This MCQ module is based on: Motivation (Maslow) & Leadership Styles
Motivation (Maslow) & Leadership Styles
This assessment will be based on: Motivation (Maslow) & Leadership Styles
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7.6 Motivation — Concept & the Three Related Terms
The chapter on directing returns to a central managerial puzzle: it is not always possible to extract the best from employees merely by exercising formal authority. Why are some people reluctant to work though they have the ability? What can a manager do to make people work effectively? NCERT illustrates this through the case of Rashmi Joshi at Fine Productions — a high-performing district sales manager who became despondent and let her work deteriorate after being passed over for promotion. The new marketing manager's first major problem was simply: how do you re-motivate Rashmi?
📖 NCERT Mini-Case — Directing a Dissatisfied Manager
Rashmi Joshi had been a district sales manager at Fine Productions for ten years. She was recognised as a strong performer but was extremely ambitious. When the marketing-manager position fell vacant, she applied — but top management decided to fill it from outside, fearing she might displease peers if she tried to take credit for their work. Rashmi was heart-broken; she became despondent, decisions slowed, sales reports were filed late. Her staff continued to be productive, but Rashmi could no longer take the credit. When the new marketing manager took charge, motivating Rashmi back to her former level of performance was his first major challenge.
Adapted from NCERT Class 12 Business Studies (Part I) — illustrative case on motivation.
To answer such questions, managers must understand three closely related but distinct terms — motive, motivation and motivators.
Motivation — the process of stimulating people to action to accomplish desired goals; depends on satisfying needs.
Motivators — the techniques managers use (pay, bonus, promotion, recognition, praise, responsibility) to influence employees.
"Motivation refers to the way in which urges, drives, desires, aspirations, strivings or needs direct, control and explain the behaviour of human beings." — McFarland
"Motivation is a complex force starting with keeping a person at work in an organisation. Motivation is something which moves the person to action and continues him in the course of action already initiated." — Dubin
Features of Motivation
① Internal Feeling
The urges, drives, desires, aspirations, strivings or needs of human beings are internal; they influence human behaviour from within. Examples: the urge for a motorbike, a comfortable house, social reputation.
② Goal-Directed Behaviour
Motivation produces goal-directed behaviour. Example: if an employee is offered a promotion to improve performance, and he is interested in promotion, the offer produces behaviour aimed at improved performance.
③ Positive or Negative
Motivation can be positive (rewards: pay rise, promotion, recognition) or negative (punishment, withholding increments, threatening). Both can induce action in the desired direction.
④ Complex Process
Individuals are heterogeneous in expectations, perceptions and reactions. Any single motivator may not have a uniform effect on all members; the manager must tailor approach.
Motivation Process — From Unsatisfied Need to Reduction of Tension
The motivation process is grounded in human needs. NCERT illustrates the cycle through a simple example: Ramu is hungry; tension rises; he searches for a hotel; finds roti and dal for ₹10; pays and eats; tension is reduced. The same five-stage cycle plays out in every workplace need-satisfaction.
Importance of Motivation
- Improves performance levels — A satisfied employee can always produce expected performance; good motivation helps achieve higher performance levels because motivated employees contribute their maximum efforts.
- Changes negative attitudes to positive — A worker may have indifferent or negative attitudes if not properly rewarded. Suitable rewards and supervisor's praise/encouragement gradually build a positive attitude toward work.
- Reduces employee turnover — High turnover compels new recruitment and training, involving extra cost, time and effort. Motivation saves these costs by retaining talent.
- Reduces absenteeism — Bad working conditions, inadequate rewards, lack of recognition, poor relations are causes of absenteeism. A sound motivation system covers these deficiencies; work becomes a source of pleasure.
- Helps introduce changes smoothly — If the manager can convince employees that proposed changes will bring additional rewards, they may readily accept the change instead of resisting.
7.7 Maslow's Need Hierarchy Theory of Motivation
Since motivation is highly complex, many researchers have built theories to explain it. Among these, Abraham Maslow's? Need Hierarchy Theory is considered fundamental to understanding motivation. Maslow, a well-known psychologist, outlined his theory in a classic 1943 paper. He proposed that within every human being there exists a hierarchy of five needs.
| Level | Need | Individual Example | Organisational Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| ① | Basic Physiological | Hunger, thirst, shelter, sleep, sex | Basic salary that covers food, rent and daily life |
| ② | Safety / Security | Stability of income, protection from harm | Job security, pension plans, insurance |
| ③ | Affiliation / Belonging | Affection, friendship, acceptance | Cordial relations with colleagues, team-building |
| ④ | Esteem | Self-respect, autonomy, status, recognition | Job title, awards, public recognition |
| ⑤ | Self-Actualisation | Growth, self-fulfilment, achievement | Achievement of stretch goals, opportunity to lead |
Maslow's Four Assumptions
- Behaviour is needs-based — People's behaviour is based on their needs; satisfaction of those needs influences their behaviour.
- Hierarchical order — People's needs are arranged in a hierarchy, starting from basic and moving to higher level needs.
