Behind what any member says, behind what he considers important, is his system of values and attitudes.
These values and motivations vary from person to person. If people are to work together as a group, there must be a certain unity in interests, objectives, and purposes. When people meet and effectively explore their individual interests and problems, they soon find it necessary to define their goals and objectives. These will give them a common basis upon which they can work as a group.
Individuals with different expectations, abilities, and backgrounds often have difficulty in becoming a smoothly functioning group. People after: join groups with different kinds of expectations as to what the group will do for them. If group members are to enjoy their organization and its functions and gain satisfactions from group participation and accomplishments, they must each feel they have a part in forming its purposes and goals. Each person must feel that the group’s goals are consistent with his own, that the group is his group, and that the important decisions of the group are at least partially his decisions.
The basic properties of group goals and individual goals are not fundamentally different. Group activities, like individual activities, are motivated by needs and directed toward goals. Group goals can guide the behavior of group members and motivate them to perform certain activities rather than others. Thus it is important to recognize that group goals can be a source of real influence upon group members.
When a particular group goal has been established, it is expected that “good” group members will work toward its attainment, even when the goal they preferred was not accepted. Individual group members are influenced in varying degrees and in different ways by the various goals of a group. The magnitude of this influence can vary quantitatively among members and from goal to goal for any particular member.
Research tells us that compatibility of individual goals influences the degree to which group goals become established and the amount of influence they will have over members. When all or most of the members of a group have the same goal in mind, it is almost certain that this goal will become a group goal and the group will make a concerted effort to achieve it.
It is evident that group goals must be closely related to the interests and needs of the individual members. The expression of interests and needs by anyone member is influenced to a considerable degree by the manifestation of interests and needs by fellow members. This mutual expression and identification of interests and needs is the real basis for the formation of a group and for the formulation of its goals and objectives.
Members who most fully accept group goals display most strongly the drives and motivations which help a group achieve its goals. Those who merely acquiesce are less motivated toward group achievement. Those who reject the group goals tend to pursue individual interests and private goals.
In some groups, members have little knowledge or understanding of group goals. Again, if a group goal is not fully accepted by the members it has little power to motivate the individual toward activities which might lead to its fulfillment. Such a situation is inclined to develop a low level of motivation, rather poor coordination of efforts, and a relatively high incidence of self-oriented rather than grcuptask oriented behavior on the part of individual members. Member involvement in the process of goal definition enhances the probability that group goals will be understood, accepted, and internalized by group members.
Regular group members influence new members to accept group goals and perform group functions. How effectively this is done depends largely upon the degree to which they satisfy their own interests and needs by participation in the group’s activities.
Remember, however, that prospective and new members must have the opportunity to learn about and understand the group’s goals. Groups whose members like one another as people, groups that supply personal need satisfactions, and groups with high prestige all exert strong influences upon members to accept their goals.
Many groups have well-defined objectives which give them direction. They have been found to be most productive. Other groups with vague concepts as to why they are organized, what they are attempting to accomplish, or why they are engaged in their activities are less productive. Time spent by group members in effectively defining group goals and objectives can do much to give a group direction and purpose and to increase the quality and efficiency of its achievements.
“Everyone knows why we’re here. Let’s get on with the job.” This is a common enough opening for a meeting. But is it true? Do we really know and agree on what the job is? How will we know we are accomplishing the job? A group unaware of its purposes is a rudderless ship. Cooperatively determined and well-stated goals based on the definite interests and needs of group members will help provide answers to these and many other questions.
Group formation and participation, including individual motivations, blocks, and adjustments, is a complex process by which an aggregate of people with a wide variety of individual goals, values, skills, and blocks to group participation mold themselves into a productive group. Because each aggregate is unique it is nearly impossible to describe the total social process of group formation. But there are certain basic necessities common to all group development and certain essentials which must exist before a group will be formed.
There are many blocks to full participation in groups.
In his quest to satisfy his needs and wants, man has found that many of them are best satisfied through group affiliation and action. If the members of various groups are asked why they joined, they will give many different answers. Some might have joined because membership in the group will enhance their status. Others joined because of a value placed on service – they wanted to help other people and feel this group gives them this opportunity. Another person may have joined a group because he feels he may make some business contacts that he feels in the end may make him some money. There are other kinds of personal gain motivations.
There are many theories extant as to the motivations of men, and the authors are aware that these many explanations exist. They are acquainted with much more sophisticated explanations of human wants than the “four wishes” of W. I. Thomas, but for the purposes of this post they find the classification a useful one in pointing out the general lines along which motivations flow. It will be accepted that man, wherever he is found – in the jungles of Africa, in the Arctic or on Main Street, U.S.A. – has four basic desires which Thomas has pointed out. The four “wishes” are security, new experience, recognition, and response.
The ends or goals of any man’s actions and the actions themselves are not randomly determined. There is a consistency in them. The framework which provides this consistency is what is known as his value orientation or, very loosely, his philosophy of life.
The frame of reference for a given type of stimulus will vary among individuals. It is in essence the conceptual boundaries within which a given stimulus falls. A diamond which weighs an ounce is considered huge, because the accumulated experience regarding existing diamonds warrants the deduction that few are larger. On the other hand, one would conclude that a piece of limestone weighing one ounce is relatively small. Considering diamonds and limestone, there is a high degree of agreement of frames of reference among individuals.
Why are we here at all? Why do people join groups and participate in their activities? Probably nearly everyone has asked himself these questions as he has looked about a meeting room. Again, why do people react so differently to the various ideas and situations which confront the group? These questions are basic, and might be summed up as:
Why does a group exist? It must have objectives – ends which it seeks – whether these are explicitly stated or only implied. Sometimes groups seem to have little conception of the reasons for their existence, what they are trying to accomplish, or why they take part in the activities in which they do. They exist largely because “they always have” and people continue to hold meetings. But many groups have, on the contrary, more specific purposes. Often they are well defined and integrated. Such objectives may be long range as well as shore range – they may be single- or multiple purpose objectives, and they may be specific or general.