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Journal ArticleDOI

Job demand and employee well-being: A moderated mediation model of emotional intelligence and surface acting

Shazia Nauman, +3 more
- 02 Aug 2019 - 
- Vol. 48, Iss: 5, pp 1150-1168
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TLDR
In this paper, the authors investigated the relationship between workload job demand and employee well-being with mediating effects of surface acting (SA) and moderating effect of emotional intelligence (EI) in service organizations.
Abstract
The extant research on emotional labor (EL) has focused on positive and negative outcomes observed in the workplace; however, many fundamental questions remain unanswered. The research has yet to consider what factors buffer the negative outcomes of EL. The purpose of this paper is to investigate the relationship between workload job demand and employee well-being with mediating effects of surface acting (SA) and moderating effects of emotional intelligence (EI) in service organizations.,The authors used two wave data from a sample of 207 emergency medical technicians to test the hypotheses.,By integrating SA, EI and employee well-being with the conservation of resource theory, the authors found evidence of an indirect effect of workload job demand on emotional exhaustion and job satisfaction via SA. The results of moderated mediation show that the negative relationship between SA and job satisfaction was low when EI was high and the positive relationship between SA and emotional exhaustion was low when EI was high.,A major limitation of the present study is that all the participants were male and drawn from a single profession within the same organization. Another limitation is that the data were collected through self-reports.,This research has important theoretical and practical implications for service organizations wishing to buffer the harmful effects of SA on employees. This study presents key theoretical implications for the EL and well-being literatures. An important practical implication is that EI is a good resource for managing SA’s negative outcomes.,The current study contributes to the extant research by showing that workload job demands have negative effects on employee well-being via SA resulting in reduced job satisfaction and increased emotional exhaustion. Further, the negative outcomes of SA on employee well-being can be buffered through EI by taking EI as an emotional resource. High level of EI helps employees to mitigate the harmful effects of SA.

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Relax from job, Don't feel stress! The detrimental effects of job stress and buffering effects of coworker trust on burnout and turnover intention

TL;DR: In this article, the detrimental effects of job demands and daily job stress on daily burnout and daily turnover intention of hospitality employees were analyzed by revisiting the job demands-resources (JD-R) theory.
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Nexus among cyberloafing behavior, job demands and job resources: A mediated-moderated model

TL;DR: This study examines the influence of job demands and job resources on cyberloafing behavior through the mediating role of job stress and work engagement and the contingent role of employee motivation at universities through the partial least square structural equation modeling technique.
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Is job performance conditioned by work-from-home demands and resources?

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that employees' ICT anxiety and smartphone addiction can inhibit their work progress by provoking interruptions in the course and reducing the efficacy, further affecting performance, and that companies must simplify the transition to the home office, providing employees with job management and tools to ensure uninterrupted and productive working processes.
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But they promised! How psychological contracts influence the impact of felt violations on job-related anxiety and performance

TL;DR: In this article, the authors unpacked the relationship between violations of organizational promises, as perceived by employees and their job performance, considering the mediating effects of job-related anxiety and moderating effect of psychological contract type, and found that feeling of organizational betrayal may reduce job performance due to the higher anxiety that employees experience in their daily work.
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Guanxi HRM Practice and Employees' Occupational Well-Being in China: A Multi-Level Psychological Process.

TL;DR: The theoretical model of this study proposes that employee psychological safety mediates the relationship between guanxi HRM practice and occupational well-being, while collectivistic team culture moderates the relationship with psychological safety.
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Journal ArticleDOI

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