Motivation Flashcards

1
Q

performance appraisal

A

more historical focused, and is used to test an employee’s performance like an evaluation (are they performing effectively)

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2
Q

performance management

A

more focused on continuous management, and is used to continually motivate employees and keep them aligned with the organization’s strategic goals

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3
Q

what do organizations often spend more of their time on?

A

We often focus on PA and less about PM, even though its equally important

  • like SPOT surveys are an example of PA but don’t tell profs how to improve
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4
Q

purposes of PM

and what is the one most effective tool for evaluation and development of future performance?

A

help predict future performance and shape it

should always separate the evaluation of performance with the coaching of how to get better

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5
Q

should employees be surprised when they see their perfromance review?

A

NO - they should know what they’re getting …

if they are surprised that means they have a bad manager, that isn’t coaching them well

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6
Q

3 characteristics of a good PA system

A

reliable: consistently returns same results for same inputs
valid: measures relevant aspects of performance
specific: should give guidance on what is expected

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7
Q

leniency error, central tendency error and severity error

A

Leniency Error: consistently rates employees at high end of the scale

Central Tendency Error: consistently rates employees at scale midpoint

Severity Error: consistently rates employees at low end of the scale

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8
Q

halo error

A

evaluation of employee performance on one dimension creates overall impression that drives ratings on other dimensions

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9
Q

recency error vs. contrast error

A

Recency Error: rating is heavily influenced by most recent performance

Contrast Error: current employee rating is boosted after rating a poor employee or lowered after rating an excellent employee

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10
Q

similar to me error

A

Similar-to-me Error: rating is inflated because of a personal connection

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11
Q

issues with graphical rating scales, and why should we use behavioral scales?

A

the main issue with graphical scales is that they use words like likely … highly likely on a scale and these can be subjective

behavioral scales are better because they outline the criteria for each level of the ranking system

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12
Q

results based approach to management

A

setting clear goals of what to achieve to hit a 5/5 evaluation

  • these are good because they’re specific, only issue is that they can be hard to measure across employees of different skill levels
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13
Q

comparative approach

A

Ranking employees from best to worst in terms of a particular attribute

Gives forced distribution

Paired comparison, comparing two employees head to head (who’s better at what)

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14
Q

pros and cons of comparative approach

A

pros: Good for differentiating individual performance
Easy to use and socially acceptable

cons: rivalries, doesn’t give feedback on how to improve, can lead to collusion

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15
Q

extrinsic vs intrinsic motivation

A

ext: anything external that motivates you (pay, praise, making someone else happy)

int: enjoying the task itself, doing something bc it’s fun, passionate about it

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16
Q

are extrinsic and intrinsic motivation mutually exclusive

A

NO, you can have both

  • enjoy running, but also running to look good in front of others
17
Q

what’s the pitfall of adding extrinsic motivators into something you have intrinsic motivation for?

A

it can cause people to lose enjoyment of doing something, like when you’re paid to play a sport - it becomes less fun and feels like work

18
Q

Herzberg’s Motivator-Hygiene Theory

A

argues that certain things in the workplace lead to satisfaction while others reduce motivation (hygiene factors)

You can’t improve motivation by removing hygiene factors, but you can reduce demotivation

19
Q

challenges to Maslow’s hierarchy of needs

A

can be countered because the lines between each stage are not clear + some people flip the pyramid upside down and pursue self actualization while giving up physical belongings (monks)

20
Q

McClellands Need Theory

A

Based on State based personality characteristics

Different needs over time

Need for achievement, power and affiliation

21
Q

what are the 3 needs in McClelland’s Need Theory

A

achievement: people who are goal oriented and like performing at a high level

power: people want power over others and like making big decisions

affiliation: people like being associated with certain people, leads to more democratic leadership

22
Q

Skinner’s Reinforcement theory

A

behavior is the result of consequences

23
Q

4 stages of skinners theory

A

for GOOD BEHAVIOR
pos. reinforcement: adding a good stimulus
neg. reinforcement: removing a harmful stimulus

for BAD BEHAVIOR
punishment: adding a harmful stimulus
extinction: removing a good stimulus

24
Q

Vroom’s expectancy theory

A

all parts of the chain must be intact for it to work
- expectancy + instrumentality + valence = motivation

25
Q

describe the 4 stages of Vroom’s expectancy theory

A

expectancy: belief that effort will lead to performance

instrumentality: belief that performance will be rewarded

valence: belief that the reward is valuable

= motivation

26
Q

House Path Goal Theory (related to Vroom)

A

increasing the links of the chain will lead to better motivation

27
Q

Goal setting theory

A

believes that self-made goals that are public can lead to strong motivation

  • engages self efficacy and self-generated feedback
28
Q

Equity theory

A

Motivation is directly impacted by our perception of how fair the systems for inputs and outputs are

comparing the perceived inputs and outputs to see if they’re balanced

  • having a comparative other in this case is very important as a reference point
29
Q

autonomy, mastery and purpose theory

A

if a project at work has any of these characteristics then people will be motivated to do it

  • i.e. if the project gives someone purpose in life, or if they’re really good at the task, or if they’re given full responsibility
30
Q

distributive vs procedural justice

A

in the 100 metre race example, everyone was starting on a different line (not knowing where they were), yet they still benefitted from being ahead

31
Q
A