The 'happy-productive worker thesis' has long intrigued organisational researchers and practitioners. Despite mixed empirical evidence from decades of research, there is support in the literature for this thesis. An account is provided on a variation on the enduring debate of the happiness-productivity theme, to support an emerging 'happy-performing managers proposition'. An empirical study is presented to establish the dimensions of managers' job happiness (operationalised as affective wellbeing and intrinsic job satisfaction) associated with contextual and task performance. The emphasis was on investigating an aspect of human behaviour with the potential to enhance managerial performance. These findings inform the broader debate on what d...
Organizational and behavioural scholars have a long fascination with the ‘happy–productive worker th...
Organizational and behavioural scholars have a long fascination with the ‘happy–productive worker th...
Hosie, PJ ORCiD: 0000-0003-2585-024XThis research investigated the impact of role stressors and job ...
Hosie, PJ ORCiD: 0000-0003-2585-024XThe 'happy-productive worker thesis' has long intrigued organisa...
The ‘happy–productive worker thesis’ has long intrigued organisational researchers and practitioners...
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to emanate from an enduring stream of research into individua...
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to emanate from an enduring stream of research into individua...
There has long been an adherence to the intuitively appealing notion that happy employees perform be...
Decades of research have failed to establish a strong link between managers' job satisfaction and pe...
A seminal question in human resource management is revisited by this investigation: ‘Do happy manage...
Hosie, PJ ORCiD: 0000-0003-2585-024XPurpose - The purpose of this paper is to emanate from an enduri...
A seminal question in industrial/organisational psychology and management is revisited in this paper...
There has long been an adherence to the intuitively appealing notion that happy employees perform be...
Hosie, PJ ORCiD: 0000-0003-2585-024XThere has long been an adherence to the intuitively appealing no...
Implicit in the drive for international competitiveness is the recognition that high erforming mana...
Organizational and behavioural scholars have a long fascination with the ‘happy–productive worker th...
Organizational and behavioural scholars have a long fascination with the ‘happy–productive worker th...
Hosie, PJ ORCiD: 0000-0003-2585-024XThis research investigated the impact of role stressors and job ...
Hosie, PJ ORCiD: 0000-0003-2585-024XThe 'happy-productive worker thesis' has long intrigued organisa...
The ‘happy–productive worker thesis’ has long intrigued organisational researchers and practitioners...
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to emanate from an enduring stream of research into individua...
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to emanate from an enduring stream of research into individua...
There has long been an adherence to the intuitively appealing notion that happy employees perform be...
Decades of research have failed to establish a strong link between managers' job satisfaction and pe...
A seminal question in human resource management is revisited by this investigation: ‘Do happy manage...
Hosie, PJ ORCiD: 0000-0003-2585-024XPurpose - The purpose of this paper is to emanate from an enduri...
A seminal question in industrial/organisational psychology and management is revisited in this paper...
There has long been an adherence to the intuitively appealing notion that happy employees perform be...
Hosie, PJ ORCiD: 0000-0003-2585-024XThere has long been an adherence to the intuitively appealing no...
Implicit in the drive for international competitiveness is the recognition that high erforming mana...
Organizational and behavioural scholars have a long fascination with the ‘happy–productive worker th...
Organizational and behavioural scholars have a long fascination with the ‘happy–productive worker th...
Hosie, PJ ORCiD: 0000-0003-2585-024XThis research investigated the impact of role stressors and job ...