scholarly journals Teamwork and Organizational Productivity: A study of Lord’s Mint Technology Nigeria Limited

Author(s):  
Ademeso James Olufemi ◽  
Bankole Oluseun Ayodele
ILR Review ◽  
1989 ◽  
Vol 42 (3) ◽  
pp. 474
Author(s):  
Robert N. Stern ◽  
Dean Tjosvold

Author(s):  
Abhishek Sharma

Work engagement is not only a "nice-to-have" but has been shown to be linked to various positive outcomes of work, including its proven financial and behavioural gains. The concern regarding employee engagement is increasing, and organizations of the 21st century are looking for every possible way to develop the culture of employee engagement deliberately. In this context, this research introduces employee engagement as a viable method to encourage organizational productivity and examines how perceptions of specific human resource (HR) practices and organizational identification relate to experiences of employee's work engagement. The study data was collected using standard psychometric tools from 75 mid-level managers working in various organizations. Statistical analysis was performed to answer research questions. The results conveyed the significance of applying encouraging human resource practices and demonstrated the positive effect of organization-al identification (OID) on work engagement. HR practices and OID were found instrumental in positively predicting the significant amount of work engagement. By discovering the relationship between HR practices (conditions that organizations can influence easily), organizational identification, and employee engagement, this study relates to the realistic implementation of measures to improve employee engagement and especially emphasises them. As most companies are searching for ways to promote employee engagement, the latest re-search results are of practical importance to HR executives.


Author(s):  
KUNIHIKO HIGA ◽  
MILAM W. AIKEN ◽  
OLIVIA R. LIU SHENG

Electronic Mail Systems (EMSs) have been a boon to organizational productivity, but these systems may not receive greater acceptance due in part to their general lack of robust system features. Particularly, the intractable problem of effective electronic mail dissemination management has largely eluded solution. This paper first provides a brief survey of several existing intelligent EMSs which seek to address the conundrum of mail management and then proposes an alternative solution which takes advantage of the unique characteristics of a knowledge base/database coupling to facilitate effective information sharing among members of an organization. This approach improves on prior Knowledge-Based Mail System (KMS) designs by (1) focusing on message dissemination management rather than on message receipt management, (2) separating the relatively static knowledge of message routing from the relatively dynamic knowledge of the organizational membership, and (3) incorporating a more comprehensive view of the semantic constraints involved in configuring distribution lists of message receivers through the use of the Structured Object Model (SOM) Methodology. The design concepts are illustrated by a prototype KMS, the Message Dissemination System (MDS).


Author(s):  
Ajalie Stanley Nwannebuife ◽  
Ofuonyebuzor, Daniel Chucks ◽  
Olaleke, Ogunnaike Oluseye ◽  
Oluwakemi Onayemi

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document