Assessing Motivation During Interviews

by | Jun 6, 2024

In a podcast from the archive, Dave Mashburn explains the difference between extrinsic and intrinsic motivation.

With extrinsic motivation, an individual’s primary goals are things such as status, wealth, and physical attractiveness.

These are elusive, never-ending goals typically associated with instant gratification, stress-avoidance, pleasure, comfort, and passive entertainment.

Research demonstrates that this motivation leads to depression, narcissism, and anxiety.

With intrinsic motivation, an individual’s primary drive is engaging in an activity for the sake of the activity, for its greater purpose, and how it serves others.

It has a bias for principal-based actions, learning, and contribution.

Intrinsically motivated individuals tend to perform their work with dedication and commitment.

Research demonstrates that this motivation must be constantly cultivated in order to be maintained.

With such a stark difference between the two types of motivation, it’s an important topic to cover during both interviews and follow-up.

Hiring a bunch of extrinsically motivated agents can lead to short-term success, but it comes with a price.

 

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Unlock the secrets of effective real estate recruiting. Revised to include actionable frameworks for sharper execution and to help you turn psychological theory into a repeatable recruiting system.

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The Library Effect

The Library Effect is something you can easily apply to recruiting, and it’s one of the reasons that accountability groups are so effective.

Just getting together with other hiring managers and recruiting for a set period of time each week will short-circuit many of your recruiting excuses.