One of the earliest studies of human behavior at work was done at
AT&T's Western Electric Hawthorne Plant in 1927 by Harvard's Elton
Mayo and published in a widely influential report by F. J. Roethlisberger and
W. Dickson, Management and the Worker.
Their principle findings
are still relevant today: when workers have an opportunity to contribute their
thinking and learning to workplace issues, their job performance improves.
The initial study set out to discover how lighting affects
performance and fatigue of workers . The findings revealed that it is not so much physical conditions
that matter. People were motivated to perform well by the mere fact that
someone took the time to pay attention to what they were doing. They were also
encouraged to interact socially and to contribute ideas. Their social needs
were shown to have a powerful impact on their behavior at work.
Several of the current top business books emphasize this same
concept.
“The success of your organization doesn't depend on your
understanding of economics, or organizational development, or marketing. It
depends, quite simply, on your understanding of human psychology: how each
individual employee connects with your company and how each individual employee
connects with your customers.” Curt Coffman and Gabriela Gonzalez-Molina, Ph.D.
in Follow This Path: How the World's Greatest Organizations Drive
Growth by Unleashing Human Potential , Warner Books, 2002.
Subsequent research in the over seventy years that have
passed since the Hawthorne study continues to reveal much the same thing: in
order to tap into the potential of human capital, executives and leaders must
pay attention to their employees, on a level that respects their basic human
nature and individual differences.
Yet a growing number of executives intuitively know what research
by the Gallup Organization reveals: most organizations are
running at about one third of their human potential . Successful organizations
don't expect that employee incentives will guarantee better job performance.
Instead, they pay attention to human nature.
As one CEO puts it, “In today's business world there are really
only two important challenges: One is to reduce costs and cut prices. The other is to grow
margins by acquiring and sustaining profitable customers. I can't do that. My
employees must do it, one customer at a time.”
Companies on the path of extreme competition must be able to
provide more than price advantage . In order to do so, organizations must tap into employee
motivation and discover what drives them. When they do, they unleash tremendous
energy and potential.
What many organizations don't see is that employee performance and
its subsequent impact on customer engagement revolve around intrinsic
motivation determined in the brain . This motivation defines specific talents and the emotional
mechanisms everyone brings to work. Recent discoveries in neurosciences support
the fact that emotional processes are integral to learning, reasoning and
decision-making. How can leaders improve their understanding of their
employees' strengths and motivating drives?
What Are the Basics of
Human Motivation?
Several theories of human nature provide perspectives for understanding
basic human drives . A review of these will remind leaders of how important it is to
understand how employees behave at work and how they are motivated. However, a
note of caution: While assessment tools will categorize and simplify
human behavior, they cannot fully represent a person's complexity. Each
theory and its measurement merely provide a basic framework. Theories and
assessment profiles are helpful in understanding how and why humans behave.
Attention and respect must always be paid to individual differences.
Employees are not the same, and in order to gain greater
understanding of an individual's strengths and values, it is necessary to look
at certain categories or classifications of personalities, styles, preferences
and interests .
Carl Jung said that people either derive energy from relating to
others or from internal thoughts. They also tend to gather information in different ways, either by
focusing on data, or by intuitively seeing the big picture. They express
themselves in different ways, either with a focus on rational thinking, or on
feelings and values. And they also have tendencies to make decisions rapidly
with planning and organization, or to be more spontaneous and
pressure-prompted. Using the Myers Briggs Type Indicator and other assessments,
these dichotomies can be measured to indicate type preferences:
• Extraverted or Introverted
• Sensing or Intuitive
• Thinking or Feeling
• Judging or Perceiving.
