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High expectations from employers may lower worker job satisfaction

Washington, Fri, 27 Jan 2012 ANI

Washington, Jan 27 (ANI): Increased expectations from employers may have a negative impact on employees' job satisfaction and well being, a new study has revealed.

 

Researchers led by Stephen Wood, from the University of Leicester, set out to test a widely held assumption - that direct employee involvement methods can lead to high levels of worker job satisfaction, which in turn lead to a better performing organization.

 

Armed with data from the UK's Workplace Employment Relations Survey 2004 survey, the researchers used statistical methods to look at in the effects of two distinct management models: enriched job design and high involvement management (HIM).

 

Statistical analysis of data from 14,127 employees and 1,177 workplaces shows that HIM is directly and positively related to labour productivity, financial performance, and quality, but not to absenteeism.

 

The researchers also found a direct relationship between HIM and job satisfaction and anxiety - but surprisingly, it was a negative: HIM may be a source of dissatisfaction with the job and of anxiety. In fact, the negative effect of HIM on job satisfaction depresses its overall positive effects on organizational performance.

 

The enriched job design approach to management also had a positive relationship with labour productivity, financial performance and quality but this was positively related to job satisfaction, though not workplace anxiety.

 

Moreover, the job satisfaction explains how the enriched job design affects performance.

 

The enriched job design approach offers employees discretion, variety and high levels of responsibility; while the HIM model encourages wider organizational involvement such as team working, idea-capturing schemes or functional flexibility (the ability to take on aspects of others' roles).

 

Enriched job design concentrates on the employee's core job, while HIM is about organizational involvement, which entails workers participating in decision-making beyond the narrow confines of the job.

 

HIM originated in the 1990s, and a lot of research has followed on how this approach improves performance.

 

According to the authors, HIM entails a qualitative change in demands, not a simple quantitative change in effort levels. It may be that management's approach toward encouraging employees to be proactive and flexible creates anxieties and dissatisfaction.

 

Increased expectations associated with involvement may actually make employees more stressed. In enriched job design, individuals have greater responsibility and autonomy, possibly offering more choices and pleasurable experiences that contrast with feelings evoked by a pressured environment.

 

"Treating enriched job design and HIM as discrete has certainly been vindicated by our findings, as has taking a multi-dimensional approach to well-being," Wood said.

 

"The study offers further grounds for encouraging policy makers and managers to put job quality high on their agendas," Wood added.

 

Workplace data were collected by face-to-face interview with a manager in each workplace, and through a survey of employees.

 

The study has been published in the journal Human Relations. (ANI)

 


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