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Will the role and influence of the employee be different in the new world of work?

The changing role of the employee is a topic that is gaining prominence, especially in today’s business environment. There are many angles from which we can understand this – which I’m sure will throw up a lot of interesting thoughts in this forum – but for starters, I want to discuss employee motivation, both extrinsic and intrinsic.

What is motivation? Motivation is simply the internal condition that activates behavior and gives it direction. In the context of business, it is what drives an individual to spend time and energy on a particular task or goal. It is obvious, when you look at the people who work for you, that motivation levels vary from person to person, and from job to job. So to understand why this is the case, researchers have taken two approaches: some have focused on employees’ underlying needs and wants, while others have focused on the drivers that stimulate people to work harder.

One key insight that has emerged from this research is distinction between intrinsic and extrinsic motivation. Intrinsic motivation comes from the rewards inherent to a task or activity itself—for example playing the piano, walking in the countryside, or solving a puzzle. Extrinsic motivation comes from outside the person—money is the most obvious example, but coercion and the threat of punishment are also common extrinsic motivators. Recent research by psychologists Edward Deci and Richard Ryan has extended this thinking in a couple of useful directions. One is a better understanding of the components of intrinsic motivation—the need for competence, the need for autonomy, and the need for relatedness to others. The other is the identification of a hybrid third type of motivation they labeled internalized extrinsic motivation. For example, when employees receive promotions, or recognition from their peers, these are externally granted but they are internalized as valuable by the individual, and therefore they become intrinsic. The extrinsic-intrinsic dichotomy, in other words, is really a sliding scale with various levels of internalized motivators between the two end-points.

What are the drivers of motivation? Positioned along the spectrum are three sets of mechanisms—the drivers of discretionary employee effort—that managers can put in place:

  • Material drivers of discretionary effort. These are ways of providing people with material and direct rewards for their efforts. They include salary increases, promotions, bonuses, prizes. They can also include the green light given to a project, approval of a patent, or a prize for coming up with the best solution to a problem.
  • Social drivers of discretionary effort. These are ways of providing people with a reason to belong to an organization. Most of us need to be part of a group or a community. That sense of belonging, of being a team player, of having a certain status within a peer group, can accord recognition, peer approval, and popularity.
  • Personal drivers of discretionary effort. This refers to the ways managers structure and allocate work to make it more intrinsically appealing. This includes giving people the freedom to act, the chance to work creatively with others, the opportunity to build and demonstrate expertise, and the opportunity to contribute to a worthwhile cause. Think of artists, writers, and R & D scientists, who are often so wholly captivated by the nature of the work they do (not discounting, of course, the tortured moments of self-doubt), that the joy and satisfaction they derive is the engine that drives them.

So, do managers have to choose between using material, social, and personal drivers? Can they use all three simultaneously? Alas, the answer is not entirely straightforward. There is quite a lot of research showing that extrinsic rewards can drive out intrinsic ones. For example, one study of volunteer workers found that when they were paid for their efforts, they became increasingly materialistic and less inclined to work for free. Studies have also shown that some motivators, particularly those concerned with working conditions and pay, only have an effect up to a certain threshold. Renowned psychologist Frederick Herzberg called these “hygiene” factors because, like washing regularly, they are best suited to preventing ill-health in the workplace rather than as a means of generating good health.

These caveats apart, the three approaches suggested here are best viewed as complements. That is, if you as a manager can engineer a thoughtful combination of material, social, and personal drivers, it is highly likely that your employees will respond positively.

The manager’s job is therefore to be thoughtful about how to get the most out of people—to enable and encourage their discretionary effort. And this means making use of these three drivers in whatever combination is appropriate. It’s worth underlining the point that these three sets of drivers apply equally to full-time employees and to freelance community members. Many Human Resource managers worry about outsourcing work and using freelancers, because they feel they no longer have control over what these individuals are doing. TopCoder’s experiments in building an online community of programmers suggest a very different conclusion: you have just as many tools at your disposal for stimulating and engaging freelance workers as you do with traditional employees.

