Values, Attitudes, and Job Satisfaction: Learning Objectives
Values, Attitudes, and Job Satisfaction: Learning Objectives
A company which advertises that its milk products come from contented
cows implies that the products are of good quality. It is easy to understand
the logic behind it. In the same light, when someone says “workers who are
satisfied with their jobs tend to produce quality outputs,” it is also easy to
understand why it is so.
Values
Values refer to the importance a person attaches to things or ideas that
serves as guide to action. Values are enduring beliefs that one’s mode of
conduct is better than the opposite mode of conduct. An example of a belief
is the importance placed by a person on academic titles or degrees and the
doubt casted on the ability of a person without sufficient academic
qualifications.
4. Religion – values are also learned through religion. For example, the just
and fair treatment of people is a value that is taught by priests and ministers
of various religious acts. Persons who are exposed to the teachings develop
values that support such beliefs.
Types of Values
Values may be classified in various ways. A classification that is most
relevant to the workplace indicates that values are of the following types:
Attitudes
Attitudes are important in the study of human behavior. This is so because
they are linked with perception, learning, emotions, and motivation. Attitudes
also form the basis for job satisfaction in the workplace. Attitudes are
feelings and beliefs that largely determine how employees will perceive their
environment, commit themselves to intended actions, and ultimately
behave. Attitudes reflect how one feels about something.
Attitudes that are formed in an indirect way are the result of social
interactions with the family, peer groups, religious organizations, and culture.
For instance, if parents behave in a manner showing disdain towards
smokers, the children will have a strong tendency to adapt an attitude of
indifference towards smokers.
Job Satisfaction
The attitude people have about their job is called job satisfaction. In a strict
sense, however, job satisfaction refers to the positive feeling about one’s job
resulting from an evaluation of its characteristics. When the feeling about
one’s job is not positive, the appropriate term is job dissatisfaction.
When people are satisfied with their jobs, the following benefits become
possible:
1. High productivity
2. A stronger tendency to achieve customer loyalty
3. Loyalty to the company
4. Low absenteeism and turnover
5. Less job stress and burnout
6. Better safety performance
7. Better life satisfaction
Job Involvement
Job involvement is another positive employee attitude. It refers to the degree
to which a person identifies with the job, actively participates in it, and
considers performance important to self-worth. People who are really
“involved” in their jobs view work as a central part of their overall lives.