Determining involvement HRM practices and benevolent HRM attributions' role in improving employees' engagement and reducing stress in sales-centric organisations

Muddasar Ghani Khwaja, Athar Hameed, Umer Zaman

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

Workplace stress has been characterised as a global occupational phenomenon that causes adverse organisational outcomes; including serious employee's illnesses and phenomenal productivity loss per annum. Human resource management (HRM) has always thrived to induce predefined work practices that support employee wellbeing in the organisations. The present study provides a framework on how HRM practices can augment employee wellbeing by reducing their stress levels. Involvement HRM practices and benevolent HRM attributions are portrayed to enhance employee gratitude, which in return results in alleviating employee stress and improving employee engagement levels. The data was collected from 298 respondents using survey questionnaire. Proportionate stratified random sampling was deployed and structural equation modelling (SEM) was executed for the determination of causal relationship among constructs. Results affirmed established theoretical foundations as strong causality existed among the constructs. The study provides HR practitioners a pathway of optimising organisational productivity and employee wellbeing.

Original languageEnglish
JournalInternational Journal of Knowledge and Learning
Volume17
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - 2024
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • HRM attributions
  • SEM
  • employee stress
  • engagement
  • gratitude
  • human resource management
  • involvement HRM practices
  • structural equation modelling

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