- A satisfied need cannot motivate — Once a need is satisfied, it can no longer motivate; only the next higher level need can.
- Sequential progression — A person moves to the next higher level only when the lower need has been satisfied.
7.8 Financial & Non-Financial Incentives
An incentive is any measure used to motivate people to improve performance. Incentives are broadly classified as financial and non-financial. In modern economic life, money is a means to satisfy daily physical needs and also to acquire social position and power — so financial incentives matter enormously. But not all needs can be satisfied by money alone; psychological, social and emotional factors play an equally crucial role.
Financial Incentives — Seven NCERT Forms
| # | Financial Incentive | Description |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Pay & Allowances | Basic salary is the foundational monetary incentive — basic pay + dearness allowance + other allowances. Includes regular increments and time-to-time enhancement; in some firms, pay hikes are linked to performance. |
| 2 | Productivity-Linked Wage Incentives | Wage incentive plans linking payment to increase in productivity at individual or group level. |
| 3 | Bonus | An incentive offered over and above wages/salary. |
| 4 | Profit Sharing | Sharing a portion of profits with employees, motivating them to improve performance and contribute to higher profits. |
| 5 | Co-partnership / Stock Option | Employees offered company shares at a price below market — creates a sense of ownership and aligns interests with firm growth. Infosys has implemented stock options as part of managerial compensation. |
| 6 | Retirement Benefits | Provident fund, pension, gratuity — provide financial security after retirement; motivate during service. |
| 7 | Perquisites | Car allowance, housing, medical aid, children's education, fringe benefits — provided over and above salary. |
Non-Financial Incentives — Eight NCERT Forms
Non-financial incentives focus on psychological, social and emotional needs. Sometimes monetary aspects are involved (e.g., promotion brings extra money), but the emphasis is psychological satisfaction rather than money-driven satisfaction.
① Status
The ranking of positions in the organisation. Authority, responsibility, rewards, recognition, perquisites and prestige indicate status — and satisfy psychological, social and esteem needs.
② Organisational Climate
The set of characteristics that distinguish one organisation from another and influence individual behaviour — individual autonomy, reward orientation, consideration to employees, risk-taking. Positive measures here improve climate.
③ Career Advancement Opportunity
Every individual wants to grow. Skill-development programmes and a sound promotion policy help employees rise; promotion works as a tonic and encourages improved performance.
④ Job Enrichment
Designing jobs with greater variety, higher knowledge/skill requirements, more autonomy and responsibility, and the opportunity for personal growth. Enriched jobs make work itself a source of motivation.
⑤ Employee Recognition Programmes
People need their work to be acknowledged. Recognition can take forms like — congratulating the employee, displaying achievement on the notice board or company newsletter, awards/certificates, mementos and complimentaries (e.g., T-shirts), rewards for valuable suggestions.
⑥ Job Security
Employees want stability of future income and work, so they work without worry. Particularly important in India given inadequate job opportunities. Caveat: excessive security can make employees complacent.
⑦ Employee Participation
Involving employees in decision-making on issues that affect them — through joint management committees, work committees, canteen committees, etc.
⑧ Employee Empowerment
Giving subordinates more autonomy and powers. Empowerment makes employees feel their jobs are important, contributing positively to the use of skills and talents in performance.
For each of Maslow's five levels, identify two incentives — one financial and one non-financial — that an Indian IT company like Infosys could use to satisfy needs at that level.
- ① Physiological: Financial — basic competitive pay; Non-financial — subsidised canteen and transport.
- ② Safety: Financial — provident fund + gratuity + medical insurance; Non-financial — formal job security through clear contracts.
- ③ Affiliation: Financial — group rewards / team bonuses; Non-financial — work committees, social events, mentor programmes.
- ④ Esteem: Financial — performance bonus tied to client awards; Non-financial — public recognition, "Engineer of the Quarter" certificate.
- ⑤ Self-actualisation: Financial — stock options & profit sharing; Non-financial — job enrichment, autonomy to choose research projects.
7.9 Indicative Visualisation — Comparing Incentive Effectiveness
The chart below is a pedagogical sample comparing how strongly different financial and non-financial incentives are reported to drive engagement in Indian knowledge-economy firms. Numbers are illustrative — the lesson is the relative effect.
7.10 Leadership — Concept, Features, Importance & Qualities
Whenever we hear the success stories of any organisation, we are immediately reminded of their leaders. Can you imagine Microsoft without Bill Gates, Reliance without the Ambanis, Infosys without Narayana Murthy, Tata without J. R. D. Tata, or Wipro without Azim Premji? NCERT's clear answer is no — without these leaders, such organisational success would be unimaginable. Leadership is the process of influencing the behaviour of people by making them strive willingly toward achievement of organisational goals.
"Leadership is the art or process of influencing people so that they will strive willingly and enthusiastically toward the achievement of group goals." — Harold Koontz & Heinz Weihrich
"Leadership is a set of interpersonal behaviours designed to influence employees to cooperate in the achievement of objectives." — Glueck
Features of Leadership
- Indicates ability to influence others — Leadership is essentially the capacity to shape others' behaviour.
