• Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Advertisement
  • Privacy & Policy
Friday, July 11, 2025
SUBSCRIBE
The Brief | Namibia's Leading Business & Financial News
26 °c
Windhoek
22 ° Wed
25 ° Thu
  • Home
  • Companies
    • Finance
    • Agriculture
    • Technology
    • Property
    • Trade
    • Tourism
  • Business & Economy
  • Mining & Energy
  • Opinions
    • Analysis
    • Columnists
  • Africa
  • e-edition
No Result
View All Result
The Brief | Namibia's Leading Business & Financial News
  • Home
  • Companies
    • Finance
    • Agriculture
    • Technology
    • Property
    • Trade
    • Tourism
  • Business & Economy
  • Mining & Energy
  • Opinions
    • Analysis
    • Columnists
  • Africa
  • e-edition
No Result
View All Result
The Brief | Namibia's Leading Business & Financial News
Subscribe
No Result
View All Result
TB image banner 750x140
Home Opinions Columnists

How intrinsic and extrinsic motivation shape high-performance organisational cultures

by reporter
June 27, 2025
in Columnists
49
A A
59
SHARES
982
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on TwitterShare on LinkedIn

By Junias Erasmus

You might also like

How AI can reduce waiting times and improve service delivery in Namibian hospitals

Namibia’s downgrade: A harsh reflection, not a glitch

Be a mentor, not a tormentor

In today’s rapidly evolving workplace environment, the quest for higher productivity, innovation, and employee engagement has led organisations to place increasing emphasis on workplace culture.

At the heart of a high-performance culture lies one of the most fundamental yet complex human elements: motivation. Understanding how motivation works and how it can be cultivated through both intrinsic and extrinsic strategies is vital for leaders who wish to unlock the full potential of their teams.

While external rewards such as salary, bonuses, and recognition continue to play a critical role in driving employee behaviour, the long-term success and sustainability of organisational performance rest heavily on the power of intrinsic motivation.

Motivation in the workplace can be traced back to two main sources. Extrinsic motivation refers to the desire to perform tasks in exchange for external rewards or to avoid punishment. This includes financial incentives, promotions, praise, or job security. Intrinsic motivation, in contrast, comes from within.

It is driven by internal satisfaction, a sense of purpose, enjoyment, curiosity, or a commitment to personal growth. While both forms of motivation can coexist and complement each other, understanding their timing, context, and application is what separates ordinary organisations from those that consistently outperform.

Organisations often begin their motivational efforts with extrinsic rewards. These are easier to implement, measure, and link to short-term performance outcomes. In many cases, they are highly effective.

For example, a bonus for exceeding sales targets can spur productivity, just as public recognition can encourage a culture of excellence. In the early stages of a project, when energy and enthusiasm may be low, such rewards can provide the momentum needed to get things moving. In environments where work is routine or high-pressure, extrinsic motivators help maintain discipline, drive, and consistency.

 However, over time, the over-reliance on external rewards can diminish their impact.

When employees begin to associate their value solely with financial compensation or public praise, motivation can wane in the absence of those rewards. Worse still, it can breed unhealthy competition, entitlement, and a transactional mindset that erodes collaboration and trust.

This is where intrinsic motivation becomes vital. It is what sustains performance after the applause fades. It is what keeps employees engaged during quiet seasons, what drives innovation during uncertainty, and what fuels perseverance when setbacks arise.

Creating a culture that nurtures intrinsic motivation requires intentional leadership. It means designing roles and work environments where employees feel a sense of purpose and autonomy. It involves creating opportunities for mastery, learning, and meaningful contribution.

When employees understand how their work connects to the organisation’s broader mission or to societal impact, they begin to feel that their work matters. This sense of purpose can be more powerful than any monetary reward. It also means recognising and respecting employees as whole individuals with aspirations, values, and passions beyond their job descriptions.

In Namibia and across the African continent, where cultural identity, communal values, and personal dignity play a central role in everyday life, intrinsic motivation takes on an even deeper significance.

Leaders who take time to know their people, involve them in decision-making, and affirm their contributions in culturally respectful ways foster deeper loyalty, resilience, and accountability. When people feel seen, trusted, and valued beyond their outputs, they are more likely to go above and beyond what is required.

Intrinsic and extrinsic motivation are not mutually exclusive. The best organizational cultures blend both in a balanced and context-sensitive manner. They offer fair and competitive rewards to honour achievement, while at the same time investing in emotional intelligence, mentoring, purpose-driven leadership, and a values-based environment.

