THE IMPORTANCE OF PAY IN EMPLOYEE MOTIVATION: DISCREPANCIES BETWEEN WHAT PEOPLE SAY AND WHAT THEY DO
	Human Resource
	It is easy to overestimate the frequency with which adults actually go to the opera and underestimate the frequency withm which they watch TV cartoons on Saturday mornings, based on their self-reports.
	(Nunnally & Bernstein, 1994, p. 383)
	Rynes, Colbert, and Brown (2002) presentedthe following statement to 959 membersof the Society for Human Resource
	Management (SHRM): “Surveys that directlyask employees how important pay is tothem are likely to overestimate pay’s true importance
	in actual decisions” (p. 158). If ourinterpretation (and that of Rynes et al.) of
	the research literature is accurate, then thecorrect true-false answer to the above statementis “false.” In other words, people are
	more likely to underreport than to overreport the importance of pay as a motivational factor
	in most situations. Put another way, research
	suggests that pay is much more important
	in people’s actual choices and
	behaviors than it is in their self-reports of
	what motivates them, much like the cartoon
	viewers mentioned in the quote above. Yet,
	only 35% of the respondents in the Rynes et
	al. study answered in a way consistent with
	research findings (i.e., chose “false”).
	Our objective in this article is to show
	that employee surveys regarding the importance
	of various factors in motivation generally
	produce results that are inconsistent
	with studies of actual employee behavior. In
	particular, we focus on well-documented
	findings that employees tend to say that pay
	dissertation代写THE IMPORTANCE OF PAY IN EMPLOYEE
	MOTIVATION: DISCREPANCIES BETWEEN
	WHAT PEOPLE SAY AND WHAT THEY DO
	Human Resource Management, Winter 2004, Vol. 43, No. 4, Pp. 381–394
	© 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Published online in Wiley InterScience DOI: 10.1002/hrm.20031
	Sara L. Rynes, Barry Gerhart, and Kathleen A. Minette
	A majority of human resources professionals appear to believe that employees are likely to overreport
	the importance of pay in employee surveys. However, research suggests the opposite is actually
	true. We review evidence showing the discrepancies between what people say and do with
	respect to pay. We then discuss why pay is likely to be such an important general motivator, as
	well as a variety of reasons why managers might underestimate its importance. We note that pay
	is not equally important in all situations or to all individuals, and identify circumstances under
	which pay is likely to be more (or less) important to employees. We close with recommendations
	for implementing research findings with respect to pay and suggestions for evaluating pay systems.
	© 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
	Correspondence to: Sara L. Rynes, Tippie College of Business, 108 PBB, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA
	382 • HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT, Winter 2004
	is less important to them than it actually is.
	This is an important point because if employees’
	reports are taken at face value, HR
	professionals are likely to seriously underestimate
	the motivational potential of pay.
	Moreover, a quick survey of the journals or
	magazines that are most often read by practitioners
	(in particular, HR Magazine for HR
	professionals and Harvard Business Review
	for general managers) suggests that they, too,
	tend to take employee surveys at face value
	without carefully examining the behavioral
	evidence related to pay and motivation.
	In the section that follows, we first present
	evidence demonstrating the gap between
	what people say and what they do with respect
	to pay. We then show that practitioner
	journals present claims about pay importance
	that are inconsistent with research about the
	actual motivational effects of pay. In general,
	there appears to be a consistent (but incorrect)
	message to practitioners that pay is not
	a very effective motivator—a message that, if
	believed, could cause practitioners to seriously
	underestimate the motivational potential
	of a well-designed compensation system.
	Gaps between What People Say and Do
	with Respect to Pay
	Table I presents findings from a number of
	major studies that have attempted to determine
	the importance of pay to employees,
	relative to other potential motivators. In the
	first column are the results of studies that
	have simply asked people to rate or rank
	pay’s importance, relative to other potential
	motivators. In the right-hand column are
	the results of studies in real, ongoing organizations
	that examine differences in
	work output following implementation of
	various motivational interventions: modifications
	of pay systems, work redesign, increases
	in employee participation, and enhanced
	performance feedback. In order to
	increase the reliability of the conclusions
	drawn, we included only studies that are either
	narrative reviews of the literature,
	meta-analytic reviews (which incorporate
	the data from many individual studies into a
	single large-scale empirical analysis),1 or
	single studies with very large sample sizes
	(e.g., Jurgensen 1978, which had over
	50,000 respondents, and Towers Perrin
	2003, which had over 35,000.
	As the first column of Table I shows,
	when asked directly about the importance of
	pay, people tend to give it answers that place
	somewhere around fifth (range = second to
	eighth) in lists of potential motivators. In
	contrast, meta-analytic studies of actual behaviors
	in response to motivational initiatives
	(second column) nearly always show pay to
	be the most effective motivator. Indeed, after
	conducting the first such meta-analysis with
	respect to motivational interventions, Locke,
	Feren, McCaleb, Shaw, and Denny (1980)
	concluded: “Money is the crucial incentive
	. . . no other incentive or motivational technique
	comes even close to money with respect
	to its instrumental value” (p. 379).
	Subsequent research has continued to support
	their conclusion.
	Why do such discrepancies occur, and
	how can psychological theories help us explain
	them? The common tendency for people
	to say one thing but do another is known
	as socially desirable responding: “the tendency
	to choose items that reflect societally approved
	behaviors” (Nunnally & Bernstein,
	1994, p. 382). Social desirability stems from
	either a lack of self-insight or a lack of frankness
	(Nunnally & Bernstein, 1994). In the
	case of pay, people are likely to understate importance
	either because they misjudge how
	they might react to, say, an offer of a higherpaying
	job, or due to social norms that view
	money as a less noble source of motivation
	than factors such as challenging work or work
	that makes a contribution to society.
	Generally speaking, the more a particular
	question touches on strongly held social
	values, the less valid direct self-reports are
	likely to be. In such cases, both managers
	and researchers must find additional ways of
	ferreting out more valid information. Recognizing
	this, some researchers have approached
	the topic of pay importance by examining
	how employees’ behaviors (such as
	turnover or performance) change in response
	to changes in pay and other HR practices
	(e.g., the second column in Table I).
	These behavioral responses are far more
	compelling pieces of evidence than people’s
	In general,
	there appears to
	be a consistent
	(but incorrect)
	message to
	practitioners
	that pay is not
	a very effective
	motivator—a
	message that, if
	believed, could
	cause
	practitioners to
	seriously
	underestimate
	the
	motivational
	potential of a
	well-designed
	compensation
	system.
 
  
 
					 
				
 
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