Abstract

PurposeEmployees’ turnover intention is a key problem that hotel managers face daily. This is partially explained by the inevitability of performing tasks with little significance and low identity. This study aims to understand how job embeddedness and job satisfaction could lessen the undesirable effect of task characteristics on turnover intentions.Design/methodology/approachA sample of 525 employees operating in 46 Portuguese hotels was used in this study. The questionnaire included demographic variables and four reliable instruments used to measure job satisfaction, job characteristics, job embeddedness and turnover intentions. The study used a multilevel statistical approach considering both the individual and the hotel levels of analysis.FindingsThrough multilevel statistics, the findings suggest that both at the individual level and the hotel level of analysis, job satisfaction and job embeddedness fully mediated the relationship between different task characteristics (significance and identity) and turnover intentions.Research limitations/implicationsDespite a possible absence of common method variance, due to the confirmatory factor analysis, social desirability bias may exist because of the self-reported nature of the survey.Practical implicationsManagers should increase the perceived costs of employees leaving the hotel by introducing training programs and plans for career development. Also, to increase job embeddedness, managers should also rethink the organizational dynamics of this industry.Originality/valueThis research provides empirical evidence of the antecedents and mediators of employees’ intentions to leave the hotel industry both at the individual and at the hotel level (multilevel approach).

Highlights

  • Employees’ decision to stay or leave an organization where they work is a key variable for work-related research in all sectors of professional activity

  • Through multilevel statistics, our findings suggest that both at the individual and the hotel level of analysis, job satisfaction and job embeddedness fully mediated the relationship between different task characteristics and turnover intentions

  • We opted for a multilevel approach, as we included variables measured at the individual-level and the hotel-level

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Employees’ decision to stay or leave an organization where they work is a key variable for work-related research in all sectors of professional activity. 26.3% of employees had precarious contracts and presented low levels of satisfaction at work (3.4 in a scale ranging from 1 to 5). All of this evidence shows that turnover highly affects tourism, in Portugal. The existing hospitality literature has revealed that, in general, hotel employees have low qualifications and a reduced identification with the task (Nickson, 2007). These findings infer that high turnover levels (Slattery et al, 2010) become even higher with working staff at operational levels (Milman, 2003). Evidence has shown that job embeddedness is related to turnover intention (Karatepe and Shahriari, 2014) and that job satisfaction is correlated with employees’ self-actualization and self-esteem needs (Lee et al, 2015)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call