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Integrating Employee Well-Being into HRM for Effective Distance Working Implementation Dody Suhermawan; Vidhayandika M, Almira
Journal of Managerial Sciences and Studies Vol. 3 No. 2 (2025): Agustus: Journal of Managerial Sciences and Studies
Publisher : PT. Mawadaku Sukses Solusindo

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.61160/jomss.v3i2.91

Abstract

Purpose - The growing adoption of remote work has raised important questions regarding the role of human resource management (HRM) practices in safeguarding employee well-being. While well-being-oriented HRM has been recognized as an essential framework for supporting happiness, health, and social connectedness in traditional organizational settings, its relevance in remote work arrangements remains ambiguous. The reduced physical presence and visibility of employees in remote contexts may diminish the effectiveness of such practices, thereby warranting a deeper empirical investigation. Aims - This study seeks to examine whether well-being-oriented HRM maintains its capacity to enhance employee well-being in remote working environments, as compared to conventional, on-site contexts. More specifically, it aims to evaluate how distinct domains of well-being-oriented HRM are associated with different facets of employee well-being—including psychological well-being (happiness, job satisfaction, and engagement), physical well-being (strain and health), and relational well-being (social connectedness). Additionally, the moderating role of remote work intensity is assessed to determine whether variations in the extent of remote work influence these relationships. Design - The empirical analysis was conducted using a two-wave dataset collected from 258 Indonesian state-owned manufacturing enterprises. By differentiating between remote and non-remote work settings, the study applies a comparative lens to assess both the direct associations of well-being-oriented HRM with well-being outcomes and the potential moderating influence of remote work intensity. This approach allows for a nuanced understanding of how HRM practices function across varying organizational work arrangements. Findings - The results indicate that well-being-oriented HRM continues to exert a positive influence on employee well-being in remote work contexts, particularly in terms of happiness (engagement and job satisfaction) and health (strain reduction). However, variations emerge across domains of HRM, as certain practices appear more effective in enhancing happiness and health-related outcomes than others.
MEASURING THE CORRELATION COGNITIVE DISSONANCE BIAS, HIND SIGHT BIAS, OVER CONFIDENCE BIAS AND SELF-CONTROL BIAS TO INVESTMENT DECISION ON STOCK OPTION Dody Suhermawan; Vidhayandika M, Almira
Journal of Managerial Sciences and Studies Vol. 2 No. 3 (2024): Desember: Journal of Managerial Sciences and Studies
Publisher : PT. Mawadaku Sukses Solusindo

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar | DOI: 10.61160/jomss.v2i3.106

Abstract

Researchers want to know the effects of cognitive dissonance bias, hindsight bias, overconfidence bias, and self-control bias on Stock Option investment decisions. The researcher uses the technical analysis of convergent validity test, discriminant validity test, outer model test, inner model test, rsquare, hypothesis test and Sobel test. The program used is SmartPLS 3 trial version with a sample of 224 respondents with predetermined criteria. The results show that the cognitive dissonance bias variable on Stock Option investment decisions has no significant effect, the hindsight bias variable has no effect on Stock Option investment decisions, overconfidence bias has a positive but not significant effect on Stock Option investment decisions. This is because the T-statistic value is less than 1.97. While the self-control variable can have a positive and significant effect on Stock Option investment decisions.