Motivation Types
and Theories
Motivational Factors and Needs
Work Environment and Job Design
Ethics and Incentives
Job Satisfaction
and Retention
100

The internal drive directing behavior.

Motivation

100

Conditions preventing dissatisfaction (e.g., salary)

Hygiene Factors

100

Giving employees autonomy and decision-making power.

Empowerment

100

Moral principles governing behavior.

Ethics

100

 Highest level in Maslow’s hierarchy.

Self-Actualization

200

Internal satisfaction-driven motivation.

Intrinsic Motivation

200

Elements actively increasing job satisfaction

Motivators

200

Work arrangements that allow schedule control.

Flexibility

200

A reward offered to motivate behavior.

Incentive

200

Equilibrium between work and personal life.

Work-Life Balance

300

Motivation from external rewards.

Extrinsic Motivation

300

Fulfillment of one’s full potential.

Self-Actualization

300

Enhancing a job by adding meaningful tasks.

Job Enrichment

300

The desire to influence and control situations.

Power

300

Validation for accomplishments.

Recognition

400

Workplace satisfaction via hygiene factors and motivators.

Herzberg’s Two-Factor Theory

400

The desire to accomplish challenging goals.

Achievement

400

Balancing work and personal responsibilities.

Work-Life Balance

400

The rate of employee departure from a company.

Turnover

400

Employee departure rate.

Turnover

500

Human needs ranked from basic to self-actualization.

Maslow’s Hierarchy of Needs

500

The need to build social relationships.

Affiliation

500

Acknowledgment of an employee’s achievements.

Recognition

500

Exhaustion from prolonged stress or overwork.

Burnout

500

Stress-induced exhaustion impacting motivation.

Burnout