Effective Organizational Communication: a Key to Employee Motivation and Performance Kirti Rajhans Asst. Professor‚ National Institute of Construction Management & Research‚ Pune- 411045‚ India. Email: kirti.rajhans@gmail.com _________________________________________________________________________________________________ ABSTRACT: Organisational Communication‚ in today’s organizations has not only become far more complex and varied but has become an important factor for overall organizational functioning
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University of Phoenix Material Employee Portfolio: Motivation Action Plan |Team Member Name |Summary of Individual Characteristics |Motivational Strategy and Action Plan |Relevant Theory | | | |A progressive training program that will develop the skills | | |
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Team Motivation Plan Patrick Hall‚ Joyce Woodbury‚ William Leonardi LDR 531 July 09‚ 2012 Eric Heard A Positive Team Motivation Plan In today’s business world‚ each business organization has a diverse workforce and each worker has specific motivations and emotions. An effective manager understands the challenges involved in creating a workplace that combines the employees’ motivations‚ satisfactions‚ and performance into a cohesive and effective workforce. A manager must develop a plan encompassing
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ABSTRACT The purpose of writing this paper is to examine work motivation and show why organizations should have a motivated work force. Motivation is central because it determines the time and effort people put into their work to help achieve company goals. It shall try to explain why individuals with similar abilities and different levels of motivation won’t necessarily produce similar results. Some will care about their tasks and others simply wont. Managers should therefore make sure that
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Patterns of Employee Motivation Assignment 1 by Iliana Marin‚ EDD 8472 Human Resource Development Nova Southeastern University May 31‚ 2009 Introduction What motivates one person may not motivate another; likewise the actions behind the motivational behavior may not always have the same impact on the same person. Today’s leaders need to identify legitimate and satisfactory ways to convince followers to improve their behavior and productivity on the job with limited financial
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Organizational Behavior Using rewards and punishments in a workplace to increase employee performance. 1. Punishment: For example‚ docking an employee one hour of pay for being 15 minutes late to work is punishment. From my point of view‚ a manager needs to understand what each concept is and how it applies to a situation. Then he can act according to the case. For reasons such as abuse‚ violence‚ harassment and theft‚ I think that the manager should use a punishment like a suspension
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------------------------------------------------- THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN REWARDS‚ RECOGNITION AND MOTIVATION AT AN INSURANCE COMPANY ------------------------------------------------- IN THE WESTERN CAPE ABSTRACT Increasingly‚ organizations are realizing that they have to establish an equitable balance between the employee’s contribution to the organization and the organization’s contribution to the employee. Establishing this balance is one of the main reasons to reward and recognize employees.
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The Impact of Motivation on Employee Job Performance The Impact of Motivation on Employee Job Performance Introduction People within an organization are harmoniously working together to satisfy one certain goal‚ whether short or long-term goal. The organization‚ as the collection of people‚ are expected to be deliver the best assets that they have which are the people bearing the knowledge and skills suitable to their position in the organization. Through the desirable performances of the employees
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Evaluating Employee Performance Most companies conduct formal evaluations of every employee at least once a year. At such times‚ each employee meets individually with his or her supervisor‚ and the supervisor reviews and discusses each employee’s job performance. The supervisor often prepares and presents a written evaluation to the employee‚ and a copy of the evaluation is kept in the employee’s personnel file. The evaluation process serves a number of important purposes for both employees and
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work. We will use examples from Fujitsu Services’ employees to see what stimulates them to perform and how these can be related to the theories of motivations that have existed for the last 50 years. This paper will show that there is no simple defined levers that managers can rely on to motivate their employees to perform. Theories of motivation and how they apply Once‚ employees were considered just another input into the production of goods and services. What perhaps changed this way of thinking
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