Understanding the Effect of Perceived Supervisor Unavailability on Job Satisfaction, Counterproductive Work Behaviors, and Intent to Quit
Publisher
University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
Place of Publication
Chattanooga (Tenn.)
Abstract
This study aims to examine the influence of supervisor unavailability on employee job satisfaction, counterproductive work behaviors, and intent to quit. It introduces the construct of Perceived Supervisor Unavailability (PSU), defined as the employee's perception that their supervisor is not present, reachable, or responsive during times when support or input is expected or needed. Grounded in Job Demands-Resources and Social Exchange Theory, this study will look at personal and organizational resources as mediators of the PSU-work outcomes relationship. Role clarity acting as personal resource and perceived supervisor and organizational support, acting as organizational resources are expected to reduce the influence of PSU on work outcomes. Data will be collected from both employees and supervisors working on-site and hybrid/remote conditions to examine whether physical presence influences PSU.
Subject
Industrial and organizational psychology
Document Type
posters
Language
English
Rights
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
License
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/
Understanding the Effect of Perceived Supervisor Unavailability on Job Satisfaction, Counterproductive Work Behaviors, and Intent to Quit
This study aims to examine the influence of supervisor unavailability on employee job satisfaction, counterproductive work behaviors, and intent to quit. It introduces the construct of Perceived Supervisor Unavailability (PSU), defined as the employee's perception that their supervisor is not present, reachable, or responsive during times when support or input is expected or needed. Grounded in Job Demands-Resources and Social Exchange Theory, this study will look at personal and organizational resources as mediators of the PSU-work outcomes relationship. Role clarity acting as personal resource and perceived supervisor and organizational support, acting as organizational resources are expected to reduce the influence of PSU on work outcomes. Data will be collected from both employees and supervisors working on-site and hybrid/remote conditions to examine whether physical presence influences PSU.
Department
University of Tennessee at Chattanooga. Dept. of Psychology