BISNIS & BIROKRASI: Jurnal Ilmu Administrasi dan Organisasi


Rethinking the Mediating Mechanism: HRM Practices and Employee Well-being

Saragih, Susanti (Unknown)
Margaretha, Meily (Unknown)
Suhada, Namira (Unknown)



Article Info

Publish Date
30 Sep 2024

Abstract

The relationship between Human Resource Management (HRM) practices and employee well-being is complex and often contradictory. While HRM practices can enhance employee well-being through various mechanisms, they can also negatively impact well-being, especially in contexts of high-demand jobs. This study investigates the mediating roles of job crafting and work engagement in this relationship. Data from 100 hotel employees in Bandung, Indonesia, were analyzed using Partial Least Squares (PLS). While HRM practices did not directly influence well-being, they significantly impacted job crafting. Interestingly, job crafting, not work engagement, emerged as a strong mediator between HRM practices and employee well-being. These findings suggest that employee-oriented HRM practices promoting autonomy (e.g., flexible work arrangements) empower hotel staff to personalize their work, ultimately leading to greater well-being. The study challenges the traditional view of work engagement as the sole mediator and highlights the under-explored role of job crafting in this context. Future research should explore the influence of individual differences and organizational culture on this complex relationship.

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Journal Info

Abbrev

publication:jbb

Publisher

Subject

Economics, Econometrics & Finance Social Sciences

Description

The scope includes but is not limited to: public policy, administrative reform, local government studies, public and private governance, digital governance and business, digital finance, innovation, entrepreneurship, small businesses, people and culture in organization, knowledge management, ...