Table of Contents
Abstract
The Management Need Satisfaction Questionnaire (MNSQ), developed by Lyman W. Porter in 1961, is a psychometric instrument designed to evaluate how managers perceive the fulfillment of various professional needs within their specific job roles. This instrument is particularly relevant in the field of Organizational Psychology, aiming to quantify the gap between actual and desired need satisfaction.
The MNSQ structure is built around five core need categories, which generally align with Maslow’s hierarchy of needs: Security, Social needs, Esteem, Autonomy, and Self-Actualization. Respondents utilize a 7-point Likert-type scale to rate 18 management position characteristics. For each characteristic, they must address three critical dimensions: the current level of the characteristic, the ideal or desired level, and the perceived importance of the characteristic.
Keywords
Autonomy, Business Management, Esteem, Job Security, Management Personnel, Management Need Satisfaction Questionnaire, Need Satisfaction, Organizational Psychology, Questionnaires, Rating Scales, Security, Self-Actualization, Social Needs, Test Development
Authors
Porter, Lyman W.
Purpose
The primary purpose of the Management Need Satisfaction Questionnaire (MNSQ) is to systematically assess the degree to which managers experience satisfaction across key psychological needs directly related to their employment positions. By measuring both the perceived ‘is’ (current satisfaction) and the ‘should be’ (desired satisfaction), the instrument allows researchers and organizations to identify specific areas of deficiency or fulfillment.
The scale focuses specifically on five hierarchically structured needs: Security, Social needs, Esteem, Autonomy, and Self-Actualization. This assessment provides critical insights into job design, motivational factors, and overall job quality for management personnel.
Construct
The MNSQ measures the psychological construct of Management Need Satisfaction. This construct is defined as the subjective perception of the fulfillment of inherent psychological needs derived from the characteristics and conditions of one’s managerial role. It operates on the premise that job satisfaction is intrinsically linked to the extent to which the job environment provides opportunities to meet needs categorized similarly to those outlined by Maslow’s hierarchy of needs.
The assessment is differential, meaning it does not just measure overall satisfaction but breaks it down into distinct components (e.g., satisfaction of security needs versus satisfaction of autonomy needs), offering a nuanced understanding of motivational drivers among managers.
Validity
Specific details concerning the psychometric validation (e.g., criterion validity, construct validity) of the original 1961 instrument by Porter were not explicitly indicated in the foundational source material. Subsequent research utilizing the MNSQ often discusses its face validity given its direct alignment with established motivational theory, but empirical validity data is not supplied in the core documentation.
Reliability
Formal measures of internal consistency (e.g., Cronbach’s alpha) or test-retest reliability for the original Management Need Satisfaction Questionnaire were not reported in the initial documentation provided. Researchers utilizing the scale in subsequent decades would typically report the reliability statistics relevant to their specific sampled population.
Factor Analysis
No formal factor analysis results, such as exploratory or confirmatory factor analysis, were explicitly indicated in the primary reference for the 1961 scale development. The five-factor structure (Security, Social, Esteem, Autonomy, Self-Actualization) is theoretically derived from Maslow’s model of human motivation.
Instrument
Test Type: Inventory/Questionnaire
Format: The questionnaire utilizes a 7-point rating scale applied across 18 management position characteristics.
Language Available: English (Original)
Population Group: Human
Age Group: Adult (Implied by Management Personnel)
Population Details: The initial sample population consisted of Bottom- and Middle-Level Management Personnel.
Test Methodology: Respondents rate 18 items using a 7-point scale (where 1 represents low amounts and 7 represents high amounts). For each characteristic, three distinct ratings are required: 1) How much is currently connected to the position; 2) How much should be connected (desired); and 3) How important the characteristic is.
Keywords
Organizational, Occupational, Career Development, Independence (Personality), Job Security, Need Satisfaction, Self-Esteem, Social Behavior, Test Construction, Self-Actualization
Authors
Author ORCID Identifier: Not Indicated
Affiliation Email addresses: Not Indicated
Correspondence Address: Not Indicated
Permissions & Fee and Test Year
Test Year: 1961
Permissions: The instrument may be used for Research/Teaching purposes, subject to standard academic citation practices.
Fee Information: Not Indicated
Reference’s
Porter, L. W. (1961). A study of perceived need satisfactions in bottom and middle management jobs. Journal of Applied Psychology, 45(1), 1–10. https://doi.org/10.1037/h0043121
Items of the Management Need Satisfaction Questionnaire
IMPORTANT: The following scale items must be preserved in their original language and must not be changed in any way.
The measure includes 18 items, with 15 focused on need satisfaction. The five primary categories assessed are Security, Social, Esteem, Autonomy, and Self-Actualization.
Cite this article
Mohammed looti (2025). Management Need Satisfaction Questionnaire. Psychological Scales & Instruments Database. Retrieved from https://db.arabpsychology.com/scales/management-need-satisfaction-questionnaire/
Mohammed looti. "Management Need Satisfaction Questionnaire." Psychological Scales & Instruments Database, 28 Oct. 2025, https://db.arabpsychology.com/scales/management-need-satisfaction-questionnaire/.
Mohammed looti. "Management Need Satisfaction Questionnaire." Psychological Scales & Instruments Database, 2025. https://db.arabpsychology.com/scales/management-need-satisfaction-questionnaire/.
Mohammed looti (2025) 'Management Need Satisfaction Questionnaire', Psychological Scales & Instruments Database. Available at: https://db.arabpsychology.com/scales/management-need-satisfaction-questionnaire/.
[1] Mohammed looti, "Management Need Satisfaction Questionnaire," Psychological Scales & Instruments Database, vol. X, no. Y, ص Z-Z, October, 2025.
Mohammed looti. Management Need Satisfaction Questionnaire. Psychological Scales & Instruments Database. 2025;vol(issue):pages.