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Patterns of psychological contract and their relationships to employee well-being and in-role performance at work: longitudinal evidence from university employees
40
Citations
45
References
2016
Year
Workplace PsychologyJob PerformanceHuman Resource ManagementWorker Well-beingOrganizational BehaviorSocial SciencesPsychologyEmployee Job SatisfactionLongitudinal EvidenceManagementWork AttitudeJob SatisfactionOrganizational CommitmentPc PatternEmployee InvolvementPc Patterns 1Interpersonal RelationshipsUniversity EmployeesBusinessEmployee EngagementPsychological Contract
This study identified patterns of psychological contract (PC) and examined how these patterns were related to employee well-being and in-role performance over time (T1–T3). PC was measured at T1 based on cross-sectional data and well-being and performance longitudinally in two consecutive years (T1−T3) among university employees. Latent profile analysis revealed six different patterns of PC at T1. These were labelled (1) strong and balanced (n = 131), (2) average and balanced (n = 382), (3) employer-focused (n = 79), (4) employee-focused (n = 59), (5) balanced transactional (n = 224) and (6) employee-focused relational (n = 322). The longitudinal findings showed that the employees in PC patterns 1 and 2 experienced more vigour at T1–T3 than those in pattern 5, while the employees in pattern 2 reported higher proficiency at work at T1–T2 than those in pattern 6. Employee job satisfaction did not vary between patterns. Altogether, the PC pattern that included many different obligations on the part of both employee and employer seemed to result in better employee well-being and in-role performance.
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