Publication | Closed Access
Antecedents and Consequences of Salesperson Job Satisfaction: Meta-Analysis and Assessment of Causal Effects
480
Citations
54
References
1993
Year
Job SatisfactionCustomer SatisfactionEmployee AttitudeManagementConsumer ResearchCausal EffectsBusinessSale ResearchJob PerformanceHuman Resource ManagementMarketingWork AttitudeOrganizational BehaviorThree-phase Quantitative InvestigationSalesperson Job Satisfaction
A three-phase quantitative investigation of relationships involving salesperson job satisfaction was undertaken. First, the strength, valence, and consistency of pairwise relationships were assessed by means of a meta-analysis. Second, methodological characteristics coded as moderator variables were used to account for variability in study effects. Finally, weighted mean correlations resulting from the analysis of pairwise relationships were used to evaluate a causal model of antecedents and consequences of job satisfaction. In general, relationships involving job satisfaction were robust across study contexts. Systematic moderating effects of type of sales-force and operationalization of job satisfaction were found. Several summary conclusions about antecedents and consequences of salesperson job satisfaction are drawn from the analyses.
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