TY - JOUR
T1 - Consumers as employees : the impact of social responsibility on quality of work life among Australian engineers
AU - Arndt, Aaron D.
AU - Singhapakdi, Anusorn
AU - Tam, Vivian
PY - 2015
Y1 - 2015
N2 - Purpose - The aim of this paper is to investigate whether consumer values influence work-related attitudes. Employees often feel conflict among different aspects of their lives. Although most extant research has focused on the effect of family values on work attitudes, we investigate whether a fit between employees' socially responsible consumption orientation (SRCO) and firm corporate social responsibility (CSR) influences employee higher-order quality of work life. Design/methodology/approach - Survey data from 112 members of an engineering association in Australia. Findings - The results show that employees' consumer life roles can influence their work-related perceptions. However, contrary to expectations, the positive influence of CSR on higher-order quality of work life is weaker for employees who are more socially responsible consumers. Research limitations/implications - Further research should examine other industry contexts and cultures. Also, because the SRCO construct is very broad, further research should examine specific social issues. Practical implications - CSR can be an important strategy for retaining employees, even those with lower SRCO. Originality/value - This research shows that customer values influence important work-related attitudes, such as higher-order quality of work life and organizational commitment. Furthermore, we show that "fit" between consumption orientation responsibility and firm CSR does not necessarily enhance work-related attitudes because employees high in SRCO likely hold the firm to a different standard of social responsibility.
AB - Purpose - The aim of this paper is to investigate whether consumer values influence work-related attitudes. Employees often feel conflict among different aspects of their lives. Although most extant research has focused on the effect of family values on work attitudes, we investigate whether a fit between employees' socially responsible consumption orientation (SRCO) and firm corporate social responsibility (CSR) influences employee higher-order quality of work life. Design/methodology/approach - Survey data from 112 members of an engineering association in Australia. Findings - The results show that employees' consumer life roles can influence their work-related perceptions. However, contrary to expectations, the positive influence of CSR on higher-order quality of work life is weaker for employees who are more socially responsible consumers. Research limitations/implications - Further research should examine other industry contexts and cultures. Also, because the SRCO construct is very broad, further research should examine specific social issues. Practical implications - CSR can be an important strategy for retaining employees, even those with lower SRCO. Originality/value - This research shows that customer values influence important work-related attitudes, such as higher-order quality of work life and organizational commitment. Furthermore, we show that "fit" between consumption orientation responsibility and firm CSR does not necessarily enhance work-related attitudes because employees high in SRCO likely hold the firm to a different standard of social responsibility.
KW - consumer values
KW - quality of work life
KW - social responsibility of business
UR - http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/uws:30825
U2 - 10.1108/SRJ-06-2013-0075
DO - 10.1108/SRJ-06-2013-0075
M3 - Article
SN - 1747-1117
VL - 11
SP - 98
EP - 108
JO - Social Responsibility Journal
JF - Social Responsibility Journal
IS - 1
ER -