scholarly journals Mutual Support, Role Breadth Self-Efficacy, and Sustainable Job Performance of Workers in Young Firms

2019 ◽  
Vol 11 (12) ◽  
pp. 3333 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah Cheah ◽  
Shiyu li ◽  
Yuen-Ping Ho

Coworking space has flourished in the past decade. Unlike traditional shared services organizations, coworking spaces put a much greater emphasis on ‘sharing’. Members not only can share the physical office space, but also the virtual social spaces created by the coworking space operators managing the office. As coworking spaces provide a community to foster the culture of sharing, which gives rise to social interactions and thus knowledge and idea exchange, entrepreneurs favor such coworking spaces to achieve a higher level of job performance among their workers. Although it is generally accepted that a worker’s job performance varies over time within a job, there have been limited studies on within-person performance sustainability and its comparison with between-person sustainability. We sampled 101 workers of young firms operating in six coworking spaces in Singapore who completed daily surveys twice a day across ten consecutive workdays. By treating participants as the first level and daily observations as the second level, our study develops a dual-path model to explain how daily mutual support influences daily job performance. Our results indicated that daily mutual support is positively related to sustainable job performance after controlling for sleep quality, job requirements and workload stress. Within-person sustainability in mutual support was found to account for part of within-person variance in job performance. We established that mutual support not only predicts job performance, but also varies across workdays. As the collaboration of team members depends on cooperation rather than competition, mutual support is considered essential for team work and thus employees’ job performance. Our study also demonstrated the importance of role breadth self-efficacy as a moderator in the link between mutual support and sustainable job performance. Role breadth self-efficacy refers to the extent to which people feel confident that they are able to carry out a broader and more proactive role, beyond traditional prescribed technical requirements. The results revealed an enhancing moderation effect, where increasing the role breath self-efficacy would enhance the effect of the mutual support predictor on sustainable job performance of workers in young firms operating in the coworking space.

2017 ◽  
Vol 33 (5) ◽  
pp. 941-950
Author(s):  
Deepanjana Varshney ◽  
Nirbhay K. Varshney

The individual’s ability to complete the given task effectively can be termed as Self-efficacy. Employee performance is examined about outcomes and behavior. Job performance determines the quality as well as the quantity accomplished by employees over a period. Trust has been widely used as a mediating variable in previous research and has been found to exhibit positive mediating effects on the variables. In our research, we have investigated the factors (Team-self-efficacy and trust) affecting the project team members’ job performance. We have conducted a study to collect data and test the model proposed on 155 respondents (project team members) of a large construction company at Saudi Arabia. The findings demonstrated that trust partially mediated the relationship between the team job performance and self-efficacy. Additionally, significant positive correlations between the variables were found. There have been several studies examining the variables as discussed in the paper. However, there is a paucity of research on small groups like the project teams worldwide. The significance of the results and future research directions were analyzed and discussed. The importance of the results and directions for future research were also put forward.


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 18-23
Author(s):  
Faiza Akhtar ◽  
◽  
Huma Khan

The present study investigates the effects of burnout toward job performance and job satisfaction with a moderating role of hope and self-efficacy. Findings from 310 frontline employees of Pakistani commercial bank (Lahore, Karachi & Islamabad), showed burnout has a significant negative effect on job performance and job satisfaction. A simple random sampling technique was used to collect data, and inferential statistics were applied to analyze the data. However, results disclose no moderation effect of hope on burnout and job performance or with job satisfaction. But, data significantly support the moderation effect of self-efficacy. The moderation effect was analyzed by the moderation process of Preacher, Rucker, & Hayes, (2007). The study further sheds light on the development of psychological capital, and the importance of the implication of the current finding is discussed. This study will help top management and trainers to understand so they can manage burnout issues on frontline employees for better performance and employee satisfaction.


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