1. INVESTIGATING THE MOST IMPORTANT MOTIVATIONAL FACTORS FOR ROMANIAN EMPLOYEES. EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE FROM CATEGORIAL PRINCIPAL COMPONENTS ANALSYIS.
- Author
-
DAVIDESCU, Adriana AnaMaria and ISSA EID, MARJI TANIA
- Subjects
- *
EMPLOYEE motivation , *PRINCIPAL components analysis , *EMPLOYEE psychology , *CAREER development , *RESPONSIBILITY - Abstract
The paper aims to determine empirically the main motivational factors of Romanian employees using the categorical principal components analysis and to analyze these factors using empirical data from a survey of 300 employees in 2013. The study sought to describe the ranked importance of the following ten motivating factors: (a) job stability, (b) a proper potential salary, (c) opportunities promotion, (d) an attractive benefit package (e) an appropriate logistic package, (f) premiums and bonuses, (g) job attractiveness, (h) job authority, responsibility and autonomy, (i) professional development and (j) job comfort. Analyzing the mean scores of the ten motivational factors, it was pointed out that the factor "job attractiveness " was the most motivating factor for Romanian employees, while "attractive benefit package " was the least motivating aspect, stating that money should not be overestimated as motivating factor. The empirical results of categorical principal component analysis revealed the existence of two components that recover about 94% from the variance of original motivational factors. On the first dimension, all variables have moderate (positive) component loadings, being correlated mainly with job responsibility, professional development, job comfort and job attractiveness. The second dimension is positively correlated mainly with the quantified variables attractive benefit package and promotion. The results of the study highlighted that the money is important, but is not everything in terms of work motivation, suggesting that managers need to focus more on non-financial incentives to better motivate employees. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015