Motivating the Workforce
- Motivating the Workforce
- Nature of Human Relations
- How to retain good employees
- Historical perspectives on Employee Motivation
- Theories of employee motivation
- Strategies for motivating employees
- Why can a manager not make work feel like play
Motivating the Workforce
Even in small businesses, you can face motivation issues, even if people have an equal stake. If your workers know the goals, they will feel more motivated to helping acheive success
Simply stated: Benefits of employee motivation
- Higher productivity
- Workers will not want to let the team down
- More innovation
- Lower levels of absenteeism
- Workers will have personal goals aligned with the goals of the company
- Lower levels of staff turnover
- Great reputation
How to motivate people
- Lead with vision
- Share the objectives/goals
- Make sure everyone knows ‘why’
- “Because I said so” is bad obviously
- Give good, real answers
- If a task is not aimed at the mission, it will be hard to motivate (even dedicated) people.
- Main reason people leave is because they don’t see how the work they are doing is contributed to the longterm goals of the company
- Set frequent clear targets
- Short-term goals
- Recognize great work
- Don’t give negative feedback
- Don’t call people out
- Give your team autonomy
- Create a welcoming work environment
- Encourage team work
- Create a career path
- Make sure someone can see a future in your business
Nature of Human Relations
Human Relations
The study of the behavior of individuals and groups in organizational settings. It involves motivating employees to acheive organizationa objectives efficiently and effectively
Motivation
The inner drive that directs a person’s behavior toward a goal
- A goal is the satisfaction of some need
- A need is the difference between a current state and a desired state
Motivation is “consumable”. The excitement will go away, but the goal can stay.
Motivation is goal-directed behavior towards need satisfaction
Morale
Morale is an employee’s attitude towards their job, employer, and colleagues
High morale leads to
- High productivity
- High returns
- Employee loyalty
Low morale leads to
- High rates of absenteeism
- High rates of employee turnover
How to retain good employees
- Offer training and mentoring
- Create a positive organizational culture
- Build credibility through communication
- Blend compensation, benefits, and recognition
- Encourage referrals and don’t overlook internal recruiting
- Give coaching and feedback
- Provide growth opportunities
- Create work/life balance and minimize stress
- Foster trust, respect and confidence in senior leadership
Historical perspectives on Employee Motivation
Classical theory of motivation
Suggested that money is the sole motivator for workers.
Time and motion studies
- Frederick W. Taylor, Frank, and Lillian Gilbreth
- Analyzed how workers performed tasks to improve productivity
- Led to the application of scientific principles to management
Taylor’s ideas are still in practice today with financial incentives for productivity.
Theories of employee motivation
Maslow’s Hierarchy of needs

Physiological needs
The most basic needs: food, water, shelter, clothes
Security needs
Protecting yourself from physical or economic harm. Am I safe and economically in a good place? Often includes insurance.
Social needs
Companionship - the longing to feel included. Making friends, joining groups, volunteering.
Esteem needs
Self-respect. Do you get pride from doing a job well?
Self-actualization needs
The peak of who you can be as a person. You are taking advantage of every opportunity and are performing at your best.
Herzberg’s 2-factor theory
Breaks factors into heigene vs motivaitonal factors
McGregor’s Theory X
A traditional view of management
- The average person naturally dislikes work and will avoid it when possible
- Most workers must be coerced, controlled, directed, or threatened with punishment to get them to work toward acheiving organizational ovjectives
- The average workeres prefers to be directed, avoids responsibility, has little ambition, and wants security.
McGregor’s Theory Y
A humanistic view of management
McGregor’s Theory Z
Management philosophy that involves everyone in the company’s decisions
Goal-setting theory
If you know what an objective is, there is a higher chance you will get there
Strategies for motivating employees
Behavior modification
Involves changing behavior and encouraging appropriate actions by relating the consequences of behavior to the behavior itself.
Job design
- Managers can use job design strategies to improve employee motivation
- Job rotation
- Job enlargement
- Job enrichment
Flextime and showing core and flexible hours is motivational because it can allow more people to work with their jobs and their circumstances.
Why can a manager not make work feel like play
At work, you have an objective, goal, and teamwork. Sounds like sports?
Many managers cannot enjoy themselves and get work done at the same time. Managers fear loosing control of the control and productivity of their workers. Studies exist that support the most important thing is motivation rather than money to get someone to work hard.
If you take it to a point where you are just having fun, thats not good, but a fun working environment can help retain workers
| Positives | Negatives |
|---|---|
| Increases creativity | Controlling managers will not be able to adapt |
| Greater ownership | Often fails if management does not have their head on straight |
| Greater job satisfaction |
At Google, workers can play with pinball, photo booths, slides, and more. Workers will not stay if they hate walking in the door every day.