1988
DOI: 10.1037/0021-9010.73.2.337
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Effects of group feedback, goal setting, and incentives on organizational productivity.

Abstract: While industrial and organizational psychologists have been concerned about the national problem of increasing productivity, most research has focused on simple jobs with the individual as the unit of analysis. Most jobs are more complex and, because of the interdependencies in the work, require group-level interventions and more complex measures of performance or productivity. This research presents a new method of measuring productivity, the Productivity Measurement and Enhancement System (ProMES), and uses … Show more

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Cited by 292 publications
(168 citation statements)
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References 132 publications
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“…Five of these studies showed that compensation and rewards in interaction with various other HRM practices had a positive effect. Studies by Pritchard et al 576,577 found that although feedback alone was instrumental in improving the performance of employees by 50%, when feedback was used with goal setting and incentives, productivity improved by 76%. Similarly, a study by Knight et al 578 found that combining incentives with difficult goals achieved best results.…”
Section: Combination Of Compensation and Rewards With Various Other Hmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Five of these studies showed that compensation and rewards in interaction with various other HRM practices had a positive effect. Studies by Pritchard et al 576,577 found that although feedback alone was instrumental in improving the performance of employees by 50%, when feedback was used with goal setting and incentives, productivity improved by 76%. Similarly, a study by Knight et al 578 found that combining incentives with difficult goals achieved best results.…”
Section: Combination Of Compensation and Rewards With Various Other Hmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…-Private versus public feedback (Nordstrom, Lorenzi, & Hall, 1991;Pritchard, Jones, Roth, Stuebing & Ekeberg, 1988;) -Performance versus mastery goals (Dweck, 1986;Kozlowski, 1996; In press) -Reward systems (Latham & Locke, 1991;Locke & Latham, 1990;Pritchard et al, 1988; -Degree of interdependence (Mitchell & Silver, 1990;Saavedra, Early & Van Dyne, 1993) Prislin et al (1996 examined the effects of competition on skill acquisition. Competition produced beneficial effects on skill acquisition when it was introduced late in training and inhibitory effects when it was introduced early in training.…”
Section: Interfacementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Further, Pritchard, Jones, Roth, Stuebing, and Ekeberg (1988) have extended the notion of negative performance utility estimates by explicitly mapping the entire range of performance effectiveness. That is, they generate "contingency curves" where the horizontal, X-axis is an increasing scale of performance on a criterion and the Y-axis is a measure (in ratio scale) of the estimated effectiveness of that performance to the organization, ranging from -100 to +100.…”
Section: Related Issues In Utility Analysis and Performance Efrectivementioning
confidence: 99%
“…For example, both Eaton, Wing, and Mitchell (1985) and Sadacca et al (1990) developed metrics in terms of hypothetical individuals (e.g., perhaps 5 superior people are worth the same as 8 average, 50th percentile, individuals). On the other hand, the work of Pritchard et al (1988) finesses the metric problem by assessing utility in terms of an abstract effectiveness scale ranging from -100 to +100. It should be clear that performance utility (and, hence, how we conceive of performance standards) can be approached in many formats, such as an abstract value, a subjective rating along some criterion dimension, measured output (quantity of production, production value), or hypothetical individuals (i.e., some sort of prototypic individual, ranging from minimally qualified to outstanding).…”
Section: Related Issues In Utility Analysis and Performance Efrectivementioning
confidence: 99%
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