Motivation related to work: A century of progress

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Motivation related to work : A century of progress. / Kanfer, Ruth; Frese, Michael; Johnson, R.E.

In: Journal of Applied Psychology, Vol. 102, No. 3, 01.03.2017, p. 338-355.

Research output: Journal contributionsJournal articlesResearchpeer-review

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Kanfer R, Frese M, Johnson RE. Motivation related to work: A century of progress. Journal of Applied Psychology. 2017 Mar 1;102(3):338-355. doi: 10.1037/apl0000133

Bibtex

@article{ad7c43be50a24bbfbecb074b2aa10ee2,
title = "Motivation related to work: A century of progress",
abstract = "Work motivation is a topic of crucial importance to the success of organizations and societies and the well-being of individuals. We organize the work motivation literature over the last century using a meta-framework that clusters theories, findings, and advances in the field according to their primary focus on (a) motives, traits, and motivation orientations (content); (b) features of the job, work role, and broader environment (context); or (c) the mechanisms and processes involved in choice and striving (process). Our integrative review reveals major achievements in the field, including more precise mapping of the psychological inputs and operations involved in motivation and broadened conceptions of the work environment. Cross-cutting trends over the last century include the primacy of goals, the importance of goal striving processes, and a more nuanced conceptualization of work motivation as a dynamic, goal-directed, resource allocation process that unfolds over the related variables of time, experience, and place. Across the field, advances in methodology and measurement have improved the match between theory and research. Ten promising directions for future research are described and field experiments are suggested as a useful means of bridging the research-practice gap.",
keywords = "Business psychology, motivation, resource allocation, goals, self-regulation, intrinsic motivation",
author = "Ruth Kanfer and Michael Frese and R.E. Johnson",
year = "2017",
month = mar,
day = "1",
doi = "10.1037/apl0000133",
language = "English",
volume = "102",
pages = "338--355",
journal = "Journal of Applied Psychology",
issn = "0021-9010",
publisher = "American Psychological Association Inc.",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Motivation related to work

T2 - A century of progress

AU - Kanfer, Ruth

AU - Frese, Michael

AU - Johnson, R.E.

PY - 2017/3/1

Y1 - 2017/3/1

N2 - Work motivation is a topic of crucial importance to the success of organizations and societies and the well-being of individuals. We organize the work motivation literature over the last century using a meta-framework that clusters theories, findings, and advances in the field according to their primary focus on (a) motives, traits, and motivation orientations (content); (b) features of the job, work role, and broader environment (context); or (c) the mechanisms and processes involved in choice and striving (process). Our integrative review reveals major achievements in the field, including more precise mapping of the psychological inputs and operations involved in motivation and broadened conceptions of the work environment. Cross-cutting trends over the last century include the primacy of goals, the importance of goal striving processes, and a more nuanced conceptualization of work motivation as a dynamic, goal-directed, resource allocation process that unfolds over the related variables of time, experience, and place. Across the field, advances in methodology and measurement have improved the match between theory and research. Ten promising directions for future research are described and field experiments are suggested as a useful means of bridging the research-practice gap.

AB - Work motivation is a topic of crucial importance to the success of organizations and societies and the well-being of individuals. We organize the work motivation literature over the last century using a meta-framework that clusters theories, findings, and advances in the field according to their primary focus on (a) motives, traits, and motivation orientations (content); (b) features of the job, work role, and broader environment (context); or (c) the mechanisms and processes involved in choice and striving (process). Our integrative review reveals major achievements in the field, including more precise mapping of the psychological inputs and operations involved in motivation and broadened conceptions of the work environment. Cross-cutting trends over the last century include the primacy of goals, the importance of goal striving processes, and a more nuanced conceptualization of work motivation as a dynamic, goal-directed, resource allocation process that unfolds over the related variables of time, experience, and place. Across the field, advances in methodology and measurement have improved the match between theory and research. Ten promising directions for future research are described and field experiments are suggested as a useful means of bridging the research-practice gap.

KW - Business psychology

KW - motivation

KW - resource allocation

KW - goals

KW - self-regulation

KW - intrinsic motivation

U2 - 10.1037/apl0000133

DO - 10.1037/apl0000133

M3 - Journal articles

C2 - 28150980

VL - 102

SP - 338

EP - 355

JO - Journal of Applied Psychology

JF - Journal of Applied Psychology

SN - 0021-9010

IS - 3

ER -

DOI