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A satisfied employee is a productive employee.
Name:Grace Ng’ang’a
Student Number:23001873
Alphacrucis College: Sydney campus
Subject Code:RES 401
Essay Part 1
Due date:15th October 2023
Submission date:15th October 2023
Final word count: 1000 words
Plagiarism Quiz Score: 100%
Plagiarism Quiz Completed: 17th August 2023
I hereby declare that the following work in this assessment is my own, except where indicated
through due referencing. This assessment has not, in full or part, been submitted for another class or
course at AC or any other institution.
Signed: G.W.N Date: 15TH October 2023
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A satisfied employee is a productive employee.
Background
Employee satisfaction is one of the most long-standing social science study areas.
Various authors and scholars have contributed massively to understanding employee satisfaction,
giving rise to numerous definitions and models. One of the most accepted definitions of
organizational philosophy is the one proposed by Edwin Locke in 1969. According to the
scholar, job satisfaction is the pleasurable emotional state of an employee that occurs due to the
review of one's job achievement or the degree to which it contributes to achieving one's personal
job values (Sumanasena & Mohamed, 2022).
Despite being proposed more than five decades ago, this definition is becoming relevant
in the modern work environment more than ever. Researchers are more than ever interested in
understanding the various elements linked to the definition, including an individual's emotional
state, review, values and achievement. Considered wholesomely, Badrianto & Ekhsan (2020)
noted that job satisfaction is the overall attitude towards one’s work. Badrianto & Ekhsan (2020)
go further ahead to note that, like in every attitude, the job satisfaction attitude has underlying
factors influencing it, is linked to particular emotions, and influences an individual’s behaviour.
Most employers are concerned with how effectively they create an environment where
employees gain more satisfaction without harbouring dissatisfaction. They want to create a
positive work environment by understanding satisfaction factors. For instance, a study by Ali &
Anwar (2021) revealed that the most significant factors influencing satisfaction are effective
management, work culture and hiring capabilities of the firm. They noted that employees who
feel engaged, valued and confident about their company’s goals often rank higher in satisfaction.
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Other scholars are interested in understanding how employee satisfaction, or lack thereof,
influences behaviour. They want to discover how the pleasurable feeling resulting from
satisfaction with one’s job influences the actions that follow, with one of the most common
opinions of researchers in the field being that a company’s success is inherently tied to its
employee's satisfaction (Kurdi et al., 2020). It has been consistently noted that employees are the
most valuable resource in an organization. As organizations attempt to discover the key to
leveraging their most critical resources, understanding key parameters such as satisfaction and
loyalty is paramount.
Thus, the link between employee satisfaction and their behavior is one of the most
researched areas. Some of the theories employed to help understand employee satisfaction
include Maslow’s hierarchy of needs theory and Herzberg's two-factor theory. The hierarchy of
needs theory stipulates that essential human needs, such as safety and physiology, must be met
before other complex needs, such as belonging and esteem (Roberts & David, 2020). It implies
that for employees to show high levels of motivation, their current level of needs has to be
satisfied first, hence holding employers up to meet the current needs of their employees to
improve satisfaction.
Herzberg’s two-factor theory contributes to this field by emphasizing how motivator
factors such as recognition and achievement enhance the satisfaction of employees, thereby
encouraging creativity and commitment (Roberts & David, 2020). Newer theories, such as the
dispositional approach theory, consider the contemporary considerations of the personality of
individual workers and how this impacts satisfaction. According to Nikolaev et al. (2020), an
individual's personality impacts how they react to various circumstances, and the implication
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herein is that employers need to assess and understand employees as individuals to produce the
best results for their happiness and satisfaction.
This report will delve into research on why satisfied employees are productive
employees, using three main arguments to support this view. An outline of the three arguments is
given below:
Satisfied employees record higher performance
This argument will give evidence to support the link between employee satisfaction and a
collaborative, creative, and innovative attitude. It will evaluate how satisfied employees work
efficiently, become creative and innovative, and how this results in overall goal achievement and
higher performance. It will propose that employee satisfaction leads to higher productivity,
making organisational goals more achievable.
Satisfied employees equal to happy customers
This argument will evaluate how employee satisfaction encourages employees to serve
customers better. It will delve into the concept of customer service and how it relates to
employee satisfaction and the ultimate consequence of customer satisfaction. Supporting
evidence will be detailed on why employee satisfaction is paramount in customer service.
Satisfied employees have more significant job commitment
This argument will evaluate how satisfied employees show higher job commitment and how this
influences actions such as turnover, absenteeism and go-slows. This argument evaluates how
employee satisfaction keeps employees committed to their work, translating into high
productivity. It will offer supporting evidence as to how satisfied employees record higher
productivity.
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References
Ali, B. J., & Anwar, G. (2021). An empirical study of employees' motivation and its influence on
job satisfaction. Ali, BJ, & Anwar, G.(2021). An Empirical Study of Employees'
Motivation and Its Influence on Job Satisfaction. International Journal of Engineering,
Business and Management, 5(2), 21-30.
Badrianto, Y., & Ekhsan, M. (2020). Effect of work environment and job satisfaction on
employee performance in pt. Nesinak industries. Journal of Business, Management, &
Accounting, 2(1).
Kurdi, B., Alshurideh, M., & Alnaser, A. (2020). The impact of employee satisfaction on
customer satisfaction: Theoretical and empirical underpinning. Management Science
Letters, 10(15), 3561-3570.
Nikolaev, B., Shir, N., & Wiklund, J. (2020). Dispositional positive and negative affect and self-
employment transitions: The mediating role of job satisfaction. Entrepreneurship Theory
and Practice, 44(3), 451-474.
Roberts, J. A., & David, M. E. (2020). Boss phubbing, trust, job satisfaction and employee
performance. Personality and Individual Differences, p. 155, 109702.
Sumanasena, M. L. H., & Mohamed, N. F. (2022). Teacher job satisfaction: a review of the
literature. Muslim Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities, 1-12.