A trait is a temporally stable, cross-situational individual
difference . Currently the most popular approach among psychologists for
studying personality traits is the five-factor model or “Big Five” dimensions
of personality. According to statistical factor analysis, there is much
evidence that there are five basic personality traits. Researchers are not in
total agreement regarding all of the aspects of the five factors. However,
there is general agreement that the following descriptions define the factors:
• Emotional stability (also called
Neuroticism): The degree to which an individual is calm, self confident, and
cool versus insecure, anxious, depressed and emotional
• Extraversion: The extent to which an
individual is out going, assertive and positively interactive with others,
instead of reserved and quiet
• Openness: Defines individuals who
are creative, curious and cultured, versus practical with narrow interests
(some call this a Culture dimension)
• Agreeableness : Concerns the degree to
which individuals are cooperative, warm and agreeable versus argumentative, cold,
and antagonistic
• Conscientiousness: The extent to which
individuals are hard working and organized, dependable and persevering versus
lazy, disorganized and unreliable
A very popular assessment tool is called the DISC. It is based on a theory
of behavior style preferences formulated by psychologist William Moulton
Marsten in the 1930s. The letters “DISC” stand for four basic behavior
preferences:
1. Dominance : Response to problems
and challenges
2. Influencing : Ability to influence
others to personal point of view
3. Steadiness : Response to the pace
of the environment
4. Compliance : Response to rules and
procedures set by others
The general meaning is that people will demonstrate by their
behaviors a natural tendency to be high or low on each of the four dimensions . A person high on the D
factor is usually task oriented, competitive and a risk taker. A high I rating
indicates a “people-person,” who enjoys interacting and developing
relationships. A high S means a person is reliable, organized and
conscientious, albeit non-demonstrative. A high C refers to a person who is
compliant and who is concerned with rules and paper work. The implications for
job placement are obvious.
Another assessment frequently used in conjunction with the DISC is
one that defines personal interests, attitudes and values . Based on work in the
1930s of another psychologist, Eduard Spranger, it rates a person's degree of
interest in six domains:
1. Utilitarian : Usefulness and
efficiency of activities, including economy of time and resources
2. Aesthetic : Beauty and harmony in
the environment
3. Theoretical : Learning, with a high
regard for knowledge and research
4. Individualistic : Influencing others,
and having power
5. Social : The good of mankind,
justice and fairness for all
6. Traditional : A social system, which
could be religious, political or philosophical
According to this theory, each person holds these interests in a
hierarchical manner, and will seek to satisfy their first and second interests
in all of their activities, including at work. The implications are
important for job placement, as well as for job enrichment.
Abraham Maslow believed that satisfying physiological and safety
needs alone is not enough to motivate a person . Once these needs have
been met, there are others waiting to take their place. In Maslow's Hierarchy,
a person progressively seeks to satisfy more sophisticated needs:
Self-Actualization
|
Ego
|
Social
Needs
|
Safety
Needs
|
Physiological
Needs
|
MASLOW'S HIERARCHY OF NEEDS
Physiological
Needs :
Basic physical needs such as the ability to acquire food, shelter, clothing,
sex and other survival needs
Safety Needs : A safe and non-threatening work environment, job security, safe equipment and installations
Social Needs : Contact and friendship with fellow-workers, social activities and opportunities
Ego : Recognition, acknowledgment, rewards
Self-Actualization : Realizing one's dreams, using one's gifts, talents and potential
Safety Needs : A safe and non-threatening work environment, job security, safe equipment and installations
Social Needs : Contact and friendship with fellow-workers, social activities and opportunities
Ego : Recognition, acknowledgment, rewards
Self-Actualization : Realizing one's dreams, using one's gifts, talents and potential
In
1968, Frederick Herzberg wrote a classic article in Harvard Business
Review on how to motivate employees─ an article that today remains the
all-time best selling reprint for the publication . He explains that money doesn't
really motivate people, but if inadequate, will cause dissatisfaction. People
are motivated by interesting work, an opportunity to contribute and be heard,
and appropriate recognition. Job enrichment is created by giving employees
responsibility and participation in decision-making. Herzberg reinforces the
research results of the Hawthorne Studies. Herzberg's landmark article called,
“One More Time: How Do You Motivate Employees?” ( Harvard Business
Review , reprint 87507) merits a thorough reread for understanding the
basics of motivation in employees .
David
McClelland described three basic motivators in managers in an important article
in the Harvard Business Review (1976). His original work on motivation defined three social motives
in humans (1949):
1. The drive to achieve
2. The drive for power
3. The drive to affiliate with
others.
The
key issue here is the way a manager defines success, i.e. what motivates the
manager .
Some equate success with personal achievement (“personal power manager”);
others see it as being liked by others (“the affiliative manager”). While both
have merit, in order to succeed in a complex organization, a manager needs to
have a power motivation that is not a dictatorial impulse but a desire to have
a strong impact and to be influential. Furthermore, that desire for power must
be organized around the benefit of the organization (“the institutional
manager”), rather than for personal achievement.
