TY - JOUR
T1 - The Compensatory Effect of Belonging to Different Organizational Levels on Job Satisfaction
AU - Elster, Andrey
AU - Sagiv, Lilach
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025.
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Belonging to the workplace is pivotal for employees’ job satisfaction. In the current research, we aim to show how different organizational levels serve as alternative sources of belonging, compensating one for the other in their contribution to job satisfaction. The results of two field studies of administrative employees (Study 1, n = 620) and faculty members (Study 2, n = 624) in a public university revealed the proposed compensatory mechanism. As hypothesized, the lower belonging members experienced in their immediate work context, the more strongly belonging to the organization as a whole predicted their job satisfaction, and vice versa. The lower belonging to the organization they experienced, the more strongly belonging to the immediate context predicted their job satisfaction. The findings were consistent when belonging to the immediate context was assessed as an individual (Studies 1–2) as well as a collectively-shared experience in one’s environment (Study 2). These results illustrate the interplay between organizational levels, suggesting important theoretical and practical implications.
AB - Belonging to the workplace is pivotal for employees’ job satisfaction. In the current research, we aim to show how different organizational levels serve as alternative sources of belonging, compensating one for the other in their contribution to job satisfaction. The results of two field studies of administrative employees (Study 1, n = 620) and faculty members (Study 2, n = 624) in a public university revealed the proposed compensatory mechanism. As hypothesized, the lower belonging members experienced in their immediate work context, the more strongly belonging to the organization as a whole predicted their job satisfaction, and vice versa. The lower belonging to the organization they experienced, the more strongly belonging to the immediate context predicted their job satisfaction. The findings were consistent when belonging to the immediate context was assessed as an individual (Studies 1–2) as well as a collectively-shared experience in one’s environment (Study 2). These results illustrate the interplay between organizational levels, suggesting important theoretical and practical implications.
KW - belonging
KW - compensatory mechanism
KW - group processes
KW - job satisfaction
KW - multilevel approach
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=105006995820&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/10596011251344752
DO - 10.1177/10596011251344752
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AN - SCOPUS:105006995820
SN - 1059-6011
JO - Group and Organization Management
JF - Group and Organization Management
M1 - 10596011251344752
ER -