Motivation To Work Well Depends More Than High Wages And On Working Co

1627 Words4 Pages

Motivation to Work Well Depends More Than High Wages and on Working Conditions

1) Discuss critically the validity of the contention that the motivation to work well depends on more than a high salary and good working conditions.

This essay will define what motivation is, the influence and effect that money and good working conditions have on staff and the other factors and issues that motivate staff to work in the context of the workplace.

In order to critically discuss and evaluate what motivates staff in the workplace it is imperitive to firstly define the concept of motivation.
Motivation can be defined as the force or process which impels people to behave in the way they do; Newcomb (1950) said that an organism is motivated:

"when - and only when - it is characterized both by a state of drive and by a direction of behaviour towards some goal which is selected in preference to all other possible goals. Motive, then is a concept which joins together drive and goal". This implies that providing the drive for staff to achieve goals that have been set is a vital and important part of the managerial role.

Although it is apparent that to become or be motivated does not always rely on drive and goals - it can often arise through voluntary action as well.
McDougall (1908) made this extension of the concept of motivation to 'voluntary behaviour' explicit by suggesting that instincts were the 'prime movers' of all human activity. McDougall disagrees with the drive theorists arguing that the instincts of staff in the workplace provide a major source of motivation.

Hebb (1949) also disagrees with the assumptions that directed and persistant behaviour is always preceeded by 'extra neural bodily irritants'. Hebb claims that 'The term motivation then refers to: (1) To the existence of an organisational phase sequence, (2) to its direction or content, and (3) to its persistence in a given direction or stability of content. There are obviously many schools of thought and theories on exactly what is motivation and why people are motivated, but it seems that the general concensus opinion lies with
Maslow (1970) "Motivation is the force or combination of forces which lead us to behave as we do". The actual force or forces that motivate will be now be discussed. Money is an important factor in the motivation of employees, as profit acts as a measu... ... middle of paper ...

...t Edition, Hampshire, Gower Publishing
Ltd.

BINDRA, D (1973) Motivation
Second Edition, Buckinghamshire, Hazell
Watson and Viney
EVANS, P (1989) Motivation and
Emotion
Second Edition, Worcester, Billing & Sons Ltd.
WEINER, B (1974) Achivement
Motivation and Attribution Theory
First Edition, New Jersey, General Learning
Press

HAMMOND, S (1988) Business Studies
Fourth Edition, London, Longman Group UK

STEFANOU, R (1992) Understanding Industry
Third Edition, Bath, Bath Press

More about Motivation To Work Well Depends More Than High Wages And On Working Co

Open Document