6 Motivating Employees: Answers To Coursebook Activities
6 Motivating Employees: Answers To Coursebook Activities
6 Motivating Employees: Answers To Coursebook Activities
6 Motivating employees
Answers to Coursebook activities
Activity 6.1 (page 74)
1 Many employees leaving the business – increase in labour turnover; absenteeism at an all-time high;
production levels – productivity – fallen; increase in customer complaints; poor quality.
2 Work became boring – less interesting than it used to be; bonus targets are too high; pay is lower than
that of similar businesses.
3 Answers should focus on the effect motivation has on labour turnover, productivity, quality.
4 Answers should discuss the importance of financial motivators v non-financial motivators. Answers
that identify a benefit or a drawback of the new pay system to ZHAF will demonstrate analysis.
An answer that has the student making a judgement about the likely success of the new pay system
supported by evidence from the case study or relevant theories would be evidence of evaluation.
4 Answers should outline Herzberg’s two-factor theory and explain the importance of hygiene factors and
motivators, how a knowledge of these might be used by senior managers to improve the motivation of
employees and why this could lead to improvement in productivity. Better answers will link the theory to
the present situation of the employees and how some of the hygiene factors are present, e.g. high wages,
but others are not, e.g. poor working conditions. Answers should recognise that an improvement in these
factors will not motivate employees but that they need to be present to satisfactory standard in order
to prevent job dissatisfaction. Focus should then be on how senior managers might use ‘motivators’ to
improve employee motivation and productivity. Influence of the leadership style of the factory manager
might also be considered. Senior managers might also consider why the productivity of employees in
their other factories is higher than Factory A, i.e. what is so different between the factories?
attention to quality if they are trying to produce as many units as possible. Changing from piece-rate
to another system, e.g. hourly rate, might improve quality, could reduce productivity. Decrease in
productivity will increase average costs and this would need to be balanced against any reduction in
average costs as a result of improved quality/reduced wastage.