I think the points given in the article above work better for these people.

Personally, I am motivated by the kind of work. I want to do the kind of work that could be distinctly identified, not like a brick in the wall kinda stuff, and I want due recognition for it, perhaps an email or something praising me to all the team members Smile

What motivates you, Amy?
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Daemon99
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Joined: 21 Feb 2008
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