During
the Enlightenment (1762), Rousseau observed that institutions could only
flourish if they are founded on a social contract that enables human beings to
pursue their individual and collective interests to the fullest extent possible . This French philosopher knew then
what we emphasize in successful organizations today: The modern
enterprise flourishes when there is attention to and respect for the human
beings who contribute their work efforts.
The
human potential that can be unleashed in the work place is enhanced by teams
working together with opportunities to contribute, participate in decisions and
have social interactions. This
is as true today as it was in 1930 at the Hawthorne Plant.
Darwin and Evolutionary
Psychology:
A New Theory of Four Basic Human Drives
A New Theory of Four Basic Human Drives
A
recent book on motivation offers a new theory on basic drives in humans: Driven:
How Human Nature Shapes Our Choices , by Paul R. Lawrence and Nitin
Nohria (Jossey Bass, 2001). These
two Harvard Business School professors draw evidence for their four-drive
theory from evolutionary psychology and Darwin as well as from the social
sciences and business. Human beings are driven to seek ways to fulfill all four
drives because these drives are the product of the species' common evolutionary
heritage: they increase the ability of our genes to survive. They make a good
case for the following basic drives:
1. The drive to acquire objects and experiences that improve
our status relative to others
2. The drive to bond with others in long-term
relationships of mutual care and commitment
3. The drive to learn and to make sense of the world and
of ourselves
4. The drive to defend ourselves, our loved ones, our
beliefs, and our resources from harm
Each
drive also has a “dark side,” as when the drive to acquire becomes
excessively competitive and diminishes respect for others, or when the drive
to defendone's current thinking diminishes the drive to learn new
perspectives.
These
four drives exist in each of us, and determine the choices we make. In some
people, one drive will be more developed than others, creating an imbalance. In
some jobs, some drives will be emphasized more than others . The authors suggest that
organizational life can be enhanced when attention is paid to all four drives.
The
independence of these drives is what forces people to think and to choose,
because not all drives can be met at all times . These four drives are what make
people distinctly human─ complex beings with complex motives and complex
choices.
Modern
economic theory based on Adam Smith may actually create an imbalance by its
over-emphasis on the drive to acquire . With opportunities for reform
prevalent in countries such as Russia , Afghanistan and now Iraq , smoother
transitions are made possible when leaders pay attention to all four drives as
they exist in the basic nature of mankind.
“The
challenge is to find a course forward that fulfils all of our basic drives in
some creative, balanced way. …The way forward must be to use the best side of
each drive to check the dark, excessive potential of human nature” (Lawrence & Nohria, p. 283).
Resources
Coffman,
Curt & Gonzalez-Molina, Gabriela (2002), Follow This Path: How the
World's Greatest Organizations Drive Growth by Unleashing Human Potential ,
Warner Books.
Fitzgerald, Catherine, & Kirby, Linda K. (1997), Developing Leaders, Davies- Black Publishing.
Fordham, Freida (1966), An Introduction to Jung's Psychology , Penguin Books.
Herzberg, Frederick (1968, 1976), “One More Time: How Do You Motivate Employees?” Harvard Business Review.
Lawrence, Paul R., & Nohria, Nitin (2002), Driven: How Human Nature Shapes Our Choices, Jossey-Bass.
McClelland, D. C. (1984), Motives, Personality and Society , New York : Praeger.
McClelland, D. C., and Burnham, D. (Jan/Feb 1995), “Power is the Great Motivator,” Harvard Business Review , 73, No. 1: 126-139.
Fitzgerald, Catherine, & Kirby, Linda K. (1997), Developing Leaders, Davies- Black Publishing.
Fordham, Freida (1966), An Introduction to Jung's Psychology , Penguin Books.
Herzberg, Frederick (1968, 1976), “One More Time: How Do You Motivate Employees?” Harvard Business Review.
Lawrence, Paul R., & Nohria, Nitin (2002), Driven: How Human Nature Shapes Our Choices, Jossey-Bass.
McClelland, D. C. (1984), Motives, Personality and Society , New York : Praeger.
McClelland, D. C., and Burnham, D. (Jan/Feb 1995), “Power is the Great Motivator,” Harvard Business Review , 73, No. 1: 126-139.
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