Leadership & Human
Behavior
As a leader, you need to interact with your followers,
peers, seniors, and others; whose support you need in order to accomplish your
goals. To gain their support, you must be able to understand and motivate them.
To understand and motivate people, you must know human nature. Human nature is
the common qualities of all human beings. People behave according to certain
principles of human nature.
Human needs are an important part of human nature. Values, beliefs, and customs differ
from country to country and even within group to group, but in general, all
people have a few basic needs. As a leader you must understand these needs
because they can be powerful motivators.
Unlike others researchers in the earlier days of
psychology, Abraham Maslow's based his theory of human needson creative people who
used all their talents, potential, and capabilities (Bootzin, Loftus, Zajonc,
Hall, 1983). His methodology differed from most other psychological researchers
at the time in that these researchers mainly observed mentally unhealthy
people.
Maslow (1970) felt that human needs were arranged in a
hierarchical order that could be divided into two major groups: basic needs and
metaneeds (higher order needs):
- Basic Needs are
physiological, such as food, water, and sleep; and psychological, such as
affection, security, and self-esteem. These basic needs are also called
“deficiency needs” because if they are not met by an individual, then that
person will strive to make up the deficiency.
- Metaneeds or being needs (growth needs). These include justice, goodness, beauty, order, unity,
etc. Basic needs normally take priority over these meta needs. For
example, a person who lacks food or water will not normally attend to
justice or beauty needs.
These needs are normally listed in a hierarchical
order in the form of a pyramid to show that the basic needs (bottom ones) must
be met before the higher order needs:
- 5. Self-actualization — know
exactly who you are, where you are going, and what you want to accomplish.
A state of well-being.
- 4. Esteem — feeling of moving up in world, recognition, few
doubts about self.
- 3. Belongingness and love — belong
to a group, close friends to confide with.
- 2. Safety — feel free from immediate danger.
- 1. Physiological — food,
water, shelter, sex.
Maslow posited that people want and are forever striving
to meet various goals. Because the lower level needs are more immediate and
urgent, then they come into play as the source and direction of a person's goal
if they are not satisfied.
A need higher in the hierarchy will become a motive of
behavior as long as the needs below it have been satisfied. Unsatisfied lower
needs will dominate unsatisfied higher needs and must be satisfied before the
person can climb up the hierarchy.
Knowing where a person is located on the pyramid will
aid you in determining effective motivators. For example, motivating a
middle-class person (who is in range 4 of the hierarchy) with a certificate
will have a far greater impact than using the same motivator to effect a
minimum wage person from the ghetto who is desperately struggling to meet the
first couple of needs.
It should be noted that almost no one stays in one
particular hierarchy for an extended period. We constantly strive to move up,
while at the same time various forces outside our control try to push us down.
Those on top get pushed down for short time periods, i.e., death of a loved-one
or an idea that does not work, while those on the bottom get pushed up, i.e.,
come across a small prize. Our goal as leaders therefore is to help people
obtain the skills and knowledge that will push them up the hierarchy on a more
permanent basis. People who have their basic needs met become much better
workers as they are able to concentrate on fulfilling the visions put forth to
them, rather than consistently struggling to make ends meet.
Criticisms and Strengths
The above statements may be considered
generalizations. Maslow's theory has often been criticized because we can find
exceptions to it, such as the military, police, firefighters, etc. who will
risk their safety for the well-being of others or parents who will sacrifice
their basic needs for their children. However, there are very few theories that
are not flawed in that once we start drilling down to individualistic levels,
then the theory or generalization often starts to fall apart. For
example, even Newton's theory of physics, which later became laws, fell apart
once we were able to drill down to the atomic level.
A recent study (Tay, Diener, 2011) discovered that as
hypothesized by Maslow (1954), people tend to achieve basic and safety needs
before other needs. However, fulfilling the various needs has relatively
independent effects on a person's Subjective
Well-Being. Thus rather than being a pyramid with the basic human needs arranged in a
hierarchical order, it is more like a box with the basic human needs scattered
within and depending on the situation and/or environment, different needs rise
to the top to compensate for the deficient needs.
Maslow's theory remains a classic because rather than
looking at psychology as strictly the study of the mentally ill, his theory was
based upon healthy persons. And being one of the first humanistic ones,
it has its share of flaws.
Expansion of the Pyramid
In Maslow's (1971) later years, he become more
interested in the higher order or metaneeds and tried to further distinguish
them. Maslow theorized that the ultimate goal of life is self-actualization,
which is almost never fully attained but rather is something we try to always
strive for.
He later theorized that this level does not stop, it
goes on to self-transcendence, which carries us to the spiritual level, e.g.
Gandhi, Mother Theresa, Dalai Lama, or even poets, such as Robert Frost.
Maslow's self-transcendence level recognizes the human need for ethics,
creativity, compassion and spirituality. Without this spiritual or transegoic
sense, we are simply animals or machines.
This expansion of the higher order needs is shown
here:
Note that the four meta needs (above the inner
pyramid) can be pursued in any order, depending upon a person's wants or
circumstances, as long as the basic needs have all been met:
- 8. Self-transcendence — a
transegoic (see Note below)
level that emphasizes visionary intuition, altruism, and unity consciousness.
- 7. Self-actualization — know
exactly who you are, where you are going, and what you want to accomplish.
A state of well-being.
