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A manager has more opportunity to directly motivate employees than
does any other organizational influence. And in today's complex and
fluid work environments, where retention of top-performing
employees is paramount, managers are under considerable pressure to
motivate individuals to achieve both personal and organizational
goals. Integrating insights from management and psychology, The
Manager as Motivator covers such issues as the development of a
free-agent workforce, with talent following supply and demand; the
emergence of employees as the only true sustainable advantage; and
the opportunities and challenges that managers face in their role
as motivators, especially when they themselves are wrestling with
limited resources and competing demands. Featuring diagnostic
exercises, case examples, checklists, and other interactive
elements, the book addresses common myths and misconceptions about
motivation (such as the popular focus on charismatic leaders) and
offers readers many practical tools for becoming more effective
motivators—and measuring the positive results. A manager has more
opportunity to directly motivate employees than does any other
organizational influence. Conversely, research reveals that
de-motivating managers are the primary reason employees voluntarily
leave. Managers set the tone, translate organizational strategy
into employee performance and developmental plans, provide the
carrots and the sticks to achieve those plans, and in virtually
every other way reinforce—for better or worse—the cultural
attitudes of the organization. The Manager as Motivator explores
the dynamics of motivation, especially in the context of today's
complex and fluid work enivronments, where retention of
top-performing employees is paramount. Integrating insights from
management and psychology, the author covers such issues as the
development of a free-agent workforce, with talent following supply
and demand; the emergence of employees as the only true sustainable
advantage; and the opportunities and challenges that managers face
in their role as motivators, especially when they themselves are
wrestling with limited resources and competing demands. Featuring
diagnostic exercises, case examples, checklists, and other
interactive elements, the book addresses common myths and
misconceptions about motivation (such as the popular focus on
charismatic leaders) and offers readers many practical tools for
becoming more effective motivators—and measuring the positive
results.
In this age of stiff competition and "free agency," no organization
can afford to take its employees for granted. The new labor-market
landscape is forcing organizations to think creatively about how to
inject passion in the workplace and motivate their employees to
find meaning in their work. In Transforming Work, Boverie and Kroth
draw from their extensive research and experience in the field to
show executives, HR professionals, and students how to create
inspiring, employee-friendly work environments in order to capture,
develop, and retain talent and transform both the employees and the
organization in the process.
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