Abstract
This study examines strategies for improving the work attitude and mental health of airlines’ “problem employees”. Based on a review of previous studies, five different handling methods for problem employees were derived: (1) duty assignment according to ability, (2) confidence beliefs, (3) managerial coaching, (4) human understanding, and (5) mentor system. The study hypothesized that these five approaches influence employees’ work attitudes, mental health, and job performance. To verify these hypotheses, empirical data were collected from 200 airline crew members. The analysis found that only three of the “five different handling methods of problem employees” positively influence job attitudes, mental health, and job performance: (1) duty assignment according to ability, (2) confidence beliefs, and (3) mentor system. In contrast, managerial coaching negatively impacted outcome variables. The study also found that the current handling approaches implemented in the industry have positive and negative outcomes on problem employees. Therefore, airline companies need to manage problem staff based on the findings of this study. Particularly, when conducting managerial coaching, supervisors should check employees’ work attitude change status. Research implications, limitations, and future research directions are discussed.
Highlights
The airline industry is a labor-intensive industry [1]
Cabin crew members work in limited space and time, concretely, and they work in an uncommon place where they cannot directly contact the outside world [3]; teamwork is a crucial factor in sophisticated work performance [4]
A survey was conducted on cabin crew, and all 200 members who faithfully participated in this survey were selected as subjects
Summary
The airline industry is a labor-intensive industry [1]. It is a business that requires a great deal of labor to produce goods and services. Intensive efforts have been made to improve the teamwork of cabin crews to maximize their work efficiency. Teamwork affects team performance in a unique working environment but is directly associated with customer service quality [3]. Given this fact, cabin crew members perform as a team of more than 10 members during a long-range flight, so even a minor mistake by one can negatively affect the remaining team members
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