American David Clarence
McClelland (1917-98) achieved his doctorate in psychology at Yale in
1941 and became professor at Wesleyan University. He then taught and
lectured, including a spell at Harvard from 1956, where with
colleagues for twenty years he studied particularly motivation and
the achievement need. He began his McBer consultancy in 1963, helping
industry assess and train staff, and later taught at Boston
University, from 1987 until his death. McClelland is chiefly known
for his work on achievement motivation, but his research interests
extended to personality and consciousness. David McClelland pioneered
workplace motivational thinking, developing achievement-based
motivational theory and models, and promoted improvements in employee
assessment methods, advocating competency-based assessments and
tests, arguing them to be better than traditional IQ and
personality-based tests. His ideas have since been widely adopted in
many organisations, and relate closely to the theory of Frederick
Herzberg.
David McClelland is most
noted for describing three types of motivational need, which he
identified in his 1961 book, The Achieving Society:
- achievement motivation (n-ach)
- authority/power motivation (n-pow)
- affiliation
motivation (n-affil)
These needs are found to varying degrees in all workers and managers, and this mix of motivational needs characterises a person's or manager's style and behaviour, both in terms of being motivated, and in the management and motivation others.