¶ … Locke's Goal-Setting Theory
Most people want and need to know what is expected of them in the workplace, and Locke (1964) proposed that goal-setting theory can help explain why. Subsequently, Locke (1996) conceptualized goals as being the objective or purpose that serves to guide individual actions at work (Perrone & Smith, 2003). The main points of Locke's goal-setting theory are as follows:
Specific high goals lead to higher performance than setting no goals or setting an abstract goal such as "do your best";
There is a linear relationship between goal difficulty and performance and the higher the goal the higher the performance; and,
Factors such as feedback, participation in decision making, and competition only affect performance to the extent that they lead to the setting of and commitment to specific high goals (Latham, 2001, p. 1).
According to Latham, "Three of the four mediators of the goal setting performance relationship are motivational, namely direction, effort, and persistence; the fourth is cognitive, namely, task strategies" (2001, p. 2). The...
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