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Psychological Contracts in Organizations

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Title: Psychological Contracts in Organizations


1
Chapter 9
  • Psychological Contracts in Organizations
  • The Importance of Satisfaction and Morale
  • Motivation in the Workplace
  • Strategies for Enhancing Job Satisfaction and
    Morale
  • Managerial Styles and Leadership

2
Objectives
  • Describe the nature and importance of
    psychological contracts in the workplace.
  • Discuss the importance of job satisfaction and
    employee morale and summarize their roles in
    human relations in the workplace.
  • Identify and summarize the most important
    theories of employee motivation.
  • Describe some of the strategies used by
    organizations to improve job satisfaction and
    employee motivation.
  • Discuss different managerial styles of leadership
    and their impact on human relations in the
    workplace.

3
Psychological Contracts in Organizations
  • Human Relations
  • Interactions between employers and employees and
    their attitudes toward one another
  • Psychological Contract 
  • Set of expectations held by an employee
    concerning what he or she will contribute to an
    organization (referred to as contributions) and
    what the organization will in return provide the
    employee (referred to as inducements)

4
The Importance of Satisfaction Morale
  • Job Satisfaction 
  • Degree of enjoyment that people derive from
    performing their jobs
  • Morale 
  • Overall attitude that employees have toward their
    workplace

5
Satisfaction and Return to Shareholders
According to a recent study, the 100 best
companies to work for those with the highest
levels of highest levels of satisfaction and
moral outperformed the 300 largest U.S.
companies over both 5- and 10-year periods.
100 Best
100 Best
Russell 300
Russell 300
5-Year 1992-1997
10-Year 1987-1997
9 - 5
6
Recent Trends in Managing Satisfaction Morale
  • The booming economy of the late 1990s forced
    companies to work harder not only to retain
    current employees but also to offer creative
    incentives to secure new employees.
  • In the bust economy of the 2000s firms are
    changing their policies.
  • Should firms change depending on the economy?

7
Motivation in the Workplace
  • Motivation v Manipulation
  • The set of forces that cause people to behave in
    certain ways

8
Classical Theory
  •  
  • Theory holding that workers are motivated solely
    by money

Scientific Management Frederick Taylor (1911)
reasoned that paying employees more should prompt
them to produce more Time-and-Motion
Studies Industrial-engineering techniques were
applied to each facet of a job in order to
determine how to perform it most efficiently
9
Behavior Theory
  • Hawthorne Effect
  • Tendency for productivity to increase when
    workers believe they are receiving special
    attention from management

10
Contemporary Motivational Theories
  • The major motivation theories include
  • Human Resources Model
  • Hierarchy of Needs Model
  • Two-Factor Theory
  • Expectancy Theory
  • Equity Theory

11
Human Resources Model
Behavioral scientist Douglas McGregor concluded
that managers had radically different beliefs
about how best to use the human resources
employed by a firm.
  • Theory X
  • Theory of motivation holding that people are
    naturally irresponsible and uncooperative
  • Theory Y
  • Theory of motivation holding that people are
    naturally responsible, growth oriented,
    self-motivated, and interested in being
    productive

12
Hierarchy of Needs Model
Psychologist Abraham Maslow proposed that people
have several different needs that they attempt to
satisfy in their work.
  • Hierarchy of Human Needs Model
  • Theory of motivation describing five levels of
    human needs and arguing that basic needs must be
    fulfilled before people work to satisfy
    higher-level needs

13
Maslows Hierarchy of Needs
Self- Actualization Needs
Esteem Needs
Social Needs
Security Needs
Physiological Needs
9 - 13
14
Two-Factor Theory
  • Psychologist Frederick Herzberg concluded that
    job satisfaction and dissatisfaction depend on
    two factors
  • Hygiene Factors working conditions
  • Motivation Factors recognition for a job well
    done
  • According to the two-factor theory, hygiene
    factors affect motivation and satisfaction only
    if they are absent or fail to meet expectations.

15
Two-Factor Theory of Motivation
  • Motivation Factors
  • Achievement
  • Recognition
  • The Work Itself
  • Responsibility
  • Advancement Growth
  • Hygiene Factors
  • Supervisors
  • Working Conditions
  • Interpersonal Relations
  • Pay Security
  • Company Policies Administration

9 - 15
16
Expectancy Theory
  • Theory of motivation holding that people are
    motivated to work toward rewards that they want
    and that they believe they have a reasonable
    chance of obtaining

17
Equity Theory
  • Theory of motivation holding that people evaluate
    their treatment by employers relative to the
    treatment of others

18
Strategies for Enhancing Job Satisfaction Morale
  • Reinforcement/Behavior Modification Theory
  • Theory that behavior can be encouraged or
    discouraged by means of rewards or punishments
  • Management by Objectives (MBO)
  • Set of procedures involving both managers and
    subordinates in setting goals and evaluating
    progress

19
Management by Objectives
Starting the MBO Program
Establishing Organizational Goals Plans
Collaborative Goal Setting Planning
Communicating Organizational Goals Plans
Meeting
Setting Verifiable Goals Clear Plans
Counseling
Identifying Resources
Establishing Organizational Goals Plans
Collaborative Goal Setting Planning
9 - 19
20
Strategies for Enhancing Job Satisfaction Morale
  • Participative Management and Empowerment
  • Method of increasing job satisfaction by giving
    employees a voice in the management of their jobs
    and the company

21
Team Management
  • Managers should remember that teams are not for
    everyone
  • Some employees thrive in participative programs
  • Many people will be frustrated by
    responsibilities they are not equipped to handle
  • Participative programs may result in dissatisfied
    employees if workers see the invitation to
    participate as more symbolic than substantive

22
Job Enrichment Job Redesign
  • Job Enrichment
  • Method of increasing job satisfaction by adding
    one or more motivating factors to job activities
  • Job Redesign
  • Method of increasing job satisfaction by
    designing a more satisfactory fit between workers
    and their jobs

23
Job redesign is usually implemented in one of
three ways
  • Combining Tasks
  • The job of combining tasks involves enlarging
    jobs and increasing their variety to make
    employees feel that their work is more
    meaningful.
  • Forming Natural Work Groups
  • People who do different jobs on the same projects
    are candidates for natural work groups.
  • Establishing Client Relationships
  • Establishing client relationships means letting
    employees interact with customers.

24
ManagerialStyles Leadership
  • Leadership (Followership?)
  • Process of motivating others to work to meet
    specific objectives
  • Managerial Style
  • Pattern of behavior that a manager exhibits in
    dealing with subordinates

25
Managerial Styles
  • Autocratic Style
  • Managerial style in which managers generally
    issue orders and expect them to be obeyed without
    question
  • Democratic Style
  • Managerial style in which managers generally ask
    for input from subordinates but retain final
    decision-making power
  • Free-Rein Style
  • Managerial style in which managers typically
    serve as advisers to subordinates who are allowed
    to make decisions
  • Contingency Approach
  • Approach to managerial style holding that the
    appropriate behavior in any situation is
    dependent (contingent) on the unique elements of
    that situation

9 - 25
26
Motivation and Leadership in the Twenty-First
Century
  • Changing Patterns of Motivation
  • Todays employees want rewards that are often
    quite different from those valued by earlier
    generations.
  • Example Money is no longer the prime motivator
    for most people.
  • Changing Patterns of Leadership
  • As organizations become flatter and workers more
    empowered, managers naturally find it less
    acceptable to use the autocratic approach to
    leadership.
  • Example Many are becoming more
    democraticfunctioning more as coaches than as
    bosses.
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