The job demands-resources model of work engagement in South African call centres

Orientation: A ‘sacrificial human resource strategy’ is practised in call centres, resulting in poor employee occupational health. Consequently, questions are posed in terms of the consequences of call centre work and which salient antecedent variables impact the engagement and wellbeing of call cen...

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Main Authors: Yolandi Janse van Rensburg, Billy Boonzaier, Michèle Boonzaier
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2013-09-01
Series:South African Journal of Human Resource Management
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sajhrm.co.za/index.php/sajhrm/article/viewFile/484/684
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spelling doaj-26555b5c3bfc4d8a92b773aeb1796ef22020-11-24T23:00:38ZengAOSISSouth African Journal of Human Resource Management1683-75842071-078X2013-09-01111113doi: 10.4102/sajhrm.v11i1.484The job demands-resources model of work engagement in South African call centresYolandi Janse van RensburgBilly BoonzaierMichèle BoonzaierOrientation: A ‘sacrificial human resource strategy’ is practised in call centres, resulting in poor employee occupational health. Consequently, questions are posed in terms of the consequences of call centre work and which salient antecedent variables impact the engagement and wellbeing of call centre representatives.Research purpose: Firstly, to gauge the level of employee engagement amongst a sample of call centre representatives in South Africa and, secondly, to track the paths through which salient personal and job resources affect this engagement. More specifically, the relationships between sense of coherence, leadership effectiveness, team effectiveness and engagement were investigated, thus testing the Job Demands-Resources model of work engagement.Motivation for the study: To present an application of the Job Demands-Resources model of work engagement in a call centre environment in order to diagnose current ills and consequently propose remedies.Research design: A cross-sectional survey design was used and a non-probability convenient sample of 217 call centre representatives was selected. The measuring instruments comprise the Utrecht Work Engagement Scale to measure engagement, the Team Diagnostic Survey to measure team effectiveness, the leadership practices inventory to gauge leadership effectiveness, and the Orientation to Life Questionnaire to measure sense of coherence. A series of structural equation modelling analyses were performed.Main findings: Contrary to the ‘electronic sweatshop’ image attached to call centre jobs depicted in the literature, results show a high level of employee engagement for call centre representatives in the sample. Also, personal resources such as sense of coherence and job resources such as team effectiveness related significantly to engagement. A non-significant relationship exists between leadership effectiveness and engagement.Practical/managerial implications: Both the content and context of jobs need to be addressed to increase the personal and job resources of call centre representatives.Contribution/value-add: The Job Demands-Resources model of work engagement can be used to improve the occupational health and performance of employees in call centres.http://www.sajhrm.co.za/index.php/sajhrm/article/viewFile/484/684Call CentresWork EngagementSense of CoherenceLeadership EffectivenessTeam EffectivenessJob Demands-Resources (JD-R) Model
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yolandi Janse van Rensburg
Billy Boonzaier
Michèle Boonzaier
spellingShingle Yolandi Janse van Rensburg
Billy Boonzaier
Michèle Boonzaier
The job demands-resources model of work engagement in South African call centres
South African Journal of Human Resource Management
Call Centres
Work Engagement
Sense of Coherence
Leadership Effectiveness
Team Effectiveness
Job Demands-Resources (JD-R) Model
author_facet Yolandi Janse van Rensburg
Billy Boonzaier
Michèle Boonzaier
author_sort Yolandi Janse van Rensburg
title The job demands-resources model of work engagement in South African call centres
title_short The job demands-resources model of work engagement in South African call centres
title_full The job demands-resources model of work engagement in South African call centres
title_fullStr The job demands-resources model of work engagement in South African call centres
title_full_unstemmed The job demands-resources model of work engagement in South African call centres
title_sort job demands-resources model of work engagement in south african call centres
publisher AOSIS
series South African Journal of Human Resource Management
issn 1683-7584
2071-078X
publishDate 2013-09-01
description Orientation: A ‘sacrificial human resource strategy’ is practised in call centres, resulting in poor employee occupational health. Consequently, questions are posed in terms of the consequences of call centre work and which salient antecedent variables impact the engagement and wellbeing of call centre representatives.Research purpose: Firstly, to gauge the level of employee engagement amongst a sample of call centre representatives in South Africa and, secondly, to track the paths through which salient personal and job resources affect this engagement. More specifically, the relationships between sense of coherence, leadership effectiveness, team effectiveness and engagement were investigated, thus testing the Job Demands-Resources model of work engagement.Motivation for the study: To present an application of the Job Demands-Resources model of work engagement in a call centre environment in order to diagnose current ills and consequently propose remedies.Research design: A cross-sectional survey design was used and a non-probability convenient sample of 217 call centre representatives was selected. The measuring instruments comprise the Utrecht Work Engagement Scale to measure engagement, the Team Diagnostic Survey to measure team effectiveness, the leadership practices inventory to gauge leadership effectiveness, and the Orientation to Life Questionnaire to measure sense of coherence. A series of structural equation modelling analyses were performed.Main findings: Contrary to the ‘electronic sweatshop’ image attached to call centre jobs depicted in the literature, results show a high level of employee engagement for call centre representatives in the sample. Also, personal resources such as sense of coherence and job resources such as team effectiveness related significantly to engagement. A non-significant relationship exists between leadership effectiveness and engagement.Practical/managerial implications: Both the content and context of jobs need to be addressed to increase the personal and job resources of call centre representatives.Contribution/value-add: The Job Demands-Resources model of work engagement can be used to improve the occupational health and performance of employees in call centres.
topic Call Centres
Work Engagement
Sense of Coherence
Leadership Effectiveness
Team Effectiveness
Job Demands-Resources (JD-R) Model
url http://www.sajhrm.co.za/index.php/sajhrm/article/viewFile/484/684
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