NWU Institutional Repository

Organisational and individual strengths use as predictors of engagement and productivity

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Authors

Stander, Frederick W.
Mostert, Karina
De Beer, Leon T.

Supervisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Record Identifier

Abstract

This study sought to determine whether Perceived Organisational Support for Strengths Use (POSSU) and Proactive Behaviour towards Strengths Use (PBSU) predict engagement and productivity in a sample of South African call centre operators. Participants were 218 call centre operators within the financial services sector (females=51%, males = 49%), representative of the South African population, and predominantly holding secondary educational qualifications. Information was gathered through a cross-sectional quantitative research design comprising self-report measures. The measures were administered on site within a call centre of one of the country's largest financial service providers. Structural equation modelling methods were implemented to establish the model fit of the constructs in the study and to explain structural paths between the variables. Findings showed that POSSU and PBSU are significant predictors of work engagement. PBSU predicted productivity. In addition, engagement mediated the relationship between POSSU/PBSU and productivity. This supports the theoretical context of the job demands-resources (JD-R) model and provides grounds for further exploration of the strengths-based approach (on both organisational and individual levels) as a developmental approach to utilise within organisations to enhance engagement and productivity.

Sustainable Development Goals

Description

Citation

Stander, F.W. et al. 2014. Organisational and individual strengths use as predictors of engagement and productivity. Journal of Psychology in Africa, 24(5):403-409. [http://www.tandfonline.com/toc/rpia20/current#.VD55Uxaq06A]

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By