Subjective well-being and its intrinsic and extrinsic motivational correlates in high performance executives: A study in Chilean managers empirically revisiting the bifactor model
Abstract:
This study analyzes the relationship between work satisfaction, family satisfaction, and general well-being in high performance managers in Santiago, Chile. The importance of the satisfaction of intrinsic and extrinsic needs and motivations was examined to advance in the development of a positive organizational psychology, which investigates the factors that reinforce well-being. Seventy-five executives from large and medium-sized companies were surveyed and 8 in-depth interviews were carried out. The main pbkp_redictors of well-being are, from family satisfaction, the family’s ability to cope with stress and, from work satisfaction, extrinsic aspects such as material conditions of the job and stability, and intrinsic aspects such as recognition and the ability to organize one’s own work. The more general regression model shows that extrinsic job and family satisfaction pbkp_redict general well-being, not intrinsic satisfaction. The results are discussed in the framework of classical models of motivation, such as Herzberg’s, their relationship to Deci and Ryan’s self-determination theory, and the current study of well-being in organizations.
Año de publicación:
2021
Keywords:
- WELL-BEING
- Work satisfaction
- EXTRINSIC MOTIVATION
- INTRINSIC MOTIVATION
Fuente:
Tipo de documento:
Article
Estado:
Acceso abierto
Áreas de conocimiento:
- Psicología
Áreas temáticas:
- Psicología diferencial y del desarrollo
- Psicología aplicada
- Grupos de personas