A study of employee satisfaction in two manufacturing facilities of General Motors South Africa

Employed individuals spend a majority of their waking time at work. Therefore, within an individual’s working lifetime, most hours will be spent at work. Subsequently, theories abound purporting that humans are hedonistic beings. Considering that on average people spend most of their working lives i...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Matutoane, Leanetse Paul
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Rhodes University 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1003887
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-rhodes-vital-7662017-07-20T04:13:10ZA study of employee satisfaction in two manufacturing facilities of General Motors South AfricaMatutoane, Leanetse PaulGeneral Motors Corporation -- South Africa -- Port ElizabethJob satisfaction -- South Africa -- Port ElizabethEmployee motivation -- South Africa -- Port ElizabethEmployee attitude surveys -- South Africa -- Port ElizabethEmployed individuals spend a majority of their waking time at work. Therefore, within an individual’s working lifetime, most hours will be spent at work. Subsequently, theories abound purporting that humans are hedonistic beings. Considering that on average people spend most of their working lives in a working environment, it then stands to reason that people should endeavor to be satisfied at work if humans are always in pursuit of happiness. The questions arise as thus: what makes people satisfied at work, does being satisfied with the job result in less turnover, and is that the only reason that they would endeavor to prolong their employment, are older employees more satisfied with their jobs than younger employees, is a plant with an older workforce more satisfied than a similar plant with a younger workforce? This study attempts to find an answer to these and other related questions. It was conducted on employees of two plants of an automotive manufacturer based in Port Elizabeth, a town in the Eastern Cape province of South Africa. The Job Descriptive Index (JDI) was used to collect the feelings of 92 employees in different shops and analyzed to check for differences in satisfaction levels. No significant differences were found between the plants, shops and age categories surveyed.Rhodes UniversityFaculty of Commerce, Rhodes Investec Business School2009ThesisMastersMBAix, 78 leaves : ill.pdfvital:766http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1003887EnglishMatutoane, Leanetse Paul
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic General Motors Corporation -- South Africa -- Port Elizabeth
Job satisfaction -- South Africa -- Port Elizabeth
Employee motivation -- South Africa -- Port Elizabeth
Employee attitude surveys -- South Africa -- Port Elizabeth
spellingShingle General Motors Corporation -- South Africa -- Port Elizabeth
Job satisfaction -- South Africa -- Port Elizabeth
Employee motivation -- South Africa -- Port Elizabeth
Employee attitude surveys -- South Africa -- Port Elizabeth
Matutoane, Leanetse Paul
A study of employee satisfaction in two manufacturing facilities of General Motors South Africa
description Employed individuals spend a majority of their waking time at work. Therefore, within an individual’s working lifetime, most hours will be spent at work. Subsequently, theories abound purporting that humans are hedonistic beings. Considering that on average people spend most of their working lives in a working environment, it then stands to reason that people should endeavor to be satisfied at work if humans are always in pursuit of happiness. The questions arise as thus: what makes people satisfied at work, does being satisfied with the job result in less turnover, and is that the only reason that they would endeavor to prolong their employment, are older employees more satisfied with their jobs than younger employees, is a plant with an older workforce more satisfied than a similar plant with a younger workforce? This study attempts to find an answer to these and other related questions. It was conducted on employees of two plants of an automotive manufacturer based in Port Elizabeth, a town in the Eastern Cape province of South Africa. The Job Descriptive Index (JDI) was used to collect the feelings of 92 employees in different shops and analyzed to check for differences in satisfaction levels. No significant differences were found between the plants, shops and age categories surveyed.
author Matutoane, Leanetse Paul
author_facet Matutoane, Leanetse Paul
author_sort Matutoane, Leanetse Paul
title A study of employee satisfaction in two manufacturing facilities of General Motors South Africa
title_short A study of employee satisfaction in two manufacturing facilities of General Motors South Africa
title_full A study of employee satisfaction in two manufacturing facilities of General Motors South Africa
title_fullStr A study of employee satisfaction in two manufacturing facilities of General Motors South Africa
title_full_unstemmed A study of employee satisfaction in two manufacturing facilities of General Motors South Africa
title_sort study of employee satisfaction in two manufacturing facilities of general motors south africa
publisher Rhodes University
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10962/d1003887
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