In the United States, the cost of supplementary benefits to
employees in industry has risen to over forty percent by 2004
according to a study by the United States Chamber of Commerce.
There is a lot of money paid out to cover what, in terms of
motivational theory, are work satisfiers, not motivators. To
explain, let me tell what I have been told is a true story.
The story begins in the factory of the Hughes Aircraft Company
when it was quite small; a few hundred employees.
Howard Hughes owned the company outright. One Christmas he gave
every employee a Christmas Turkey. It was a big surprise, the
employees were delighted. They all said nice things about Mr
Hughes and his company.
When the next Christmas approached, what do you think the
employees began to wonder and think about? "Are we going to get a
turkey again?" The grapevine carried the word that the turkey
would be forthcoming and Hughes did not want to disappoint them.
So they got a turkey.
The next Christmas it was a foregone conclusion. The cry went
up, "Where's my turkey?" So they got a turkey that Christmas and
every Christmas thereafter.
The company some twenty years later had grown to 20,000
employees. The logistics with the turkeys was already becoming a
problem. The turkeys were stacked in a hopper in the factory
parking area. People came by in their lunch period, picked up a
turkey and then returned to their work stations.
Were the employees any more satisfied? Satisfied that they had
a turkey? Yes. More motivated, more loyal or more grateful? No.
Did they remain satisfied? No.
Because the turkey packer printed the weight of the turkey on
the boxes in which they came, the employees began comparing
weights. If their turkey weighed two hundred grams less than
another one, then suddenly they had a grievance and were
dissatisfied.
By now, the turkey was included in the labour agreements and
was subject to collective bargaining. Soon there was a choice
between a turkey and a ham.
Hughes Aircraft Company at Christmas time now had turkeys in
the parking lot and hams and if someone thought a ham smelt off,
the grapevine would set to work. Hams were sniffed all over the
plant. People imagined that their hams were off.
That year there was a lot of dissatisfaction. So much that they
made an arrangement with the local supermarket to keep the turkeys
and hams under refrigeration. Then they gave employees a cash card
and said, "Take this card along to the supermarket and pick up a
turkey or ham".
Then they said, "Of course you can pick up anything else like
meat or potatoes instead of the turkey", which of course, people
did.
It is not to say that the employees of Hughes Aircraft factory
were not satisfied with their cash card. It is just that the card
was not doing what Hughes set out to do all those years ago when
he began giving out turkeys.
All that was clear was that he could not stop giving out
turkeys, or its substitute, because it was by now built into their
expectations.
Someone raised the question "Why did he ever give them the
turkey to begin with?" His defenders said, "Because he is a nice
guy and he wanted to let them know he was concerned for their
welfare."
An argument can be made that the turkeys were, in fact, a
manifestation of paternalism that may have been better paid as an
increase in salary. What is clear is that they were not a reward
that acted as a motivator of performance.
According to Herzberg's motivation theory, certain factors
truly motivate ('motivators'), whereas others tend to lead to
dissatisfaction ('hygiene factors').
Herzberg's research proved that people will strive to achieve
hygiene needs because they are unhappy without them. However, once
satisfied the effect soon wears off; satisfaction is temporary.
Examples of hygiene needs in the workplace are policy,
relationship with supervisor, work conditions, salary, company
car, status, security, relationship with subordinates, personal
life.
True motivators were found to be other completely different
factors including achievement, recognition, work itself,
responsibility, advancement and personal growth.
The turkey may have seemed to be a motivator but in reality was
and soon became all too evident to be, a hygiene factor.
Being given the responsibility, the competence and tools to do
a job well and the recognition of your peers, subordinates and
superiors when the job is done well are the rewards by which most
people are motivated.
Rewards which grow the individual or the team and recognition
in the form of a public "thank you" that specifically details what
the employee is being thanked for is a more powerful motivator
than a truck load of turkeys.
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