Impact of Micromanagement on Organizational Commitment Through Mediating Role of Job Stress, Moderating Effect of Hostile Attribution Bias
Keywords:
Micromanagement Organizational Commitment Job stress Hostile attribution biasAbstract
This study examines Micromanagement behavior and its effect on organizational commitment and Job stress, as well as the moderating effect of Hostile attribution bias. Data were collected from sample size research by Krejcie and Morgan (1970), N:360 and S:186 respondents from two factories under the owner's manager in Mashhad-Iran. Data was
collected and analyzed using (Smart PLS software) to test the measurement and substantive models. Results indicate that
Micromanagement is a Significant Negative related to organizational commitment, and Micromanagement is a Significant Positive for job stress. Job stress Negatively mediates between Micromanagement and organizational commitment; therefore, Hostile attribution Bias can Moderate the relationship between job stress and organizational commitment. We specifically investigated the negative behavior of Micromanagement in the Mashhad industry scope. A manager with
micromanaging skills must understand and accept the impact of his behavior and communicate effectively. This is the first examination of the role of Hostile attribution Bias as a Moderator in the relationship between Job stress and organizational commitment related to micromanaging, are in Iran. In this country, Monitoring tools are favorite by Managers.
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
Copyright (c) 2024 International Journal of Business and Management Sciences
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.