Looking To Increase Employee Performance? Motivation Is Critical.
What’s an organization to do when all of its honest and genuine
efforts to motivate Sally and Sam to come to work on time, work
safely, deliver efficient services, and act as if they were
happy to be a part of the team, fail? There is no shortage of
pop-psych books and motivational speakers who’ll tell you a
thousand-and-one ways to light a fire in Sam’s belly. But what
do you do when the fire goes out and none of those
thousand-and-one ways seem to work any more? What do we really
know about motivation?
Does anything work?
Given the constant barrage of pep talks and posters, slogans
and free advice on the topic of motivation, there should
certainly be at least a couple of core principles that
predictably work every time. Aren’t there? Or are we stuck with
the notion that everybody’s an individual, and what’s a turn-on
for Sally is likely to be a turn-off for Sam?
Rather than speculate, let’s gather some data. Think back
through all the jobs you’ve ever had, and bring to mind the job
you had that produced the greatest amount of motivation in you.
It doesn’t matter what the job was — it might be the job you
have right now; it might be a part-time job you had in high
school. Doesn’t matter.
It also doesn’t matter what the word, “motivation,” means to
you. However you choose to define the term is fine. Simply
bring to mind the job that you had when you had the greatest
degree of job satisfaction, excitement, enthusiasm,
turned-on-ness.
Now that you’ve got the job clearly in mind, quickly jot down
the factors that caused you to feel so motivated, so satisfied,
and so turned on. If you’re like most people, the factors you
listed are highly predictable — and so are the ones that didn’t
make your list.
On your list appear such items as recognition, opportunities
for achievement, freedom and autonomy, challenge, the chance to
learn and grow, and the work itself. What was missing? You
probably didn’t write down such important items as job
security, benefits, working conditions, and the organization’s
policies and procedures.
It turns out that the missing link in understanding motivation
is understanding that there are two very different factors at
work. On one hand there are the things that motivate us, that
turn us on, that cause us to feel satisfied with the job. On
the other are those things that dissatisfy us, that turn us
off, that demotivate us. There are two separate variables at
work, and you have to attack both of them. Psychologist Fred
Herzberg stated it best, “Job satisfaction and job
dissatisfaction are not flip sides of the same coin. They are
entirely different coins, and the wise manager uses both those
coins to buy better performance.”
What is motivation?
A good working definition of motivation is this: motivation
represents a measurable increase in both job satisfaction and
productivity. The motivated worker does his job better and
likes it more than those folks who are not so motivated. What
generates real motivation is the first set of factors
mentioned: opportunities for achievement and accomplishment,
recognition, learning and growth, having some say in how the
job is done, and worthwhile work. Those are the items that
generate strong feelings of loyalty, satisfaction, enthusiasm,
and all those other important attributes we want to see in
those whose paychecks we sign.
But you can’t get away with working exclusively on the
satisfiers scale. You have to make sure that you clean up the
job to reduce or eliminate those things that cause people to be
unhappy and quit.
Wait a minute, some of you are saying — where does money fit
into this scheme? Pay is the ringer in the equation; the one
factor that shows up as both a source of satisfaction and a
source of dissatisfaction. People are dissatisfied with their
pay when they feel it isn’t commensurate with their efforts, or
is distributed inequitably, or doesn’t reflect the
responsibilities of the job, or is out of touch with market
realities. If you don’t pay competitive wages, people will be
unhappy and they will quit. But no matter how much you raise
salaries, you won’t generate motivation and job satisfaction,
because job satisfaction is a function of the content of the
job.
Look at it this way: Hire me to wash dirty dishes and pay me
chickenfeed and I’ll be unhappy and demotivated. But raise my
wages to a princely sum and guess what — I’ll still hate
washing dirty dishes. But I won’t complain any more about my
crummy compensation; I probably won’t quit; and I may even
improve my attendance record (if you pay me my munificent wages
on an hourly basis). What you have bought with the generous pay
increase you provided me was not real job satisfaction. All you
have bought is the absence of dissatisfaction. They are not the
same thing. If you really want me to be a happy camper, you’d
better change the nature of my work.
And changing the nature of the work is the true key to
motivation. The message is clear: do everything you can to get
rid of the things that generate employee unhappiness,
recognizing that no matter how big an investment you make
you’ll get precious little in return. All your money will buy
is the absence of dissatisfaction. Listen up — you have no
choice! You must pay people competitive wages, you must provide
a healthy, safe and attractive work environment, you must give
at least as good insurance policies and vacations and
retirements plans as people could get working for the bagel
joint down the street. If you don’t, people will quit and you
won’t be able to hire replacements. But all you’ll get for the
fortune you spend in this effort is a bunch of people who have
to search hard for something to complain about.
If you want genuine motivation, though, you’ve got to look at
the job itself. Does the work provide me with the chance to
really accomplish something? Does my job allow me to do
something that makes an actual difference? Do I have a lot of
say in how I do my job or am I totally constricted by standard
operating procedures? Can I learn and grow and develop on this
job, or will I be tightening the same nut on the same bolt for
the next thirty years? Do I get any recognition when I do
something particularly well?
Providing recognition of good performance is the best place to
start. Recognizing good performance any time it’s encountered —
with just a “Thanks” or a literal pat on the back — can be
enough to get the motivational engine working. Sally and Sam
will need more than just an attaboy, but acknowledging
excellent work every time it appears is a wonderful place to
start the engine of motivation running.
About The Author: Dick Grote is one of America’s most
successful and best-known authors, consultants, and speakers on
performance management. He is the Chairman and CEO of Grote
Consulting and the developer of the GroteApproach online
performance management system – on the Web at
www.groteapproach.com/
|