Victor Vroom was born on 8 September 1932 in Montreal, Canada. He is a Professor of Psychology, and currently works in the Yale School of Management.
Professor Vroom is renowned for his work on the Expectancy Theory of Motivation, in which he examines why people chose to follow a particular course of action.
Vroom's Expectancy Theory deals with motivation and management. Vroom's theory assumes that behavior results from conscious choices among alternatives whose purpose it is to maximize pleasure and minimize pain. Together with Edward Lawler and Lyman Porter, Vroom suggested that the relationship between people's behavior at work and their goals was not as simple as was first imagined by other theorists. Vroom posited that an employee's performance is based on individual factors such as personality, skills, knowledge, experience and abilities.
The expectancy theory states that, in the workplace, individuals have a variety of goals and that they can be motivated if they believe that:
The actual equation is: F = E (I x V) Vroom's Expectancy Theory is based upon the following three beliefs:
Vroom suggests that an employee's beliefs about expectancy, instrumentality, and valence interact psychologically to create a motivational force such that the employee acts in ways that bring pleasure and avoid pain. This force can be 'calculated' via the following formula: Motivation = Expectancy x (Valence x Instrumentality).
This formula can be used to indicate and predict such things as job satisfaction, one's occupational choice, the likelihood of staying in a job, and the effort one might expend at work.
1932 births | Living people | Canadian psychologists | Business theorists | Motivation
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