The purpose of this paper is to investigate impacts of training on organizational commitment and turnover intentions in private sector of Saudi Arabia. The study seeks to focus the relationship between organizational commitment and turnover intentions of the employees. A literature review of organizational commitment and employee turnover provides the basis for the research model and hypotheses. A self-administered questionnaire was used, involving 251 respondents from leading private organizations of Saudi Arabia to collect data and testing the existing theory. The results provide strong support for the hypothesis that is the negative relationship between organizational commitment and turnover intention. Employees' training is significantly correlated with organizational commitment, turnover intentions and the commitment-turnover relationship.The sample was limited to private organization in Saudi Arabia. It may not be appropriate to generalize the findings across other populations or settings. However, the sample can be viewed as a representative case typical of many other organizations in the same industry. The results provides insight into the impact of organizational commitment on turnover intentions in the specific private sector of Saudi Arabia, which might benefit for managers and policy makers of the concerned organizations and in general for the whole sector. The paper studies the problems that exist in the private sector of Saudi Arabia.
Organizational Citizenship Behaviour (OCB) has been signified as one of the antecedents of organizational effectiveness. OCB is widely studied over the years in the US but has received relatively inadequate attention in other Asian contexts. This study explored and examined number of predictors of OCB in the Arabic-speaking context (Saudi Arabia in Gulf). The data was drawn from 275 employees of both private and public banking sectors. Predictors of OCB examined are Job Satisfaction and Organizational Commitment, Role Perceptions, Fairness Perceptions, Leadership Behavior, Individual Dispositions, Motivation and Feedback. The results found support the hypotheses stating the positive relationship between the predictors of OCB and organizational citizenship behaviour except motivation that found no relationship with OCB. Implications for future research are discussed.
The current study has examined the interaction between social support and workload for predicting the work related performance of academic staff in Pakistan. A self administered questionnaire was distributed among a sample of 400 academic staff working in the six universities of Pakistan. Data was analyzed through multivariate statistics like Factor Analysis and Multiple Regression Analysis. The results of current study showed that workload was negatively related with the work performance, where social support significantly moderated the negative relationship between workload and performance. The findings of this study have provided new insights on interaction between workload, social support and performance in academia of Pakistan through empirically testing the JD-R theory. This study recommends the proper utilization of personal resources at individual and organizational levels for managing workload and performance related problems in academia of Pakistan.
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