Rejuvenating the rewards typology: Qualitative insights into reward preferences

Orientation: In order to drive desirable behaviour, employees need to feel valued. It is, therefore, important to identify which rewards motivate employees and satisfy their needs. Research purpose: The overarching aims of this study were to explore how South African employees feel rewarded at work...

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Main Authors: Janine A. Victor, Crystal Hoole
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2021-08-01
Series:SA Journal of Industrial Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://sajip.co.za/index.php/sajip/article/view/1880
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spelling doaj-2f09057b8e9741128910b71983edf29e2021-09-03T09:22:26ZengAOSISSA Journal of Industrial Psychology0258-52002071-07632021-08-01470e1e1710.4102/sajip.v47i0.18801202Rejuvenating the rewards typology: Qualitative insights into reward preferencesJanine A. Victor0Crystal Hoole1Department of Industrial Psychology and People Management, Faculty of Business and Economics, University of Johannesburg, JohannesburgDepartment of Industrial Psychology and People Management, Faculty of Business and Economics, University of Johannesburg, JohannesburgOrientation: In order to drive desirable behaviour, employees need to feel valued. It is, therefore, important to identify which rewards motivate employees and satisfy their needs. Research purpose: The overarching aims of this study were to explore how South African employees feel rewarded at work and to develop a model depicting how rewards can be categorised. Motivation for the study: There is a dearth of qualitative research on reward preferences, especially on the psychological façade of this construct. Research approach/design and method: Using a phenomenological research approach and in-depth interviewing techniques, 47 South African employees participated in focus group sessions. To analyse the data, a deductive and constructionist thematic analysis was employed. Main findings: The rewards construct is perceived to be multidimensional. Rewards can be categorised into three main categories: (1) extrinsic financial rewards (consisting of the total remuneration package), (2) extrinsic non-financial rewards (inclusive of good relationships, learning and development opportunities, organisational culture, communication, recognition, the physical working environment, feedback and work-life balance) and intrinsic-psychological rewards (encapsulating autonomy, meaningful work, felt competence, task enjoyment and challenging work). Practical/managerial implications: Outdated reward strategies should be re-evaluated to include all three categories of rewards. This means that there should also be a more in-depth focus on intrinsic-psychological rewards in the workplace. Contribution/value-add: This study highlighted the importance of using extrinsic (financial and non-financial) as well as intrinsic-psychological rewards to motivate employees and satisfy their needs. The insights gained from this research study can be used by future researchers and practitioners to construct modernised rewards frameworks.https://sajip.co.za/index.php/sajip/article/view/1880reward preferencesextrinsic financial rewardsextrinsic non-financial rewardsintrinsic-psychological rewardswork motivationjob satisfactionqualitative research
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Janine A. Victor
Crystal Hoole
spellingShingle Janine A. Victor
Crystal Hoole
Rejuvenating the rewards typology: Qualitative insights into reward preferences
SA Journal of Industrial Psychology
reward preferences
extrinsic financial rewards
extrinsic non-financial rewards
intrinsic-psychological rewards
work motivation
job satisfaction
qualitative research
author_facet Janine A. Victor
Crystal Hoole
author_sort Janine A. Victor
title Rejuvenating the rewards typology: Qualitative insights into reward preferences
title_short Rejuvenating the rewards typology: Qualitative insights into reward preferences
title_full Rejuvenating the rewards typology: Qualitative insights into reward preferences
title_fullStr Rejuvenating the rewards typology: Qualitative insights into reward preferences
title_full_unstemmed Rejuvenating the rewards typology: Qualitative insights into reward preferences
title_sort rejuvenating the rewards typology: qualitative insights into reward preferences
publisher AOSIS
series SA Journal of Industrial Psychology
issn 0258-5200
2071-0763
publishDate 2021-08-01
description Orientation: In order to drive desirable behaviour, employees need to feel valued. It is, therefore, important to identify which rewards motivate employees and satisfy their needs. Research purpose: The overarching aims of this study were to explore how South African employees feel rewarded at work and to develop a model depicting how rewards can be categorised. Motivation for the study: There is a dearth of qualitative research on reward preferences, especially on the psychological façade of this construct. Research approach/design and method: Using a phenomenological research approach and in-depth interviewing techniques, 47 South African employees participated in focus group sessions. To analyse the data, a deductive and constructionist thematic analysis was employed. Main findings: The rewards construct is perceived to be multidimensional. Rewards can be categorised into three main categories: (1) extrinsic financial rewards (consisting of the total remuneration package), (2) extrinsic non-financial rewards (inclusive of good relationships, learning and development opportunities, organisational culture, communication, recognition, the physical working environment, feedback and work-life balance) and intrinsic-psychological rewards (encapsulating autonomy, meaningful work, felt competence, task enjoyment and challenging work). Practical/managerial implications: Outdated reward strategies should be re-evaluated to include all three categories of rewards. This means that there should also be a more in-depth focus on intrinsic-psychological rewards in the workplace. Contribution/value-add: This study highlighted the importance of using extrinsic (financial and non-financial) as well as intrinsic-psychological rewards to motivate employees and satisfy their needs. The insights gained from this research study can be used by future researchers and practitioners to construct modernised rewards frameworks.
topic reward preferences
extrinsic financial rewards
extrinsic non-financial rewards
intrinsic-psychological rewards
work motivation
job satisfaction
qualitative research
url https://sajip.co.za/index.php/sajip/article/view/1880
work_keys_str_mv AT janineavictor rejuvenatingtherewardstypologyqualitativeinsightsintorewardpreferences
AT crystalhoole rejuvenatingtherewardstypologyqualitativeinsightsintorewardpreferences
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