hidden pixel

Organizational Commitment Information

Organizational commitment in the fields of Organizational Behavior and Industrial/Organizational Psychology is, in a general sense, the employee's psychological attachment to the organization. It can be contrasted with other work-related attitudes, such as Job Satisfaction, defined as an employee's feelings about their job, and Organizational identification, defined as the degree to which an employee experiences a 'sense of oneness' with their organization.

Beyond this general sense, Organizational scientists have developed many nuanced definitions of organizational commitment, and numerous scales to measure them. Exemplary of this work is Meyer & Allen's model of commitment, which was developed to integrate numerous definitions of commitment that had proliferated in the literature.

Model of commitment

According to Meyer and Allen's (1991) three-component model of commitment and (Removed), prior research indicated that there are three "mind sets" which can characterize an employee's commitment to the organization:

Types of employee discharge

Guidelines to enhance organizational commitment.

There are five guidelines which help to enhance organizational commitment.

  1. Commit to people-first values: Put it in writing, hire the right-kind managers, and walk the talk.
  2. Clarify and communicate your mission: Clarify the mission and ideology; make it charismatic; use value-based hiring practices; stress values-based orientation and training; build the tradition.
  3. Guarantee organizational justice: Have a comprehensive grievance procedure; provide for extensive two-way communications.
  4. Community of practise: Build value-based homogeneitly; share and ahare alike; emphasize barnraising, cross-utilization, and teamwork; getting people to work together.
  5. Support employee development: Commit to actualizing; provide first-year job challenge; enrich and empower;promote from within; provide developmental activities; provide employee security without guarantees.
Aspects of organizations
See also: ·
Architecture · Capital · Chart · Citizenship behavior · Climate · Commitment · Communication · Complexity · Configuration · Conflict · Culture · Design · Development · Diagnostics · Dissent · Ecology · Effectiveness · Engineering · Ethics · Field · Hierarchy · Identification · Intelligence · Justice · Learning · Life cycle · Mentorship · Network analysis · Ombudsman · Patterns · Performance · Politics · Proactivity · Psychology · Resilience · Retaliatory behavior · Safety · Space · Storytelling · Structure · Studies

Categories: Organizational psychology | Organizational studies and human resource management

 

The above information uses material from Wikipedia and is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Some facts may not have been fully verified for accuracy. [Disclaimers]
This page was last archived by our server on Sun Oct 2 03:27:02 2011.
Displaying this page or its contents does not use any Wikimedia Foundation's resources.
The owners of this site proudly support the Wikimedia Foundation.