This brings us to another bit of vital research. Recent studies of engagement in the workplace suggest that no more than 20 percent of employees are actively engaged in the work they are doing. This means a whopping 80 percent are doing the bare minimum to keep their bosses happy. Of course, there are some jobs that will never be intrinsically engaging—working in a call-center and flipping hamburgers are obvious examples. But if we could just achieve a modest change in these figures, say, increasing engagement from 20 percent to 30 percent, the gains in productivity and job satisfaction would be dramatic.

How about we start a discussion on the different approaches to motivation that managers have at their disposal, and the pros and cons of each one, so that ultimately we will have a better understanding of which might be most suitable to our situation as we begin to sharpen our Management Models?


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  1. Avatar Image

    I believe that the new world of work will irrevocably change from tiered organizations where employee engagement is low to expert networks. Networks where people who are highly skilled will work together on an assignment and possibly for different companies at the same time. They will be highly engaged in what they do and will drive each other towards higher performance.

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    I fear that an in-depth analysis of the mechanics of motivation is not the right path to walk. As Russell Ackoff would have said: Improving the performance of the parts of a system taken separately will not necessarily improve the performance of the whole. Motivation always is a thing in context.

    In essence, motivation is an extremely simple thing and does not require complex classifications. Unfortunately, over the past decades, the context that we call the enterprise has evolved in ways that make that motivation has become a complex issue. Most of the things that were natural enablers for a fair degree of motivation now have disappeared, being replaced by other things that are natural de-motivators. As a result, we have to dig deeper, trying to find the hidden levers that will still allow us to keep a flawed system going.

    As Namrata Rana wrote, a move towards expert networks is a possible path. Still, it is essentially an escape path, the formal confirmation of a state of unconnectedness, of no longer belonging to. Unfortunately, while this might work for the knowledge workers, it is more difficult to envision (at least for me) how this might exist for the regular worker population.

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    Marc, This is very well put.

    It will be great to get some more examples and views from you on some of the natural motivators that you talked about…

    In my opinion, all you need to do is to utilize employee’s natural ability, which you can do without any money. Adding fun and variety to their work, providing them with inputs and choice, encouraging teamwork and social interactions, helping them explore leadership opportunities, and other such cultural aspects work very well in making them involved and a part of the larger scheme of work. However, the role and influence of employees are treated as NON-CULTURAL issues in most places and hence the natural focus is on introducing policies, unnecessary rules, promotion structures, and many more forms and formations which do not in any way help them develop intrinsic motivation. How do we do that for, as Marc termed them, ‘regular worker population’?

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    I started to respond to this post, and the comment grew into it’s own post. I think there is another way of looking at the situation that doesn’t require too much analysis of what motivation is, and instead focus on an individual’s strengths.

    My thoughts on the Future of Work – http://unstructure.org/role-and-influence-of-the-employee/thoughts-on-the-future-of-work/

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    Hi Mark. Well articulated. While i am not surprised that a lot of employees are disengaged, the number 80% does throw me off my seat.

    IMO, from an employee perspective, the lack of engagement with the company goals & vision is the biggest driver for the disengagement. In the “new normal” & given the changes around us, i feel that many a companies are too slow to adopt newer means of engaging with employees (the focus being only on customers). The successful company is the one that elicits and responds real time or near real time to employee feedback. Thus, employees need to be aware that the organization is more sensitive to their feedback in this new normal & that engagement with the organization after the company defines the platform should be the mantra for the employees.

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    I’d agree with Marc that motivation is indeed simple at the individual level, though it gets complex when trying to manage it at an organizational level. It would probably be easier for organizations to identify motivation goals for its worker groups and arriving at suitable employee motivation measures. For e.g., goal for motivating pizza packing employees in say one of pizza hut’s store will be much different from that for an experienced developer in a high-end software firm. Once the goal is clear to the organization, identifying the right balance of motivational factors is a logical next step.

    To add to Namrata’s view, employee loyalty as it is perceived at present especially in the service sector might be in for a change. Similar to a talented and professional group of carpenters who work with different builders, often competitors, knowledge-workers too might end up lending their expert services to several different firms. This not only decreases overheads for organizations but also gives them access to a wider group of experts who are paid only for their respective services. In such a case, motivation will primarily be intrinsic complemented by other two out of social necessity.