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Another question which has to be answered after careful creative thinking.
Different things motivate different people, (Maslow's hierchy of needs) and there comes a point for some people where money does not affect productivity. Things like motivation, recognition and career progression seem more defined goals.
Money plays a vital role in motivating human beings - but thats not everything. For many it is not primary motivational factor !Challenging tasks / assignments often tend to attract the best of talent, as they are not bothered how much they get in terms of money, rather they are more keen to develop their skill base. In this kind of stimulating environment, the human brain is challenged and it is this factor that spurs thinking and employees get lot of satisfaction completing the challenging tasks assigned to them.Sense of achievement and pride are what associated with taking up challenging jobs !
Motivation and performance are very complex issues affected by many factors. No one factor can guarantee motivation or performance in the absence of other critical factors. Money cannot be effectively substituted for good management. Some people think that money can't be used to motivate employees and that is true for some employees, but for a large percentage of the workforce it does not have to be that way. Studies show almost everyone is motivated by money to some degree, many to a moderate degree, and most to a great degree when compensation is properly designed. Some psychologists would argue that money doesn't change behavior because they do not consider it properly termed a "motivator", but rather they call it a "director" of behavior. This is a semantic argument. The idea is whether money can be used as a tool to change employee behavior in a desirable direction. It is unfortunate that in most companies and for most jobs, pay is a small factor in managing and changing employee behavior. However, inadequate use of incentive plans and problems with compensation design and strategy are usually to blame.
Good question! :)
It greatly depends on the type of jobs involved. Regardless of whatever incentives we use to motivate people, it greatly depends on whether those are in fact wanted or essential in their life.
For people who are in the industries that have a lower pay scale, money would have a huge impact as motivation. Assuming someone gets paid minimum wage of about $11/hr, increasing their salary by $1/hr is already roughly about a 10% increase. That accumulates down to about +2k per year for that individual to spare. That amount means a lot for someone who's in a low income situation
On the other hand, even if we increase the salary of individuals who already have millions or billions of assets by the same percentage, it would not mean the same to them because at that point, $$ is merely a number to them.
Motivation and performance are very complex issues affected by many factors. No one factor can guarantee motivation or performance in the absence of other critical factors
Money cannot be effectively substituted for good management. Some people think that money can't be used to motivate employees and that is true for some employees, but for a large percentage of the workforce it does not have to be that way. Studies show almost everyone is motivated by money to some degree, many to a moderate degree, and most to a great degree when compensation is properly designed. The idea is whether money can be used as a tool to change employee behavior in a desirable direction.
How to Motivate with Pay
In jobs where significant variability in pay occurs in compensation and where it is closely related to key performance factors, then pay can be a big motivator. But remember that the good performers prior to such money based compensation plan implementation remain good performers and may not improve much because they are already giving close to 100% effort, but the middle and the bottom performers are where there is significant opportunity for change. Most are money motivated when they perceive the target is achievable and within their reach and where the rewards are also significant for target achievement. If a company is able to get significant differences in behavior from 50% to 70% of people because they are motivated by money, then the payoff for the compensation plan can be great.
Failure to Motivate only with money (behavioral change)
One of the biggest single impediments to the use of money as motivator is the manager's inability or insufficient effort to measure employee performance accurately and regularly, give performance feedback to the employee regularly, and set goals/standards that are challenging, realistic, and have strong relationship to business success. Since it is easier to measure performance and set performance standards/objectives in some jobs than others, money as motivator is more effectively used in some jobs than others. Nevertheless, company wide incentive plans can be powerful in the right circumstances.
Another major impediment is when employee motivation and effort, is overwhelmed by the impact of poor business strategy or poor business environment (i.e. the economy).
Money cannot motivate all people under all circumstances and we can prove it by means of
Maslow's hierarchy of needs. The most fundamental and basic four layers of the pyramid contain what
Maslow called "deficiency needs" or "d-needs": esteem, friendship and love, security, and physical needs.
When people have enough money to meet the physical needs they start to look for needs of higher layer
that very often don’t depend on money. The most compelling answer to this question is a meta-analysis
by Tim Judge and colleagues. The authors reviewed 120 years of research to synthesize the findings from
92 quantitative studies. The combined dataset included over 15,000 individuals and 115 correlation
coefficients. The results indicate that the association between salary and job satisfaction is very weak. The
reported correlation (r = .14) indicates that there is less than 2% overlap between pay and job satisfaction
levels
Great answers by the colleagues I don't think I have anything to add.
"If All the things remain unchanged", then i think it is true " Money can not motivate all people under all circumstances”
But truth is as follow:
To earn money is ultimate goal (necessity) to spend life (@all level) for every human being in the material world, however exceptions are always there but very rare in example (like "SADHA").
Anyone of us refused and say that i do not want annual increment, bonus, commission and Market adjustment in corporate world.
All the Yes points 1. The greed caused by pursuit of money is damaging. 2. spiritual damage 3. there are alternatives to money 4. Family damage 5. If money was such a good thing then IT would serve the people. Instead people serve IT. 6. Money equals a social status 7. money causes interest ...
Money is a powerful tool of motivation but it is not necessarily that every time employees get motivated by money.
Other techniques also can be used as motivatorssuchaschallengingjobs,goals, and participation in decision-making and other non-monetary incentives for motivatingemployees. The opposition of behavioral scientists to money as amotivator is understandable forat least six reasons.
The conclusion is that money can motivate some people under conditions. Put in another way, money cannot motivate allpeople underallcircumstances.