Page 14 - Navy Journal E-Book 7-6-20
P. 14

Navy Journal 2019


                       (3) Listening to own feelings in evaluating experiences instead of
                       the voice of tradition, authority, or the majority;
                       (4) Avoiding pretence (ie, 'game playing') and being honest;
                       (5) Being prepared to be unpopular if own view contradicts with
                       those of the majority;
                       (6) Taking responsibility and working hard; and
                       (7) Trying to identify own defences and having the courage to give them up.

                  According to Maslow, people with difficulty in achieving lower level needs
            (ie, Deficiency Needs) are not expected to be motivated towards higher Growth
            Needs. Practical research however showed that not all people are motivated in
            fulfilling their needs in that order, and not all individuals respond to the same
            motivations. In addition, some outstandingly creative individuals prospered or
            excelled in life (ie, self-actualised) with little or nothing achieved at lower levels.
            For example, exceptionally creative painters Van Gogh and Rembrandt lived
            throughout in abject poverty. The opposite, where extremely rich people are found
            capable of little or no creativity, is also true by a far wider margin.
                  However, generally  if  our needs  are  not  fulfilled,  we are  unlikely  to
            function at the best of our ability. Practical implementation of this idea in an
            organisation can provide top managers an insight on how to encourage their
            subordinates towards more productivity by keeping them constantly motivated.
            Proper understanding  of these can  enable  top managers  to devise  ways and
            means to encourage employees to self-actualise, as self-actualised employees are
            likely to work  at their maximum creative  potentials.  The Navy being an
            organisation of twenty thousand plus personnel can be no exception.

                  These discussions bring out following relevant questions:
                  a. Why or how can a naval officer’s career development be modelled after
                  Maslow’s theory, especially when that is not above criticism?
                  b. How an officer might fulfil or pursue those needs?
                  c. What is the Navy’s responsibility to assist its officers to fulfil their
                  needs and, if so, how?
                  d. Can a model for officers’ career development be suggested from such
                  an idea?

            The ensuing discussions will attempt to answer these questions.



                                               6
   9   10   11   12   13   14   15   16   17   18