1.7: Compensation and Motivation
- Page ID
- 80799
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The reality is that our desire to reduce complex questions to simple answers—for example, to identify the one factor or most important determinant of behavior—belies the complexity of human experience. For example, Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs illustrates that we are motivated by different things at different stages of our development. Given that there are five generations in the workforce, it’s likely that employees will be at different levels of development. Economic and health factors can also determine where a person is in their development and what they value and therefore what motivates them. Finally, changes in the employee-employer relationship and the nature of work may affect employee expectations and what significance the work has to an employee. For example, if a business is engaging in transactional relationships with its alternate workforce, it is likely to find those relationships (motivation) is driven more by compensation than other factors. Finally, generational changes in attitudes toward work may also impact what one wants from an employer. For some, “work” is not their life’s work, but a side hustle, so non-financial rewards may have less value. Finally, a reductionist view fails to account for income inequality. There are many people who don’t need to work. Someone like Alphabet CEO Larry Page, who was paid a dollar in 2018 (but is worth over 54 billion)—and, indeed, many Google employees—are not going to be motivated by compensation. However, the common refrain that compensation doesn’t drive motivation is simply not consistent with the financial realities of many Americans. In a specialized economy where we must purchase rather than provide for our own basic needs, we are all motivated by money to meet those basic needs.