The relative importance of different types of rewards for employee motivation and commitment in South Africa

<strong>Orientation:</strong> Employees’ perceptions of rewards are related to their affective commitment and intrinsic motivation, which have been associated with staff turnover.<p><strong>Research purpose: </strong> The study sought to establish the relationship betw...

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Main Authors: Aleeshah Nujjoo, Ines Meyer
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2012-02-01
Series:South African Journal of Human Resource Management
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sajhrm.co.za/index.php/sajhrm/article/view/442
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spelling doaj-fa437bbe7f8246ec8b6e24b4248f80702020-11-25T01:45:00ZengAOSISSouth African Journal of Human Resource Management1683-75842071-078X2012-02-01102e1e10263The relative importance of different types of rewards for employee motivation and commitment in South AfricaAleeshah Nujjoo0Ines Meyer1Organisational Psychology Section, School of Management Studies, University of Cape TownOrganisational Psychology Section, School of Management Studies, University of Cape Town<strong>Orientation:</strong> Employees’ perceptions of rewards are related to their affective commitment and intrinsic motivation, which have been associated with staff turnover.<p><strong>Research purpose: </strong> The study sought to establish the relationship between intrinsic and different extrinsic rewards with intrinsic motivation and affective commitment.</p><p><strong>Motivation for the study:</strong> South African organisations are grappling with employee retention. Literature shows that employees who are more motivated and committed to their organisation are less likely to quit. Rewards management strategies serve to create a motivated and committed workforce. Using the correct types of rewards can thus provide a competitive advantage.</p><p><strong>Research design, approach and method: </strong>A cross-sectional, correlational study was conducted. Questionnaire data of 399 South African employees were analysed using bivariate correlations and multiple regression.</p><p><strong>Main findings:</strong> Three main findings emerged. Firstly, there is a relationship between all types of rewards investigated and the two outcome variables. Secondly, this relationship is stronger for intrinsic than for extrinsic rewards and thirdly, monetary rewards do not account for the variance in intrinsic motivation above that of non-monetary rewards.</p><p><strong>Practical/managerial implications:</strong> Rewards management strategies should focus on job characteristics and designs to increase staff intrinsic rewards and include non-monetary rewards, such as supportive leadership, to encourage employees’ intrinsic motivation and affective commitment.</p><p><strong>Contribution/value-add:</strong> This research demonstrated the important role different rewards, particularly intrinsic non-monetary rewards, play in creating a committed and motivated workforce. The insights gained from this study can promote organisational effectiveness. Suggestions of how to expand on and refine the current study are addressed.</p>http://www.sajhrm.co.za/index.php/sajhrm/article/view/442affective commitmentextrinsic monetary rewardsextrinsic non-monetary rewardsintrinsic non-monetary rewardsintrinsic motivation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Aleeshah Nujjoo
Ines Meyer
spellingShingle Aleeshah Nujjoo
Ines Meyer
The relative importance of different types of rewards for employee motivation and commitment in South Africa
South African Journal of Human Resource Management
affective commitment
extrinsic monetary rewards
extrinsic non-monetary rewards
intrinsic non-monetary rewards
intrinsic motivation
author_facet Aleeshah Nujjoo
Ines Meyer
author_sort Aleeshah Nujjoo
title The relative importance of different types of rewards for employee motivation and commitment in South Africa
title_short The relative importance of different types of rewards for employee motivation and commitment in South Africa
title_full The relative importance of different types of rewards for employee motivation and commitment in South Africa
title_fullStr The relative importance of different types of rewards for employee motivation and commitment in South Africa
title_full_unstemmed The relative importance of different types of rewards for employee motivation and commitment in South Africa
title_sort relative importance of different types of rewards for employee motivation and commitment in south africa
publisher AOSIS
series South African Journal of Human Resource Management
issn 1683-7584
2071-078X
publishDate 2012-02-01
description <strong>Orientation:</strong> Employees’ perceptions of rewards are related to their affective commitment and intrinsic motivation, which have been associated with staff turnover.<p><strong>Research purpose: </strong> The study sought to establish the relationship between intrinsic and different extrinsic rewards with intrinsic motivation and affective commitment.</p><p><strong>Motivation for the study:</strong> South African organisations are grappling with employee retention. Literature shows that employees who are more motivated and committed to their organisation are less likely to quit. Rewards management strategies serve to create a motivated and committed workforce. Using the correct types of rewards can thus provide a competitive advantage.</p><p><strong>Research design, approach and method: </strong>A cross-sectional, correlational study was conducted. Questionnaire data of 399 South African employees were analysed using bivariate correlations and multiple regression.</p><p><strong>Main findings:</strong> Three main findings emerged. Firstly, there is a relationship between all types of rewards investigated and the two outcome variables. Secondly, this relationship is stronger for intrinsic than for extrinsic rewards and thirdly, monetary rewards do not account for the variance in intrinsic motivation above that of non-monetary rewards.</p><p><strong>Practical/managerial implications:</strong> Rewards management strategies should focus on job characteristics and designs to increase staff intrinsic rewards and include non-monetary rewards, such as supportive leadership, to encourage employees’ intrinsic motivation and affective commitment.</p><p><strong>Contribution/value-add:</strong> This research demonstrated the important role different rewards, particularly intrinsic non-monetary rewards, play in creating a committed and motivated workforce. The insights gained from this study can promote organisational effectiveness. Suggestions of how to expand on and refine the current study are addressed.</p>
topic affective commitment
extrinsic monetary rewards
extrinsic non-monetary rewards
intrinsic non-monetary rewards
intrinsic motivation
url http://www.sajhrm.co.za/index.php/sajhrm/article/view/442
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