'Happy-performing managers' proposition

Few conundrums have intrigued organisational researchers and practitioners as has the 'happy-productive worker' thesis. Proponents of this idea are convinced 'a happy worker is a good worker'. Despite mixed empirical evidence from decades of research, there is support in the lite...

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Main Authors: Hosie, Peter, Sevastos, Peter
Format: Conference Paper
Published: 2007
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/7368
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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 Few conundrums have intrigued organisational researchers and practitioners as has the 'happy-productive worker' thesis. Proponents of this idea are convinced 'a happy worker is a good worker'. Despite mixed empirical evidence from decades of research, there is support in the literature for the notion the 'happy-productive worker thesis'. An account is provided of a study on variation on the enduring debate of the happiness-productivity theme, the 'happy-performing managers' proposition. An empirical study is presented to establish which aspects of Australian managers' job happiness predict certain aspects of their performance. The emphasis was on investigating an aspect of human behaviour with the potential to enhance managerial performance. A contribution of this study was to provide qualified support for the 'happy-productive worker thesis' by linking managers' affective wellbeing, intrinsic job satisfaction with there contextual and task performance to propose the 'happy-performing managers' proposition. Managerial implications on these findings are considered.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-73682017-01-30T10:59:26Z 'Happy-performing managers' proposition Hosie, Peter Sevastos, Peter Few conundrums have intrigued organisational researchers and practitioners as has the 'happy-productive worker' thesis. Proponents of this idea are convinced 'a happy worker is a good worker'. Despite mixed empirical evidence from decades of research, there is support in the literature for the notion the 'happy-productive worker thesis'. An account is provided of a study on variation on the enduring debate of the happiness-productivity theme, the 'happy-performing managers' proposition. An empirical study is presented to establish which aspects of Australian managers' job happiness predict certain aspects of their performance. The emphasis was on investigating an aspect of human behaviour with the potential to enhance managerial performance. A contribution of this study was to provide qualified support for the 'happy-productive worker thesis' by linking managers' affective wellbeing, intrinsic job satisfaction with there contextual and task performance to propose the 'happy-performing managers' proposition. Managerial implications on these findings are considered. 2007 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/7368 fulltext
spellingShingle Hosie, Peter
Sevastos, Peter
'Happy-performing managers' proposition
title 'Happy-performing managers' proposition
title_full 'Happy-performing managers' proposition
title_fullStr 'Happy-performing managers' proposition
title_full_unstemmed 'Happy-performing managers' proposition
title_short 'Happy-performing managers' proposition
title_sort 'happy-performing managers' proposition
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/7368