Motivation - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Motivation

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Vj = overall subjective utility (valence or value) of achieving level j of performance ... Outcomes can have negative utility/valence ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Motivation


1
Motivation
2
Discussion Questions
  • What is the best way to motivate a salesforce?
  • How can you systematically design a motivation
    system?

3
Three Major Determinants of Motivation
  • Environmental conditions
  • The firms management policies
  • compensation
  • supervision
  • task characteristics
  • Personal characteristics of the salesperson

4
Motivation Session Objectives
  • understand the components of motivation through
    the expectancy-value model
  • relate management tools to components of the
    expectancy-value model, to use in influencing
    motivational levels
  • consider how management style and the use of
    various tools influence motivation

5
Motivation Session Outline
  • Locus of Control and Motivation
  • Expectancy-Value Model of motivation
  • what is it?
  • Who cares? (implications of the model)
  • Glengarry Glen Ross the impact of the sales
    manager on motivation
  • The impact of role stress

6
Locus of Control and Motivation
  • Locus
  • External vs. internal attributions
  • Stable vs. unstable attributions
  • Examples
  • External Stable
  • External Unstable
  • Internal Stable
  • Internal Unstable

7
The Expectancy-Value model
  • Why are people motivated
  • to initiate a task
  • to choose a certain effort level
  • to persist in a task
  • Expectancy Principle salespeople choose a level
    of effort based on the expected payoffs of
    alternative effort levels
  • Most popular model of motivation (at least among
    sales force researchers)

8
Expectancy-Value Model in Notation
  • MjEj x Vj where
  • Mjmotivational drive to achieve level j of
    performance (e.g. sales, number of new accounts
    etc.)
  • Ej beliefs about the effort to performance
    linkage perceived chances of achieving level j
    of performance given effort
  • Vj overall subjective utility (valence or
    value) of achieving level j of performance

9
Examples
10
Valence/Value Vj
  • Valence is a composite of the utility you derive
    from the suboutcomes (consequences) that
    accompany achieving level j of performance
  • These might include
  • more pay, promotion, liking respect, lack of
    leisure time, personal growth
  • security, sense of accomplishment, recognition,
    hurting personal life
  • Outcomes can have negative utility/valence
  • Obviously the list could be longer vary across
    individuals

11
Vj ? (Iij x Vi)
Vj expected overall utility to an individual of
achieving performance level j
Iij beliefs about the performance to
suboutcomes linkages the individuals subjective
probability that achieving performance level j
would create suboutcome I (instrumentalities) Exa
mple 30 chance that selling 300K (performance
level j) would get one a promotion (suboutcome I)
Vi the utility an individual derives from
suboutcome I (e.g., a promotion) Note this can
be negative
12
Thats nice, but who cares?
  • Nobody thinks like this (its too complicated)
  • But model holds up well in field testing (good
    as if model)
  • Explains up to 40 of variance in performance

13
Expectancy-Value Model Advantages
  • Model is a handy way to structure a messy
    question
  • Forces you to project o each individuals
    underlying beliefs (expectancies) and needs/wants
    (values)
  • Different people can exhibit the same level of
    motivation for very different reasons
  • Nice vocabulary to talk about motivation

14
Implications for How to Motivate
  • No reward is motivating if it is out of reach
    (low expectancy)
  • Raising the goal (performance level j) often
    depresses motivation
  • Introduces negative outcomes
  • Depresses expectancies
  • Can motivate by trying to induce sales people to
  • raise expectancy (I.e. through training,
    encouragement)
  • consider a negative suboutcome unlikely
  • consider a positive suboutcome likely
  • Add a new positive suboutcome
  • Change their ideas about whether suboutcomes are
    desirable or undesirable (vi doomed strategy for
    the most part)

15
Glengarry Glen Ross
  • what is the impact of management style on the
    components of the expectancy value model?
  • What motivational tools are used?
  • How do these tools impact motivation in the
    short-term? Over the long term?
  • How do these tools impact extrinsic motivations?
    Intrinsic motivation?

