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Job satisfaction through the perspective of emotional labor Available to Purchase

Job satisfaction through the perspective of emotional labor Available to Purchase

Title: Job satisfaction through the perspective of emotional labor Available to Purchase

Authors:

  1. Desynta Rahmawati Gunawan
  2. Anis Eliyana
  3. Rachmawati Dewi Anggraini
  4. Andika Setia Pratama
  5. Zukhruf Febrianto
  6. Marziah Zahar

Department: Manajemen

Journal Name: Kybernetes

Kinds of Journal: Q2

Keywords: Customer orientation, Deep acting, Emotional intelligence, Job satisfaction, Surface acting, Quality jobs, Decent work

Abstract:

Purpose

This study explores how emotional intelligence, customer orientation, deep acting and surface acting influence job satisfaction among middle managers in their interactions with customers, colleagues and business partners. By examining these factors, we aim to provide insights into their collective impact on job satisfaction and interpersonal dynamics within organizational contexts.

Design/methodology/approach

By involving 95 middle managers at Indonesian Internet service providers as respondents, this research used a questionnaire to collect data. Next, the data were analyzed using the partial least square-structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM) technique, which evaluated measurement models and structural models. A total of twelve hypotheses were tested in this study.

Findings

This study found that customer orientation does not have a significant effect on deep acting, thereby nullifying its indirect effect on job satisfaction. Conversely, it’s demonstrated that both deep acting and surface acting serve as partial mediators in the relationship between emotional intelligence and job satisfaction. Furthermore, surface acting emerges as a partial mediator in the connection between customer orientation and job satisfaction.

Originality/value

By exploring the relationship between customer orientation, emotional intelligence and job satisfaction among employees, this study seeks to reveal novel insights. The study examines the impact of these critical elements, which are necessary for middle managers to effectively manage their emotions and cultivate significant connections, on their overall job satisfaction and interpersonal dynamics in their diverse responsibilities.

For details: https://doi.org/10.1108/K-07-2023-1288