Rethinking ethical climate: conjoint elevation of life satisfaction and customer-orientation through a stronger inner life

PurposeIn this study, to empirically test the relationship between ethical organizational climate, inner life (IL) and life satisfaction (LS) of employees, a field study was conducted on white-collar personnel working in the service sector in the Istanbul region. The main purpose was to extract an a...

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Published in:JOURNAL OF ORGANIZATIONAL CHANGE MANAGEMENT
Main Authors: Baykal, Elif; Bhatti, Omar; Irfan, Muhammad; Zakaria, Nor Balkish
Format: Article; Early Access
Language:English
Published: EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD 2024
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001207334300001
author Baykal
Elif; Bhatti
Omar; Irfan
Muhammad; Zakaria
Nor Balkish
spellingShingle Baykal
Elif; Bhatti
Omar; Irfan
Muhammad; Zakaria
Nor Balkish
Rethinking ethical climate: conjoint elevation of life satisfaction and customer-orientation through a stronger inner life
Business & Economics
author_facet Baykal
Elif; Bhatti
Omar; Irfan
Muhammad; Zakaria
Nor Balkish
author_sort Baykal
spelling Baykal, Elif; Bhatti, Omar; Irfan, Muhammad; Zakaria, Nor Balkish
Rethinking ethical climate: conjoint elevation of life satisfaction and customer-orientation through a stronger inner life
JOURNAL OF ORGANIZATIONAL CHANGE MANAGEMENT
English
Article; Early Access
PurposeIn this study, to empirically test the relationship between ethical organizational climate, inner life (IL) and life satisfaction (LS) of employees, a field study was conducted on white-collar personnel working in the service sector in the Istanbul region. The main purpose was to extract an approach that could be applied to simultaneously boost LS and customer orientation for effective service delivery by organizations.Design/methodology/approachA two-wave time-lagged survey design was used to collect the data over a period of three months. Two sets of self-administrated survey questionnaires were developed for both waves, containing the details of the study and items for measuring variables. The questionnaires were developed in such a manner that the anonymity of the respondents and ethical considerations remained intact. In the first wave, data were collected for two variables, i.e. organizational ethical climate and IL. The measurement scale for organizational ethical climate was adapted from the study of DeBode et al. (2013) and for IL from the study of Fry et al. (2017). In the second wave, data on the remaining two variables (LS and organizational customer orientation) were collected. Direct effects and indirect effects in the hypotheses were tested by structural equation modeling (SEM).FindingsThis study has found that the organizational ethical climate strengthens the inner lives of employees, which is vital for the organizations from two angles: one, strong IL of an employee enhances his/her own LS and two, stronger IL accentuates customer orientation.Research limitations/implicationsThe fact that the context of this study is limited to Turkey and that the participants are selected from among white-collar personnel working in the service sector reduces the representativeness of the research result. In this sense, in the next stages, the model of the research can be retested in different industries or cross-cultural studies can be designed by comparing the study results with samples from different geographies, so that the validity of these relations for different cultures can be seen.Practical implicationsThe implications of this study revealed that employees will enjoy their lives more when authorities in organizations adopt organizational policies supporting the inner lives of employees, feel respect for their private areas and make the organizational climate more ethical. Hence, with practices such as workplace spirituality or spiritual leadership that support the inner lives of employees, the motivation and satisfaction of employees can be increased.Social implicationsThis study revealed that inner life strength makes people comparative more ethical in their dealings, which gives them a sense of achievement and enhances work meaningfulness, boosting LS and customer-orientation. The findings of this study are vital for leaders, as they can achieve a conjoint elevation of the LS of their employees and enhance customer orientation for higher organizational performance.Originality/valueThis study is original in emphasizing the positive effect of spiritually powerful inner-life customer-orientedness in employees with empirical proof.
EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
0953-4814
1758-7816
2024


10.1108/JOCM-06-2023-0262
Business & Economics

WOS:001207334300001
https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001207334300001
title Rethinking ethical climate: conjoint elevation of life satisfaction and customer-orientation through a stronger inner life
title_short Rethinking ethical climate: conjoint elevation of life satisfaction and customer-orientation through a stronger inner life
title_full Rethinking ethical climate: conjoint elevation of life satisfaction and customer-orientation through a stronger inner life
title_fullStr Rethinking ethical climate: conjoint elevation of life satisfaction and customer-orientation through a stronger inner life
title_full_unstemmed Rethinking ethical climate: conjoint elevation of life satisfaction and customer-orientation through a stronger inner life
title_sort Rethinking ethical climate: conjoint elevation of life satisfaction and customer-orientation through a stronger inner life
container_title JOURNAL OF ORGANIZATIONAL CHANGE MANAGEMENT
language English
format Article; Early Access
description PurposeIn this study, to empirically test the relationship between ethical organizational climate, inner life (IL) and life satisfaction (LS) of employees, a field study was conducted on white-collar personnel working in the service sector in the Istanbul region. The main purpose was to extract an approach that could be applied to simultaneously boost LS and customer orientation for effective service delivery by organizations.Design/methodology/approachA two-wave time-lagged survey design was used to collect the data over a period of three months. Two sets of self-administrated survey questionnaires were developed for both waves, containing the details of the study and items for measuring variables. The questionnaires were developed in such a manner that the anonymity of the respondents and ethical considerations remained intact. In the first wave, data were collected for two variables, i.e. organizational ethical climate and IL. The measurement scale for organizational ethical climate was adapted from the study of DeBode et al. (2013) and for IL from the study of Fry et al. (2017). In the second wave, data on the remaining two variables (LS and organizational customer orientation) were collected. Direct effects and indirect effects in the hypotheses were tested by structural equation modeling (SEM).FindingsThis study has found that the organizational ethical climate strengthens the inner lives of employees, which is vital for the organizations from two angles: one, strong IL of an employee enhances his/her own LS and two, stronger IL accentuates customer orientation.Research limitations/implicationsThe fact that the context of this study is limited to Turkey and that the participants are selected from among white-collar personnel working in the service sector reduces the representativeness of the research result. In this sense, in the next stages, the model of the research can be retested in different industries or cross-cultural studies can be designed by comparing the study results with samples from different geographies, so that the validity of these relations for different cultures can be seen.Practical implicationsThe implications of this study revealed that employees will enjoy their lives more when authorities in organizations adopt organizational policies supporting the inner lives of employees, feel respect for their private areas and make the organizational climate more ethical. Hence, with practices such as workplace spirituality or spiritual leadership that support the inner lives of employees, the motivation and satisfaction of employees can be increased.Social implicationsThis study revealed that inner life strength makes people comparative more ethical in their dealings, which gives them a sense of achievement and enhances work meaningfulness, boosting LS and customer-orientation. The findings of this study are vital for leaders, as they can achieve a conjoint elevation of the LS of their employees and enhance customer orientation for higher organizational performance.Originality/valueThis study is original in emphasizing the positive effect of spiritually powerful inner-life customer-orientedness in employees with empirical proof.
publisher EMERALD GROUP PUBLISHING LTD
issn 0953-4814
1758-7816
publishDate 2024
container_volume
container_issue
doi_str_mv 10.1108/JOCM-06-2023-0262
topic Business & Economics
topic_facet Business & Economics
accesstype
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url https://www-webofscience-com.uitm.idm.oclc.org/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:001207334300001
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