Motivating Knowledge Workers [electronic resource]: Lessons to and from the Corporate Sector / Ruth Dunkin
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OECD hemp-v15-art20-fr Marchés du travail internes versus marchés du travail externes | OECD hemp-v15-art21-en An Integrated Approach to Academic Reinforcement Systems | OECD hemp-v15-art21-fr Une approche intégrée des systèmes de renforcement académiques | OECD hemp-v15-art22-en Motivating Knowledge Workers Lessons to and from the Corporate Sector / | OECD hemp-v15-art22-fr Motiver les travailleurs du savoir Des enseignements à échanger avec le monde de l'entreprise / | OECD hemp-v15-art23-en Changing Identity in an Ambiguous Environment A Work in Progress Report | OECD hemp-v15-art23-fr Changer d'identité dans un contexte incertain Un rapport d'avancement / |
There is pressure on Australian universities to adopt organisational structures, job design, remuneration and performance management systems based on corporate sector best practice. However, these systems and practices are often at least 20 years old and are based on command-control bureaucracies that dominated the manufacturing and service industries. They are not only alien to universities but are increasingly seen as inappropriate to knowledge-based professional organisations in the corporate sector because the underlying assumptions about what motivates people are at odds with what research shows motivates professional "knowledge-workers". This research identifies sources of motivation that resonate with what has underpinned traditional university remuneration, promotion and performance schemes. However this does not mean that there is no need for change to those traditional schemes. As academic work becomes more complex and the academic labour market more differentiated, there is a need to recognise this greater diversity within extended promotional and reward schemes...
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