They ensure that motivation is not simply something leaders impose, but something that grows organically from the inside out.

Intrinsic and extrinsic motivation are not merely tools for boosting performance; they are the twin pillars of a vibrant, high-performance organisational culture. Where one offers structure and reward, the other brings depth and meaning.

In a world that is increasingly volatile, uncertain, and demanding, Namibian organisations must move beyond reward-only strategies and begin cultivating the inner fire that drives people to do meaningful work, serve others, and strive for excellence. This inner fire, when sparked and sustained, has the power to transform not only performance but people.

*Junias Erasmus works in the Financial Sector. He is a Management Scientist and Operational Researcher, a Strategic Scholar & a Motivational Speaker. This article is written in his personal capacity. For inquiries, contact him at Junias99@gmail.com

author avatar
reporter
See Full Bio
Tags: companieseconomynamibiaorganisational culturesperformance
Share24Tweet15Share4
Previous Post

SanlamAllianz pays out N$2.5 billion in premiums for 2024

Next Post

How newsrooms work and what journalists want

Recommended For You

How AI can reduce waiting times and improve service delivery in Namibian hospitals

by reporter
July 9, 2025
0
How AI can reduce waiting times and improve service delivery in Namibian hospitals

By Junias Erasmus and Ester Shangandi Namibia’s health sector, like many others across the developing world, continues to face persistent challenges in delivering timely, efficient, and quality healthcare...

Read moreDetails

Namibia’s downgrade: A harsh reflection, not a glitch

by reporter
July 6, 2025
0
Namibia’s e-visa millions: Where’s the pay-off?

For years, Namibia’s leadership criticised the World Bank for overstating the country’s prosperity. The upper-middle-income label, they claimed, was a distortion. It ignored inequality, dismissed history and robbed...

Read moreDetails

Be a mentor, not a tormentor

by reporter
July 4, 2025
0
Why Humility Is the New Competitive Advantage in Leadership

By Junias Erasmus In every workplace, school, or community, there exists an opportunity to shape the growth, development, and potential of others. That opportunity comes in the form...

Read moreDetails

Asset stripping a crisis: Windhoek’s cynical housing pitch

by reporter
June 29, 2025
0
Namibia’s e-visa millions: Where’s the pay-off?

Windhoek is not building homes. It is building illusions.In a recent address to investors, the City of Windhoek, through its CEO Moses Matyayi, presented what it described as...

Read moreDetails

BoN throws its own sector under the bus

by reporter
June 22, 2025
0
Namibia’s e-visa millions: Where’s the pay-off?

There is a line regulators should not cross. When trust in an institution depends on independence and consistency, turning on the entities one oversees is more than poor...

Read moreDetails
Next Post
Why companies must shift from CSR talk to CSI action

How newsrooms work and what journalists want

Related News

O&L Group CEO and Chief Culture Officer to step down

O&L Group CEO and Chief Culture Officer to step down

April 2, 2024
NamPower to sign 50MW wind power agreement

NamPower to sign 50MW wind power agreement

March 24, 2023
Telecoms companies a growing challenger to African banks – report

Telecoms companies a growing challenger to African banks – report

May 6, 2022

Browse by Category

  • Africa
  • Agriculture
  • Analysis
  • Business & Economy
  • Columnists
  • Companies
  • Finance
  • Finance
  • Fisheries
  • Green Hydrogen
  • Health
  • Investing
  • Latest
  • Market
  • Mining & Energy
  • Namibia
  • namibia
  • News
  • Opinions
  • Property
  • Retail
  • Technology
  • Tourism
  • Trade
The Brief | Namibia's Leading Business & Financial News

The Brief is Namibia's leading daily business, finance and economic news publication.

CATEGORIES

  • Business & Economy
  • Companies
    • Agriculture
    • Finance
    • Fisheries
    • Health
    • Property
    • Retail
    • Technology
    • Tourism
    • Trade
  • Finance
  • Green Hydrogen
  • Investing
  • Latest
  • Market
  • Mining & Energy
  • namibia
  • News
    • Africa
    • Namibia
  • Opinions
    • Analysis
    • Columnists

CONTACT US

Cell: +264814612969

Email: newsdesk@thebrief.com.na

© 2025 The Brief | All Rights Reserved. Namibian Business News, Current Affairs, Analysis and Commentary

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In

Add New Playlist

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Companies
  • Mining & Energy
  • Business & Economy
  • Opinions
    • Analysis
    • Columnists
  • Africa

© 2025 The Brief | All Rights Reserved. Namibian Business News, Current Affairs, Analysis and Commentary

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.