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Transcript of mot.lead
Job Design Theory
Characteristics1. Skill variety2. Task identity3. Task significance4. Autonomy5. Feedback
Job Characteristics ModelIdentifies five job characteristics and their relationship to personal and work outcomes
Job Design Theory (cont’d)• Job Characteristics Model
– Jobs with skill variety, task identity, task significance, autonomy, and for which feedback of results is given, directly affect three psychological states of employees:• Knowledge of results
• Meaningfulness of work
• Personal feelings of responsibility for results
– Increases in these psychological states result in increased motivation, performance, and job satisfaction.
Characteristics Examples
Skill Variety• High variety The owner-operator of a garage who does electrical repair, rebuilds engines,
does body work, and interacts with customers• Low variety A bodyshop worker who sprays paint eight hours a day
Task Identity• High identity A cabinetmaker who designs a piece of furniture, selects the wood, builds the
object, and finishes it to perfection• Low identity A worker in a furniture factory who operates a lathe to make table legs
Task Significance• High significance Nursing the sick in a hospital intensive care unit• Low significance Sweeping hospital floors
Autonomy• High autonomy A telephone installer who schedules his or her own work for the day, and
decides on the best techniques for a particular installation• Low autonomy A telephone operator who must handle calls as they come according to a
routine, highly specified procedureFeedback
• High feedback An electronics factory worker who assembles a radio and then tests it todetermine if it operates properly
• Low feedback An electronics factory worker who assembles a radio and then routes it to a quality control inspector who tests and adjusts it
Examples of High and Low Job Characteristics
Job Design Theory (cont’d)Skill VarietyThe degree to which a job requires a variety of different activities (how may different skills are used in a given day, week, month?)
Task IdentityThe degree to which the job requires completion of a whole and identifiable piece of work (from beginning to end)
Task SignificanceThe degree to which the job has a substantial impact on the lives or work of other people
Job Design Theory (cont’d)AutonomyThe degree to which the job provides substantial freedom and discretion to the individual in scheduling the work and in determining the procedures to be used in carrying it out
FeedbackThe degree to which carrying out the work activities required by a job results in the individual obtaining direct and clear information about the effectiveness of his or her performance
Computing a Motivating Potential Score
People who work on jobs with high core dimensions are generally more motivated, satisfied, and productive.
Job dimensions operate through the psychological states in influencing personal and work outcome variables rather than influencing them directly.
Job Design and SchedulingJob RotationThe periodic shifting of a worker from one task to another
Job EnlargementThe horizontal expansion of jobs
Job Enrichment
The vertical expansion of jobs
Guidelines for Enriching a Job
E X H I B I T 7–2Source: J.R. Hackman and J.L. Suttle, eds., Improving Life at Work (Glenview, IL: Scott Foresman, 1977), p. 138.
Alternative Work ArrangementsFlextimeEmployees work during a common core time period each day but have discretion in forming their total workday from a flexible set of hours outside the core.
Job SharingThe practice of having two or more people split a 40-hour-a-week job
Example of a Flextime Schedule
E X H I B I T 7–3
Alternative Work Arrangements, cont.
Categories of Telecommuting Jobs• Routine information-handling tasks• Mobile activities• Professional and other knowledge-related
tasks
TelecommutingEmployees do their work at home on a computer that is linked to their office.
Examples of Employee Involvement Programs
Participative ManagementA process in which subordinates share a significant degree of decision-making power with their immediate superiors
Examples of Employee Involvement Programs (cont’d)
Representative ParticipationWorkers participate in organizational decision making through a small group of representative employees.
Works CouncilsGroups of nominated or elected employees who must be consulted when manage-ment makes decisions involving personnel
Board RepresentativeA form of representative participation; employees sit on a company’s board of directors and represent the interests of the firm’s employees.
Examples of Employee Involvement Programs (cont’d)
Quality CircleA work group of employees who meet regularly to discuss their quality problems, investigate causes, recommend solutions, and take corrective actions
Rewarding Employees: Four Aspects
•What to Pay (Internal vs. external equity)•How to Pay (e.g., Piece rate, merit based, bonuses, profit sharing, gain sharing, ESOPs, skill-based pay) •What Benefits to Offer (e.g., Flexible benefits)•How to Recognize Employees
Rewarding Employees: Variable Pay Programs
Variable Pay ProgramsA portion of an employee’s pay is based on some individual and/or organization measure of performance.
• Piece rate pay plans• Profit sharing plans• Gain sharing plans
Variable Pay Programs (cont’d)
Profit Sharing PlansOrganization-wide programs that distribute compensation based on some established formula designed around a company’s profitability
Gain SharingAn incentive plan in which improvements in group productivity determine the total amount of money that is allocated.
Piece Rate Pay PlansWorkers are paid a fixed sum for each unit of production completed.
Rewarding Employees
Employee Stock Ownership Plans (ESOPs)Company-established benefit plans in which employees acquire stock as part of their benefits.
Skill-based Pay Plans
Benefits of Skill-based Pay Plans:1. Provides staffing flexibility
2. Facilitates communication across the organization
3. Lessens “protection of territory” behaviors
4. Meets the needs of employees for advancement (without promotion)
5. Leads to performance improvements
Pay levels are based on how many skills employees have or how many jobs they can do.
