Are happy managers more productive?

Decades of research have failed to establish a strong link between managers' job satisfaction and performance. Despite support in the literature to suggest that a relationship exists between job satisfaction and managers' performance the empirical evidence to support this proposition is mi...

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Main Authors: Hosie, Peter, Sevastos, Peter
Format: Working Paper
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/36642
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author Hosie, Peter
Sevastos, Peter
author_facet Hosie, Peter
Sevastos, Peter
author_sort Hosie, Peter
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Decades of research have failed to establish a strong link between managers' job satisfaction and performance. Despite support in the literature to suggest that a relationship exists between job satisfaction and managers' performance the empirical evidence to support this proposition is mixed. A seminal question in psychology and management is revisited the 'happy managers productive worker' thesis, by investigating the impact of job-related affective well-being and intrinsic job satisfaction on Australian managers performance. Survey items were derived from the literature and administered to managers from Western Australian organizations using self report on established affective well-being and intrinsic job satisfaction scales. An empirical methodology was used to test the hypotheses. Managers' contextual and task performance scales were developed through from the literature and confirmatory factor analysis. A measurement model of managers' performance using supervisory ratings was tested and confirmed to be multivariate and consist of eight-dimensional construct of performance. Canonical correlation and hierarchical multiple regression were used to analyze the linear combination of managers' affective well-being and job satisfaction with their performance. Indicators of affective well-being and intrinsic job satisfaction were found to predict dimensions of managers contextual and task performance.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-366422017-01-30T13:56:56Z Are happy managers more productive? Hosie, Peter Sevastos, Peter Intrinsic Job Satisfaction Managers Happy-Productive Worker Job Performance Job-Related Effective Well-Being Decades of research have failed to establish a strong link between managers' job satisfaction and performance. Despite support in the literature to suggest that a relationship exists between job satisfaction and managers' performance the empirical evidence to support this proposition is mixed. A seminal question in psychology and management is revisited the 'happy managers productive worker' thesis, by investigating the impact of job-related affective well-being and intrinsic job satisfaction on Australian managers performance. Survey items were derived from the literature and administered to managers from Western Australian organizations using self report on established affective well-being and intrinsic job satisfaction scales. An empirical methodology was used to test the hypotheses. Managers' contextual and task performance scales were developed through from the literature and confirmatory factor analysis. A measurement model of managers' performance using supervisory ratings was tested and confirmed to be multivariate and consist of eight-dimensional construct of performance. Canonical correlation and hierarchical multiple regression were used to analyze the linear combination of managers' affective well-being and job satisfaction with their performance. Indicators of affective well-being and intrinsic job satisfaction were found to predict dimensions of managers contextual and task performance. 2005 Working Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/36642 fulltext
spellingShingle Intrinsic Job Satisfaction
Managers
Happy-Productive Worker
Job Performance
Job-Related Effective Well-Being
Hosie, Peter
Sevastos, Peter
Are happy managers more productive?
title Are happy managers more productive?
title_full Are happy managers more productive?
title_fullStr Are happy managers more productive?
title_full_unstemmed Are happy managers more productive?
title_short Are happy managers more productive?
title_sort are happy managers more productive?
topic Intrinsic Job Satisfaction
Managers
Happy-Productive Worker
Job Performance
Job-Related Effective Well-Being
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/36642