Motivation to WorkQuality work that fosters job satisfaction and health enjoys top priority in industry all over the world. This was not always so. Until recently analysis of job attitudes focused primarily on human relations problems within organizations. While American industry was trying to solve the unsolvable problem of avoiding interpersonal dissatisfaction, problems with the potential for solution, such as training and quality production, were ignored. When first published, 'The Motivation to Work' challenged the received wisdom by showing that worker fulfillment came from achievement and growth within the job itself. In his new introduction, Herzberg examines thirty years of motivational research in job-related areas. Based on workers' accounts of real events that have made them feel good or bad on the job, the findings of Herzberg and his colleagues have stimulated research and controversy that continue to the present day. The authors surprisingly found that while a poor work environment generated discontent, improved conditions seldom brought about improved attitudes. Instead, satisfaction came most often from factors intrinsic to work: achievements, job recognition, and work that was challenging, interesting, and responsible. The evidence marshaled by this volume called into question many previous assumptions about job satisfaction and worker motivation. Feelings about intrinsic and extrinsic factors could not be validly averaged on a single scale of measurement. Motivation and performance are not merely dependent upon environmental needs and external rewards. Frederick Herzberg and his staff based their motivation—hygiene theory on a variety of human needs and applied it to a strategy of job enrichment that has widely influenced motivation and job design strategies. 'Motivation to Work' is a landmark volume that is of enduring interest to sociologists, psychologists, labor studies specialists, and organization analysts. |
Contents
3 | |
The Pilot Projects | 20 |
Procedure for the Major Study | 30 |
How the Interviews Were Analyzed | 37 |
The Definition of JobAttitude Factors | 44 |
The Definition of the Effects of Job Attitudes | 51 |
8 | 59 |
The Efiects | 84 |
Appendix I | 141 |
References | 151 |
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The Motivation to Work Frederick Herzberg,Bernard Mausner,Barbara Bloch Snyderman Limited preview - 2011 |
Common terms and phrases
achievement actual advancement approach attitude changes attitudinal effects basic behavior Buhl Foundation cent Chapter coded company policy content analysis critical incidents defined definition described developed dissatisfiers duration of feelings efiects employees felt field find findings first First-level factors perceived Frederick Herzberg frequency fulfillment given goals Hawthorne study high sequences hygiene identified important included increase individual individual’s industry interpersonal relations interpersonal relationships interview job attitudes job enrichment job satisfaction kind long-range sequences low job-attitude low morale low sequences measures mental health mentioned morale surveys motivation nature needs negative over-all perceived as source Percentage period personnel pilot policy and administration positive job Possible growth problems productivity psychological questions recognition reported respondent salary sample satisfiers second-level factors sequence of events short-range sequences significant significantly situations social source of feelings specific status stories supervision supervisor Table technique tion tivate tudes turnover vidual workers