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What Motivates Me: Put Your Passions to Work

door Adrian Robert Gostick, Chester Elton

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What Motivates Me presents a breakthrough new online assessment to diagnose what will make you happiest and most productive at work. The assessment identifies your top motivators and the book provides a step-by-step guide to tailor your work to better fit your core motivations and boost your happiness and success in your career.… (meer)
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As a member of the genre of self discovery books associated with a quiz, this book is quite good. The premise of this book is that what motivates a person may not be the same as what they are good at, so understanding motivation is just as important as understanding strengths.

Like most in this genre, the book itself is nothing spectacular: background about the assessment plus detailed descriptions of different motivators and the profiles that they are grouped into. This book does get some credit for going beyond that and including a short but vital section on how to follow-up and use the information to sculpt your job into one that motivates you more. The set of worksheets and examples is only a dozen pages in total, but they do a great job of helping answer the "now what" that self-assessments so often neglect.

The authors identify 23 motivators: autonomy, challenge, creativity, developing others, empathy, excelling, excitement, family, friendship, fun, impact, learning, money, ownership, pressure, prestige, problem solving, purpose, recognition, service, social responsibility, teamwork, variety. These are grouped by similarity and correlation in the research into 5 identities: Achiever, Builder, Caregiver, Reward-Driven, and Thinker.

I found the results of the quiz to be useful. That my primary motivators fell largely into the Achiever identity was not surprising. As soon as I saw that it's attributes of problem solving, pressure, and ownership were on the list of motivators, I knew that was likely where I would fall. I'm generally most excited about my work when I can control the means and resources to solve an important problem that requires timely completion (which isn't the same as having an artificial deadline).

My second identity was more of a surprise. I don't think of myself as rewards driven. I don't really care about promotions or earning ever more. However, I do identify very strongly with aspects of that identity such as being motivated to maintain a good reputation and wanting to have others adopt my ideas (less charitably: wanting to win). Thus, while I am not strongly driven by material awards or by status markers, I am strongly driven by the reward of sincere esteem from others.

Some of the caveats that the authors note follow.

The identities are just an approximate grouping for the 23 motivators that they found in their research. Most people will identify with aspects of all the identities. For me, my number 1 motivator, learning, is an attribute of the thinker identity which neither the quiz nor my reading of the identities found to really fit well. It's important to go beyond the coarse labels.

This is not a strength assessment. It's an assessment of what gets you most excited for your work. You may be good at something which doesn't motivate you. For example, I'm very detailed oriented and do legitimately get excited by things like organizing tasks and bugs. However, I find writing specification documents to be about as exciting as watching paint dry.

All of the motivators are positive, and likely things you value. This can make it hard to see some of them ranked low. For example, my lowest ranked motivator is fun. I like having fun. I like having people around who make my work environment more fun. But fun is not what makes me excited to go into work each day. I do like that the authors make this clear by grouping the ordered list of motivators into strong, moderate, and neutral motivators. (As an aside, I like that they give you the full list without making you pay extra. I'm looking at you Strengths Finder.)

Motivators are not personality. They often change over time. What motivates someone can easily change as they age. Even though this particular generalization isn't as strong as conventional wisdom would make it seem, this is captured well in the idea that people are at their most creative out of college, materialistic in their middle years, and then purpose driven again in their golden years.

I think that this assessment could be useful for a team, but I probably would structure it as something do for themselves and then share with their manager and team at their discretion. Some of these motivators may be seen as more shallow than others, and it's important that people feel comfortable being honest. (I'll admit to a moment of shame when I first saw that Rewards-Driven was my second ranked identity.)

Overall, a worthwhile use of my time. ( )
  eri_kars | Jul 10, 2022 |
What Motivates Me describes different factors that motivate people at their jobs, and things anyone can do to adjust their current job to fit with their passions. It is helpful information for anyone who wants to find a job they will really enjoy.
There's an assessment test you can take online to identify your motivators. However, you need a unique login code which comes in an envelope with the book to take the test, and since I got this book from the library the code wasn't included and I couldn't take the test. I was quite annoyed that the assessment wasn't included in the book, or on a website that anyone reading the book could access. You can read the descriptions of the different motivators, and by thinking about what you've liked or disliked about past jobs, get a good idea of what applies to you, but it would be nice to be able tot take the assessment since the whole point of the book is to identify what motivates you. ( )
  lazybee | Jul 25, 2015 |
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AuteursnaamRolType auteurWerk?Status
Adrian Robert Gostickprimaire auteuralle editiesberekend
Elton, Chesterprimaire auteuralle editiesbevestigd
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What Motivates Me presents a breakthrough new online assessment to diagnose what will make you happiest and most productive at work. The assessment identifies your top motivators and the book provides a step-by-step guide to tailor your work to better fit your core motivations and boost your happiness and success in your career.

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