Posts Tagged ‘life satisfaction’

The Pursuit of Happiness at Work

April 4, 2013

This National Public Health Week, we remind ourselves there is much that management academics and practitioners can do to refocus on the relevance of the field for improving people’s lives. Today we highlight a literature review on life satisfaction from the Journal of Management that aims to understand the relationship between work and happiness. Managers may ask themselves: do employees feel challenged at work? Are they given opportunities to grow? Is their work meaningful to them? On-the-job tension, work-family conflict, and other stressors are also considered:

JOM_v38_72ppiRGB_150pixWA discussion of top-down and bottom-up theories of life satisfaction is included, and the literatures on work-related antecedents of life satisfaction, the proximal mediators (quality of work life, quality of nonwork life, and feelings of self-worth), and consequences of life satisfaction were reviewed. A meta-analysis of life satisfaction with respect to career satisfaction, job performance, turnover intentions, and organizational commitment was performed. Each major section of the article concludes with a future opportunities subsection where gaps in the research are discussed.

Click here to continue reading “Whistle While You Work : A Review of the Life Satisfaction Literature,” published by Berrin Erdogan, Talya N. Bauer, Donald M. Truxillo and Layla R. Mansfield in the Journal of Management (JOM)–and sign up for e-alerts so stay up-to-date on the latest research in your field.

How Travel Increases Life Satisfaction

September 2, 2012

As millions hit the road this holiday weekend, we bring you a Journal of Travel Research study on how leisure travel has a significant impact on overall life satisfaction–including family life, cultural life, love life and more–along with important implications for tourism managers:

The goal of the research reported in this article was to develop a model describing how positive and negative affect associated with specific experiences of a travel trip influence tourists’ overall sense of well-being (life satisfaction). The model is based on the theoretical notion that a travel trip influences life satisfaction through tourists’ experiences of positive and negative affect associated with a recent tourist trip couched within various life domains.

How Does a Travel Trip Affect Tourists’ Life Satisfaction?” was published in the May 2011 issue of the Journal of Travel Research by M. Joseph Sirgy of Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, P. Stephanes Kruger of North-West University, and Dong-Jin Lee and Grace B. Yu, both of Yonsei University.

Click here to stay abreast of the latest travel research and receive e-alerts about new articles before they are in print.

Are You Happy At Work?

May 31, 2012

The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development’s Better Life Index revealed last week that while the U.S. ranks No. 1 in terms of income compared to other OECD countries, it lags far behind in terms of work-life balance.

A new study in the Journal of Management (JOM) examines this all-important relationship, asking how our work lives contribute to our overall level of life happiness. Berrin Erdogan, Talya N. Bauer, Donald M. Truxillo, and Layla R. Mansfield, all of Portland State University, published “Whistle While You Work: A Review of the Life Satisfaction Literature” in the July 2012 issue of JOM. To see other articles in this issue, click here.

The abstract:

Life satisfaction is a key indicator of subjective well-being. This article is a review of the multidisciplinary literature on the relationship between life satisfaction and the work domain. A discussion of top-down and bottom-up theories of life satisfaction is included, and the literatures on work-related antecedents of life satisfaction, the proximal mediators (quality of work life, quality of nonwork life, and feelings of self-worth), and consequences of life satisfaction were reviewed. A meta-analysis of life satisfaction with respect to career satisfaction, job performance, turnover intentions, and organizational commitment was performed. Each major section of the article concludes with a future opportunities subsection where gaps in the research are discussed.

To learn more about the Journal of Management, please follow this link.

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