Impact of Perceived Supervisor Support and Rewards and Recognition Toward Performance Through Work Satisfaction and Employee Engagement in Employee Marketing Banks
Author(s) -
Rahma Kurniawan,
Rina Anindita
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
business and entrepreneurial review (ber)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2252-4614
pISSN - 0853-9189
DOI - 10.25105/ber.v21i1.9280
Subject(s) - employee engagement , supervisor , job satisfaction , employee research , perceived organizational support , psychology , perspective (graphical) , feeling , structural equation modeling , work engagement , business , work (physics) , marketing , organizational commitment , applied psychology , public relations , social psychology , management , engineering , statistics , mathematics , artificial intelligence , political science , computer science , economics , mechanical engineering
The company as an organization has a dependency on individuals within the company itself. Employees as individuals in the company are part of the organizational structure that has a major role in determining the achievement of company goals. In the perspective of employees, direct supervisors' attitudes and actions can increase employee engagement or even create an atmosphere where an employee becomes disengaged (feeling not part of the company/organization). In addition to marketing employees, rewards and recognition are generally used as the main motivation to improve their performance.For this reason, the purpose of this study is to determine the role of perceived supervisor support, rewards, and recognition, employee engagement on performance mediated by job satisfaction. The study was conducted with a survey using a questionnaire where respondents used 170 marketing employees in the banking industry in Tangerang. Data were analyzed using Structural Equation Model (SEM). The results showed there was a relationship between rewards and recognition of employee engagement, there was a relationship between rewards and recognition of performance, there was not a relationship between perceived supervisor support for performance. Employee engagement mediates the relationship between rewards and recognition of job satisfaction. Job satisfaction mediates the relationship between employee engagement on performance.
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