Abstract
The literature on growth need strength (GNS) as a moderator in organizational research, particularly the job characteristics model of work motivation, is reviewed. This review reveals a preponderance of inappropriate cross-sectional surveys and few appropriate experimental tests in the field on the GNS moderator hypothesis. Next, an incremental model of growth opportunity is contrasted with that of the general level of motivating potential. It is proposed that one should manipulate growth opportunities (increments) being offered to employees in an experimental design to test GNS as a moderator in a theory of motivation. A field experiment using this approach is described. Growth opportunities were manipulated by a vertical collaboration offer based on the leader-member exchange (LMX) model. Results of this experiment demonstrated statistically significant interaction effects between GNS and growth opportunity. As predicted, only high GNS employees responded to the growth opportunity (a 55% increase in quantity produced). This increase in quantity was not made at the expense of quality; the number of errors per week also decreased for this group. The implications of these results for future research on the moderating effects of GNS are discussed. The job characteristics model (Hackman & Lawler, 1971; Hackman & Oldham, 1976) hypothesizes that employee growth need strength (GNS) will moderate the relationship between job characteristics and work outcomes. Growth needs are denned as strong needs for personal challenge and accomplishment, for learning, and for professional development. The model assumes that not all employees appreciate jobs high in motivating potential. Only employees having strong growth needs are predicted to develop strong internal motivation when working on complex, challenging jobs. Others, with less strong needs for growth, will be less likely to take advantage of opportunities for professional development provided by a job high in motivating potential. The concept of growth need strength (GNS) is crucial to the theory of work motivation underlying the job characteristics
Keywords
Affiliated Institutions
Related Publications
Job Characteristics and Internal Motivation: The Moderating Effect of Interpersonal and Individual Variables
This research examined: (a) the relationship between the internal work motivation of employees and their job performance; and (b) the moderating effect of individual growth need...
Employee reactions to job characteristics: A constructive replication.
Hackman and Lawler's conceptual model involving relationships between job characteristics and employee affective reactions was investigated by a partial replication. Subjects, 1...
Individual differences and reactions to job characteristics.
Three different methods of measuring individual differences were evaluated as moderators of employee reactions to job characteristics. The three methods are urban versus rural b...
Development of the Job Diagnostic Survey.
The properties and uses of the Job Diagnostic Survey (JDS) are described. The JDS is intended (a) to diagnose existing jobs to determine if (and how) they might be redesigned to...
Socialization and Newcomer Adjustment: The Role of Organizational Context
Research on how the context of work affects HRM practices in general, and socialization practices in particular, is relatively scarce. The present study assesses a model linking...
Publication Info
- Year
- 1986
- Type
- article
- Volume
- 71
- Issue
- 3
- Pages
- 484-491
- Citations
- 176
- Access
- Closed
External Links
Social Impact
Social media, news, blog, policy document mentions
Citation Metrics
Cite This
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1037/0021-9010.71.3.484