Exploring the relationship between perceptions of organizational emotional intelligence and turnover intentions amongst employees: the mediating role of organizational commitment and job satisfaction
Exploring the relationship between perceptions of organizational emotional intelligence and turnover intentions amongst employees: the mediating role of organizational commitment and job satisfaction
Although the proliferation of research in emotional intelligence (EI) in the last 25 years has largely focused on the individual level, some researchers have proposed theories and measurement models for EI at the organizational level. Drawing from earlier work which conceptualizes organizational emotional intelligence (OEI) as a climate-level construct involving shared norms and practices this chapter sets out to investigate the relationship between perceptions of organizational emotional intelligence (OEI) and turnover intentions amongst employees. Since turnover intentions are a reliable indicator of actual turnover they are deemed to be a critical indicator for organizational performance. This chapter also builds on previous research which found that the relationship between OEI as a climate-level construct and intention to leave was mediated by organizational emotional appeal (i.e., overall reputation) and trust in senior management to explore the mediating role of other employee attitudes which have been traditionally linked to climate and individual-level outcomes in organizations, namely job satisfaction and affective commitment. By surveying employees in a UK-based charity organization (n?=?173), the study finds that both job satisfaction and affective commitment mediate the impact of OEI on intention to leave and explain a moderate amount of variance in the focal construct. However, the majority of the mediation occurs through job satisfaction with a reduced mediation effect for affective commitment. Potential reasons for these results in the charity context are discussed. The chapter contributes to a wider understanding of the way in which perceptions of OEI impact on employee attitudes toward the organization and the job; and, in turn, how these attitudes impact on turnover intentions.
organizational emotional intelligence, turnover intentions, job satisfaction, organizational commitment
978-1-78560-221-4
295-339
Da Camara, Nuno
30835dd2-a3aa-4ea6-b4fd-8e5fa7c9a40d
Dulewicz, Victor
bed1ba8c-a8c6-4b9f-94bc-8937da615bdb
Higgs, Malcolm
bd61667f-4b7c-4caf-9d79-aee907c03ae3
2015
Da Camara, Nuno
30835dd2-a3aa-4ea6-b4fd-8e5fa7c9a40d
Dulewicz, Victor
bed1ba8c-a8c6-4b9f-94bc-8937da615bdb
Higgs, Malcolm
bd61667f-4b7c-4caf-9d79-aee907c03ae3
Da Camara, Nuno, Dulewicz, Victor and Higgs, Malcolm
(2015)
Exploring the relationship between perceptions of organizational emotional intelligence and turnover intentions amongst employees: the mediating role of organizational commitment and job satisfaction.
In,
Härtel, Charmine E.J., Zerbe, Wilfred J. and Ashkanasy, Neal M.
(eds.)
New Ways of Studying Emotions in Organizations.
(Research on Emotion in Organizations, 11)
Bingley, GB.
Emerald Publishing, .
(doi:10.1108/S1746-979120150000011012).
Record type:
Book Section
Abstract
Although the proliferation of research in emotional intelligence (EI) in the last 25 years has largely focused on the individual level, some researchers have proposed theories and measurement models for EI at the organizational level. Drawing from earlier work which conceptualizes organizational emotional intelligence (OEI) as a climate-level construct involving shared norms and practices this chapter sets out to investigate the relationship between perceptions of organizational emotional intelligence (OEI) and turnover intentions amongst employees. Since turnover intentions are a reliable indicator of actual turnover they are deemed to be a critical indicator for organizational performance. This chapter also builds on previous research which found that the relationship between OEI as a climate-level construct and intention to leave was mediated by organizational emotional appeal (i.e., overall reputation) and trust in senior management to explore the mediating role of other employee attitudes which have been traditionally linked to climate and individual-level outcomes in organizations, namely job satisfaction and affective commitment. By surveying employees in a UK-based charity organization (n?=?173), the study finds that both job satisfaction and affective commitment mediate the impact of OEI on intention to leave and explain a moderate amount of variance in the focal construct. However, the majority of the mediation occurs through job satisfaction with a reduced mediation effect for affective commitment. Potential reasons for these results in the charity context are discussed. The chapter contributes to a wider understanding of the way in which perceptions of OEI impact on employee attitudes toward the organization and the job; and, in turn, how these attitudes impact on turnover intentions.
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More information
e-pub ahead of print date: 6 July 2015
Published date: 2015
Keywords:
organizational emotional intelligence, turnover intentions, job satisfaction, organizational commitment
Organisations:
Southampton Business School
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 382849
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/382849
ISBN: 978-1-78560-221-4
ISSN: 1746-9791
PURE UUID: 8bc2abf9-e6c2-4288-80ba-78599d0626e3
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Date deposited: 13 Oct 2015 09:06
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:30
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Contributors
Author:
Nuno Da Camara
Author:
Victor Dulewicz
Editor:
Charmine E.J. Härtel
Editor:
Wilfred J. Zerbe
Editor:
Neal M. Ashkanasy
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