Linking Skill-based Plans and Motivation Theories
Skill-based Pay Plans
Reinforcement Theory
Equity
Theory
ERG Theory (Growth)
McClelland’s Need for
Achievement
Flexible Benefits
Flexible Spending Plans Allow employees to use their tax-free benefit dollars to purchase benefits and pay service premiums
Modular Plans Predesigned benefits packages for specific groups of employees
Core-Plus PlansA core of essential benefits and a menu-like selection of other benefit options
Employees tailor their benefit program to meet their personal need by picking and choosing from a menu of benefit options.
Employee Recognition Programs• Intrinsic rewards: Stimulate Intrinsic
Motivation – Personal attention given to employee– Approval and appreciation for a job well done– Growing in popularity and usage
• Benefits of Programs– Fulfill employees’ desire for recognition– Inexpensive to implement – Encourages repetition of desired behaviors
• Drawbacks of Programs– Susceptible to manipulation by management
Contemporary issues in leadership
S. Robbins
Two contemporary theories of leadership with a common theme.
1.Charismatic leadership2.Transformational leadership.
What is charismatic leadership?
• Proposed by Max Weber. A socialogist.• Charisma is a quality of an individual
personality, by virtue of which he or she is set -apart from ordinary people and
-treated as supernatural, superhuman -or at least specifically exceptional powers or qualities. - Sometimes considered as devine origin or exemplary.
Key characteristics of charismatic leadership
• 1. Vision and articulation• 2. Personal risk• 3. Sensitivity to followers needs• 4.Unconventional behavior
Personal risk
• Willing to take on high personal risk• Incur high costs• Engage in self sacrifice to achieve the vision
Sensitivity to follower’s needs• Perspective of other’s abilities• Responsive to other’s needs and feelings.
Unconventional behavior• Engages in behaviors that are novel and counter to
norms.
Personality of charismatic leaders
• Extraverted• Self confident• Achievement oriented• Articulate an over arching goal• Communicate high performance expectations• Empathize the needs of their followers • Project a powerful confident and dynamic presence • Captivating/attractive and engaging voice tone
Charismatic leadership contd.,
• It is true that individuals are born with traits that make them charismatic.
• Individuals also can be trained to exhibit charismatic behavior.
3 step process of becoming a charismatic leader
• 1. An individual needs to develop an atmosphere of charisma by maintaining an optimistic view, using passion as a catalyst for generating enthusiasm and communicating with the whole body, not just with words.
• 2.An individual draws others in by creating a bond that inspires others to follows.
• 3. An individual brings out the potential in followers by tapping into their emotions.
How Charismatic Leaders Influence Followers
• A four-step process:1. Leader articulates/communicate an attractive vision
• Vision Statement: A formal, long-term strategy to attain goals
• Links past, present, and future
2. Leader communicates high performance expectations and confidence in follower ability
3. Leader conveys a new set of values by setting an example for the followers to imitate.
4. Leader engages in emotion-inducing and often unconventional behavior to demonstrate convictions about the vision
© 2009 Prentice-Hall Inc. All rights reserved. 13-31
Charismatic Leadership Issues• People following these leaders will be exerting extra
effort, express greater satisfaction.• Charismatic effectiveness and situation– Charisma works best when:
• The follower’s task has an ideological component • There is a lot of stress and uncertainty in the environment• The leader is at the upper level of the organization• Followers have low self-esteem and self-worth
• Dark Side of Charisma– Ego-driven charismatics allow their self-interest and
personal goals to override the organization’s goals
© 2009 Prentice-Hall Inc. All rights reserved. 13-32
Transactional and Transformational Leadership
• Transactional Leaders– Leaders who guide or motivate their followers in the
direction of established goals by clarifying role and task requirements
• Transformational Leaders– Inspire followers to transcend their own self-interests
for the good of the organization; they can have a profound and extraordinary effect on followers
• Not opposing, but complementary, approaches to leadership– Great transformational leaders must also be
transactional; only one type is not enough for success
© 2009 Prentice-Hall Inc. All rights reserved. 13-33
Characteristics of the Two Types of LeadersTransactional
• Contingent Reward: – Contracts exchange of rewards
for effort, promises rewards for good performance, recognizes accomplishments
• Management by Exception:– Active: Watches and searches
for deviations from rules and standards, takes corrective action
– Passive: Intervenes only if standards are not met
• Laissez-Faire: – Abdicates responsibilities,
avoids making decisions
Transformational• Idealized Influence:
– Provides vision and sense of mission, instills pride, gains respect and trust
• Inspiration:– Communicates high
expectations, uses symbols to focus efforts, expresses important issues simply
• Intellectual Stimulation:– Promotes intelligence,
rationality, and problem solving• Individualized Consideration:
– Gives personal attention, coaches, advises
Exhibit 13-2
© 2009 Prentice-Hall Inc. All rights reserved. 13-34
Trans Vs Charismatic
• Trans broader than charismatic• Followers can question trans leaders• Ch itself is not sufficient for tr process• Leaders who score high on tr also score high
on ch.
Ethics, Trust, and Leadership• Ethics touch on many leadership styles– As the moral leaders of organizations, CEOs must
demonstrate high ethical standards– Socialized charismatic leadership: leaders who model
ethical behaviors• Trust:– The positive expectation that another person will not act
opportunistically– Composed of a blend of familiarity and willingness to take
a risk – Five key dimensions: integrity, competence, consistency,
loyalty, and opennessExhibit 13-4
© 2009 Prentice-Hall Inc. All rights reserved. 13-36