Publication | Closed Access
Reexamining the Job Satisfaction-Performance Relationship: The Complexity of Attitudes.
318
Citations
65
References
2004
Year
Job SatisfactionEmployee AttitudePerformance StudiesJob DesignManagementBusinessJob PerformanceJob Satisfaction-performance RelationshipOverly Simplistic ConceptualizationHuman Resource ManagementWork AttitudeOrganizational BehaviorPsychologyJob Attitudes
The present article argues that organizational researchers tend to adopt an overly simplistic conceptualization and operationalization of job satisfaction (and job attitudes in general). Specifically, past research has failed to examine the affective-cognitive consistency (ACC) of job attitudes and the implications this has for the strength of the attitude and its relationship with behavior (e.g., job performance). Results from Study 1 suggest ACC is a significant moderator of the job satisfaction-job performance relationship, with those employees higher in ACC showing a significantly larger correlation between job satisfaction and performance than those lower in ACC. Study 2 replicated these findings. Implications for the study of job attitudes, limitations of the current studies, and multiple avenues for future research are discussed.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1