Difference between revisions of "Social motivation"
From Deliberative Democracy Institiute Wiki
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
Social motivation is the motivation to act as a group. When we design social movements, we should think about what motivates members to contribute. | Social motivation is the motivation to act as a group. When we design social movements, we should think about what motivates members to contribute. | ||
− | + | __TOC__ | |
===Needs=== | ===Needs=== | ||
All movements start with a lack in some common [[need|needs]]. | All movements start with a lack in some common [[need|needs]]. |
Revision as of 02:29, 8 February 2021
Social motivation is the motivation to act as a group. When we design social movements, we should think about what motivates members to contribute.
Needs
All movements start with a lack in some common needs.
FFFF
Motivation can grow to some extent by creating FFFF feelings of goods and bad when we are the good ones. This approach will result in conflicts in the lifespan of the movement. People who think with FFFF cannot go for subtle decision-making.
PFC
A better way is to create a highly moral way of conducting operations. We should conduct our businesses using PFC and add the values of deliberation. The motivation will increase as William will implement these motivational points.
- Alignment of values
- Alignment of thoughts (SON)
- Coordination
- Social adherence
- Successful results to our actions which were decided by our discussions and deliberation.