Motivation Theories
Motivation is “the set of forces that cause people to behave in certain ways.” Several major theories explain why employees work hard (or don’t), each offering a different lens on human behaviour at work.
graph TD A[Motivation Theories] --> B[Content Theories What drives people] A --> C[Process Theories How motivation works] B --> D[Classical Theory Money alone] B --> E[Hawthorne Effect Attention & social factors] B --> F[Maslow Hierarchy Needs pyramid] B --> G[Herzberg Two-Factor Hygiene vs Motivators] B --> H[McGregor X/Y Manager assumptions] C --> I[Expectancy Theory Effort to Reward chain] C --> J[Equity Theory Fairness comparison] C --> K[Goal-Setting Theory SMART targets] K --> L[MBO Org-wide goal cascading]
How It Appears Per Course
ADMN 201
Motivation is framed as a management tool — managers need to understand what drives employees in order to direct behaviour effectively. The chapter surveys the full arc of motivation research, from Taylor’s piece-rate wages to modern equity and expectancy models.
The Theories
1. Classical Theory (Frederick Taylor, 1911)
Workers are motivated almost solely by money. Scientific management: analyze tasks, find the one best way, pay workers per unit produced (piece-rate).
- Contribution: established that productivity can be studied and optimized.
- Limitation: ignores social, psychological, and self-actualization needs entirely.
2. Hawthorne Effect (Elton Mayo, 1920s–30s)
Productivity increased when workers felt they were receiving special attention from management, regardless of changes to physical working conditions.
- Key insight: workers are social beings. Being watched, valued, and included matters.
- Opened the door to human relations approaches to management.
3. Maslow’s Hierarchy of Human Needs
Needs are arranged in a pyramid. A lower level must be substantially satisfied before the next level becomes motivating.
| Level | Need | Workplace Example |
|---|---|---|
| 5 | Self-Actualization | Meaningful work, creative freedom |
| 4 | Esteem | Recognition, title, awards |
| 3 | Social | Team belonging, friendships |
| 2 | Safety | Job security, safe conditions |
| 1 | Physiological | Adequate wages for food/shelter |
4. Herzberg’s Two-Factor Theory
Two entirely separate dimensions — not a single satisfaction spectrum:
Hygiene Factors — their absence causes dissatisfaction; their presence creates only neutrality:
- Pay, working conditions, job security, company policy, supervisory quality
Motivating Factors — their presence actively drives motivation and satisfaction:
- Achievement, recognition, the work itself, responsibility, advancement, growth
A pay raise can remove dissatisfaction but cannot create lasting motivation. Only motivators do that.
5. McGregor’s Theory X / Theory Y
Not about employees — about what managers assume about employees:
| Theory X | Theory Y |
|---|---|
| People dislike work | People naturally want to work |
| Must be controlled and coerced | Self-direction and self-control |
| Avoid responsibility | Seek responsibility |
| Little ambition | Creative and capable of innovation |
Theory Y aligns with participative management and empowerment strategies.
6. Expectancy Theory (Victor Vroom)
Motivation depends on three beliefs held simultaneously:
- Effort → Performance: “If I try hard, I can actually do this.”
- Performance → Reward: “If I perform well, I will be recognized/rewarded.”
- Reward → Personal Goals: “That reward is something I actually want.”
If any link breaks, motivation collapses. A manager must diagnose which link is broken.
7. Equity Theory
People evaluate fairness by comparing their input/output ratio to a comparison other (coworker, industry standard):
- Inputs: effort, skill, time, experience
- Outputs: pay, recognition, benefits, promotions
If they perceive inequity, they restore balance by: reducing effort, demanding more pay, changing their comparison target, or leaving. Perception matters more than objective fact.
8. Goal-Setting Theory
Specific, challenging, time-bound goals produce better performance than vague ones (“do your best”).
- Goals should be: Specific, Measurable, Achievable, Relevant, Time-framed (SMART)
- Implemented organizationally as MBO (Management by Objectives): goals cascade from the CEO down through every level collaboratively.
Cross-Course Connections
LeadershipApproaches — motivation theory underlies leadership effectiveness; leaders apply these models when deciding how to manage PsychologicalContract — the psychological contract is the practical expression of what motivates and satisfies an employee EmployeeBehaviour — motivation is the primary driver of whether employee behaviour is productive or counterproductive
Key Points for Exam/Study
- Classical Theory: money only. Hawthorne: attention and social factors matter.
- Maslow: needs pyramid, lower before higher.
- Herzberg: hygiene prevents dissatisfaction; motivators create satisfaction. These are NOT the same dimension.
- McGregor: manager’s assumptions about workers, not workers themselves.
- Expectancy: all three links (effort→performance→reward→goals) must hold.
- Equity: about perceived fairness of input/output ratio vs. comparison other.
- Goal-setting: specific + challenging = higher performance. MBO is the organizational application.
Open Questions
- How do different motivation theories interact? (e.g., a manager who believes Theory Y and applies Expectancy Theory)
- Does equity theory explain why pay transparency affects morale?
Cross-course: FalseCause-MotivationTheories — PHIL 252 causal reasoning tools for evaluating which motivation theories have sound causal foundations