16
Motivators
  • Positive Motivators
  • Commission
  • Recognition
  • Acceptance
  • Respect
  • Trust
  • Achievement
  • Pride
  • Negative Motivators
  • Fear
  • Intimidation
  • Revenge
  • Obligation
  • Social Comparison (one-up)

17
Sales Manager Objectives Tools
  • Objectives
  • Increase magnitude and accuracy of expectancies
  • Increase accuracy of instrumentalities
  • Understand and work with valences
  • Key
  • reduce role stress arising from role ambiguity
    role conflict
  • Tools
  • training expectancies
  • evaluations, reviews expectancies,
    instrumentalities
  • communication, participation instrumentalities
  • selection hire SP whose Vis match company
    suboutcomes

18
How to Motivate
  • Define each employees motivating factors and
    provide an environment that incorporates those
    factors
  • Praise performance
  • Address poor performance
  • Set goals clearly communicate expectations
  • Share your vision and include your team in
    creating it

19
Measuring Components of the Model
  • May be done informally for small sales forces,
    but beware of biases (e.g. we believe what we
    want to believe we think everyone else is like
    we are)
  • periodic surveys can be conducted to quantify
    each component of the model
  • expectancies to what extent do you believe that
    if you do x, y will happen
  • instrumentalities to what extent do you believe
    that if y happens, youll receive z
  • valences for suboutcomes how important is ..
  • Quantified information is valuable at both the
    aggregate level and the individual level

20
Role Stress
  • A primary influence on how salespeople perform
    is their perceptions of the demands placed upon
    them
  • A role is a prescription
  • it tells you the activities and behavior that are
    expected of anyone in a position
  • Role partners
  • communicate expectations
  • pressure salespeople to meet them
  • A role partner is anyone with a vested interest
    in how a salesperson does the job, such as
  • the boss, the customers, other executives, other
    salespeople and support people, people who are
    significant in the sales reps personal life

21
Role Stress (continued)
  • Role stress is like a disease most reps suffer
    complications of role stress
  • Why?
  • Sales is at the boundary of the firm salespeople
    are boundary spanners, which means lots of role
    partners
  • Salespeople often have to be creative find
    solutions reconcile needs
  • A sales reps performance affects performance of
    lots of other people
  • Sales reps personify the cruel voice of the
    marketplace (scapegoat- kill the messenger)
  • Time and resource constraints necessitate
    tradeoffs between role partners expectations

22
Role Stress (continued)
  • Day after day, salespeople grapple with the
    messages their role partners send them and the
    pressures role partners put on them.
  • Two things create role stress (create problems
    that eventually will make the salesperson
    miserable)
  • Perceived Role Conflict
  • Perceived Role Ambiguity

23
Perceived Role Conflict
  • you feel that the demands of your role partners
    are incompatible. To make one happy, you have to
    upset another (perceived).
  • Upshot misery poor motivation

24
Perceived Role Ambiguity
  • You feel you dont have the information to cope
    with your job demands
  • dont know how to do a task
  • dont know what role partners expect
  • dont know how your performance is being
    evaluated
  • dont have clear objectives
  • SUM unsure how youre doing and what to do next

25
How to reduce Role Stress
  • Communicate! Give feedback!
  • Even bad news is better than news
  • Salespeople must have accurate expectancies
    instrumentalities
  • Training and encouragement increase expectancies
    for desired levels of performance- people who
    believe they can, often do
  • Accept that some role stress is normal (even
    desirable)
  • but be especially alert for dysfunctional levels
    of role stress in inexperienced people

26
Sales Manager Atmosphere Creation
  • Traditional Approach
  • Authoritative management
  • Emphasis on rewards the manager gives out
  • pay
  • promotion
  • recognition of achievement
  • Leading to
  • Motivation to work harder intensity, persistence

27
Non-traditional atmosphere
  • Participate leadership
  • Emphasis on intrinsic rewards motivation
  • people work because selling satisfies them with
  • challenges
  • pride in serving customers
  • pride in skills
  • Warm Culture
  • informal
  • sense of shared values
  • identify with company
  • long-term employment

28
Motivating
  • A motivator is one who can understand an overall
    goal and inspire others to make a personal
    commitment to this goal
  • 5 ways to provide a motivating environment
  • Participation involvement in decisions that
    affect the team
  • Environment climate for success, creativity
  • Recognition giving credit, praise, rewards
  • Knowledge having it, communicating it
  • Style use appropriate style for each situation
  • coaching, supporting, delegating, directing
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