- Tries to bring change in behaviour — A leader does not merely accept the status quo; she actively attempts to alter how followers behave.
- Indicates inter-personal relations — Leadership is rooted in relationships between leaders and followers.
- Exercised to achieve common goals — Leadership serves the organisation's collective objectives, not the leader's private ones.
- Continuous process — Leadership is exercised continuously; it is not a one-off event.
Importance of Leadership — Five NCERT Benefits
- Influences behaviour positively — A leader makes people contribute their energies for the benefit of the organisation; good leaders produce good results through their followers.
- Maintains personal relations — Helps followers fulfil their needs; provides confidence, support and encouragement, creating a congenial work environment.
- Introduces required changes — Persuades, clarifies and inspires people to accept changes whole-heartedly, overcoming resistance with minimum discontentment.
- Handles conflicts effectively — Allows followers to ventilate feelings and disagreement, but persuades them through suitable clarifications.
- Provides training to subordinates — A good leader builds his successor and helps in smooth succession.
Qualities of a Good Leader
NCERT lists the qualities a leader might possess. It is recognised that no individual can have all the qualities — but understanding them helps managers acquire them through training and conscious effort.
7.11 Leadership Styles — Three NCERT Classifications
There are several bases for classifying leadership styles. The most popular classification is based on the use of authority — yielding three basic styles.
(i) Autocratic / Authoritarian Leader
An autocratic leader? gives orders and expects subordinates to obey. Communication is one-way — the subordinate only acts according to the manager's command. The leader is dogmatic — does not change his views or wish to be contradicted. His following is based on the assumption that reward or punishment can be given depending on results. This style is effective in many production-floor situations where the supervisor must ensure timely output and labour productivity, and where quick decision-making is critical. Variation: some autocratic leaders may listen to everyone's opinion before deciding, but the decision remains theirs alone.
(ii) Democratic / Participative Leader
A democratic leader? develops action plans and makes decisions in consultation with subordinates. He encourages participation in decision-making. This style is more common today because leaders recognise that people perform best when they have set their own objectives. The democratic leader respects others' opinions and supports subordinates to perform their duties — exercising control through forces within the group rather than by command from above.
(iii) Laissez-Faire / Free-Rein Leader
A laissez-faire leader? does not believe in the use of power unless absolutely essential. The followers are given a high degree of independence to formulate their own objectives and ways to achieve them. The group works on its own tasks, resolving issues themselves; the manager is there only to support and supply required information. The subordinate assumes responsibility for the work to be performed.
For each scenario, identify the most appropriate NCERT leadership style and justify briefly: (a) An assembly line during peak Diwali production, (b) A research lab developing a new vaccine, (c) A board meeting deciding next year's strategy.
- (a) Assembly line: Autocratic — quick decisions, deadline-driven; reward/punishment for output makes sense; one-way communication keeps the line moving.
- (b) Research lab: Laissez-faire — scientists need autonomy to design experiments; manager supports with funding/tools but does not dictate methods.
- (c) Board strategy meeting: Democratic — diverse expertise needed; participation builds buy-in; leader synthesises but final commitment is collective.
- Key insight: Skilled leaders flex between styles — this is exactly NCERT's "combination" point.
Maslow proposed his hierarchy in 1943. Identify three reasons why his theory remains relevant for managers today, and one reason why a modern Indian workforce might break the strict hierarchical sequence.
- Still relevant — ① Need-based behaviour: NCERT's first assumption — people behave based on needs — is timeless.
- Still relevant — ② Diagnostic value: Maslow gives managers a clear diagnostic — "which level is unmet?" — before choosing an incentive.
- Still relevant — ③ Anchors non-financial incentives: Without Maslow, a manager might over-rely on money; the pyramid forces attention to esteem and self-actualisation.
- Limitation in modern India: Knowledge workers may pursue self-actualisation (joining a startup at low pay) before securing safety/security needs — breaking strict sequencing. NCERT acknowledges Maslow's classification has been criticised.
7.12 Section Summary — Motivation & Leadership
Motivation is the process of stimulating people to action; it is internal, goal-directed, can be positive or negative, and is complex because individuals differ. Maslow's five-level hierarchy — physiological, safety, affiliation, esteem, self-actualisation — explains why different employees respond to different incentives. Managers tailor their approach using seven financial incentives (pay, productivity-linked wages, bonus, profit sharing, stock options, retirement benefits, perquisites) and eight non-financial incentives (status, organisational climate, career advancement, job enrichment, recognition, job security, participation, empowerment). Leadership — the influence that makes followers strive willingly for group goals — is exercised through three NCERT styles: autocratic (command-driven), democratic (participative) and laissez-faire (free-rein). The fourth element of directing — Communication — is taken up in Part 3, alongside the chapter's exercises.
📝 Competency-Based Questions — Motivation, Maslow & Leadership
Options: (A) Both A & R true, R correctly explains A · (B) Both true, R does not explain A · (C) A true, R false · (D) A false, R true.