- 6. Aesthetic — to do things not simply for the outcome but
because it's the reason you are here on earth — at peace, more curious
about the inner workings of all things.
- 5. Cognitive — to be
free of the good opinion of others — learning for learning alone,
contribute knowledge.
- 4. Esteem — feeling of moving up in world, recognition, few
doubts about self.
- 3. Belongingness and love — belong
to a group, close friends to confide with.
- 2. Safety — feel free from immediate danger.
- 1. Physiological — food,
water, shelter, sex.
Note: Transegoic means a
higher, psychic, or spiritual state of development. The trans is
related to transcendence, while the ego is based on Freud's
work. We go from preEGOic levels to EGOic levels to transEGOic. The EGO in all
three terms are used in the Jungian sense of consciousness as opposed to the
unconscious. Ego equates with the personality.
In addition,just as in his earlier model, we may be in
a state of flux — we shift between levels (Maslow, 1968). For example there may
be peak experiences for temporary self-actualization and self-transcendence.
These are our spiritual or creative moments.
Characteristics of self-actualizing people:
- Have better perceptions of reality and are
comfortable with it.
- Accept themselves and their own natures.
- Lack of artificiality.
- They focus on problems outside themselves and are
concerned with basic issues and eternal questions.
- They like privacy and tend to be detached.
- Rely on their own development and continued
growth.
- Appreciate the basic pleasures of life (e.g. do
not take blessings for granted).
- Have a deep feeling of kinship with others.
- Are deeply democratic and are not really aware of
differences.
- Have strong ethical and moral standards.
- Are original, inventive, less constricted and
fresher than others
Going Beyond Maslow
While the research of Maslow's theory has undergone
limited empirical scrutiny, it still remains quite popular due to its
simplicity and being the start of the movement away from a totally
behaviorist/reductionistic/mechanistic approach to a more humanistic one. In
addition, a lot of concerns are directed at his methodology in that he picked a
small number of people that he declared self-actualizing and came to the
conclusion about self-actualization. However, he understood this and thought of
his work as simply a method of pointing the way, rather than being the final
say. In addition, he hoped that others would take up the cause and complete
what he had begun.
Which brings us to the next models. Other researchers
have taken up his cause and furthered refined them, mostly in the area of
organizations and work. Herzberg, Alderfer, and McGregor's research are all
closely tied to Maslow's theory.
Frederick Herzberg was considered one of the most
influential management consultants and professors of the modern postwar era.
Herzberg was probably best known for his challenging thinking on work and
motivation. He was considered both an icon and legend among visionaries such as
Abraham Maslow, Peter Drucker, and Douglas MacGregor.
Herzberg (1966) is best known for his list of factors
that are based on Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs, except his version is more
closely related to the working environment:
HERZBERG'S HYGIENE & MOTIVATIONAL FACTORS
Hygiene or Dissatisfiers:
- Working conditions
- Policies and administrative practices
- Salary and Benefits
- Supervision
- Status
- Job security
- Co-workers
- Personal life
Motivators or Satisfiers:
- Recognition
- Achievement
- Advancement
- Growth
- Responsibility
- Job challenge
Hygiene or dissatisfiers factors must be present in
the job before motivators can be used to stimulate a person. That is, you
cannot use motivators until all the hygiene factors are met. Herzberg's needs
are specifically job related and reflect some of the distinct things that
people want from their work as opposed to Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs which
reflect all the needs in a person's life.
Building on this model, Herzberg coined the term job enrichment — the process of redesigning work in order
to build in motivators by increasing both the number of tasks that an employee
performs and the control over those tasks. It is associated with the design of
jobs and is an extension of job enlargement (an increase in the number of tasks
that an employee performs).
Douglas McGregor (1957) developed a philosophical view
of humankind with his Theory X and Theory Y — two opposing perceptions about
how people view human behavior at work and organizational life. McGregor felt
that organizations and the managers within them followed either one or the
other approach:
Theory X
- People have an inherent dislike for work and will
avoid it whenever possible.
- People must be coerced, controlled, directed, or
threatened with punishment in order to get them to achieve the
organizational objectives.
- People prefer to be directed, do not want
responsibility, and have little or no ambition.
- People seek security above all else.
In an organization with Theory X assumptions,
management's role is to coerce and control employees.
Theory Y
- Work is as natural as play and rest.
- People will exercise self-direction if they are
committed to the objectives (they are NOT lazy).
- Commitment to objectives is a function of the
rewards associated with their achievement.
- People learn to accept and seek responsibility.
- Creativity, ingenuity, and imagination are widely
distributed among the population. People are capable of using these
abilities to solve an organizational problem.
- People have potential.
In an organization with Theory Y assumptions,
management's role is to develop the potential in employees and help them to
release that potential towards common goals.
Theory X is the view that traditional management has
taken towards the workforce. Most organizations are now taking the enlightened
view of theory Y (even though they might not be very good at it). A boss can be viewed as taking the theory X
approach, while a leader takes the theory Y
approach.
Notice that Maslow, Herzberg, and McGregor's theories
all tie together:
- Herzberg's theory is a micro version of Maslow's
theory that is focused in the work environment.
- McGregor's Theory X is based on workers caught in
the lower levels (1 to 3) of Maslow's theory due to bad management
practices, while his Theory Y is for workers who have gone above level 3
with the help of management.
- McGregor's Theory X is also based on workers
caught in Herzberg's Hygie
Hiç yorum yok:
Yorum Gönder