Curtin University Homepage
  • Library
  • Help
    • Admin

    espace - Curtin’s institutional repository

    JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.
    View Item 
    • espace Home
    • espace
    • Curtin Research Publications
    • View Item
    • espace Home
    • espace
    • Curtin Research Publications
    • View Item

    Happy High-performing Managers

    Access Status
    Fulltext not available
    Authors
    Hosie, Peter
    Sevastos, Peter
    Travaglione, Tony
    Date
    2007
    Type
    Book Chapter
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Citation
    Hosie, Peter and Sevastos, Peter and Travaglione, Antonio. 2007. Happy High-performing Managers, in Basu, P. and O'Neill, G. and Travaglione, A. (eds), Engagement and Change: exploring management, economic and finance implications of a globalising environment, pp. 117-138. Brisbane: Australian Academic Press.
    Source Title
    Engagement and Change: exploring management, economic and finance implications of a globalising environment
    Faculty
    Curtin Business School
    Division of Health Sciences
    School of Psychology
    School of Management
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/44310
    Collection
    • Curtin Research Publications
    Abstract

    There has long been an adherence to the intuitively appealing notion that happy employees perform better. But decades of research have been unable to establish a strong link between job satisfaction and performance. In large part, this has resulted from researchers erroneously conceiving an operationalising job satisfaction as being identical to affective wellbeing. Belief in the 'happy-productive worker' thesis has its roots in the human behaviour school of the 1950s. Similarly, the 1970s human relations movement had a significant influence on job redesign and quality-of-life initiatives and was credited with specifying the original satisfaction-performance relationship (Strauss, 1968). Despite mixed empirical evidence, there is support in the literature to suggest that a relationship exists between manager's affective wellbeing, intrinsic job satisfaction and their performance.This study investigated the relationship between manager's job-related affective wellbeing ('affective wellbeing'), intrinsic job satisfaction and their contextual and task job performance ('managers' performance'). Specifically, the main goal was to establish which indicators o manager's affective well being and intrinsic job satisfaction might predict dimensions of their' contextual and task performance.

    Related items

    Showing items related by title, author, creator and subject.

    • Are happy managers more productive?
      Hosie, Peter; Sevastos, Peter (2005)
      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' ...
    • Are happy managers more productive?
      Hosie, Peter; Sevastos, Peter; Travaglione, Antonio (2006)
      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' ...
    • Happy High Performing Managers: Self-Sustaining Urban Myth or a Cause for Optimism?
      Hosie, Peter; Willemyns, M.; Lehaney, B. (2011)
      A seminal question in human resource management is revisited by this investigation: ‘Do happy managers perform better than their discontented counterparts?’ This study provides support for the ‘happy-performing managers’ ...
    Advanced search

    Browse

    Communities & CollectionsIssue DateAuthorTitleSubjectDocument TypeThis CollectionIssue DateAuthorTitleSubjectDocument Type

    My Account

    Admin

    Statistics

    Most Popular ItemsStatistics by CountryMost Popular Authors

    Follow Curtin

    • 
    • 
    • 
    • 
    • 

    CRICOS Provider Code: 00301JABN: 99 143 842 569TEQSA: PRV12158

    Copyright | Disclaimer | Privacy statement | Accessibility

    Curtin would like to pay respect to the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander members of our community by acknowledging the traditional owners of the land on which the Perth campus is located, the Whadjuk people of the Nyungar Nation; and on our Kalgoorlie campus, the Wongutha people of the North-Eastern Goldfields.