De motivatie en prestatie van werkverslaafde, bevlogen en opgebrande werknemers

Publication date

2012-11

Authors

Nijhuis, Nahymja
van Beek, I.ISNI 0000000419439160
Taris, ToonORCID 0000-0003-1946-3307ISNI 0000000042649423
Schaufeli, W.B.ORCID 0000-0002-6070-7150ISNI 0000000081817266

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article
Open Access logo

License

Abstract

The motivation and performance of workaholic, engaged, and burned-out workers Nahymja Nijhuis, Ilona van Beek, Toon Taris & Wilmar Schaufeli, Gedrag & Organisatie, volume 25, November 2012, nr. 4, pp. 325-346. Based on Deci and Ryan's Self-Determination Theory, the present study investigated the work motivation of workaholic, work engaged, and burned-out employees. Furthermore, it investigated how these employees perform. Data were collected among employees of a Dutch bank (N = 680). Using Structural Equation Modeling, the present study showed that workaholism is primarily associated with introjected motivational regulation, work engagement is primarily associated with intrinsic regulation, and burnout is primarily associated with amotivation. Furthermore, a positive relation was observed between work engagement and extra-role performance and a negative relation between burnout and in-role performance. The present study provides insight into the motivational regulation of workaholic, work engaged, and burned-out employees, suggests that work engagement and burn-out are related to job performance, underlines the usefulness of the Self-Determination Theory for the field of Work and Organizational Psychology, and offers practical suggestions for reducing workaholism and burnout and promoting work engagement.

Keywords

Self-Determination Theory, Burnout, Motivation, Performance, Work engagement, Workaholism, Social Psychology, Organizational Behavior and Human Resource Management, Strategy and Management

Citation

Nijhuis, N, van Beek, I, Taris, T & Schaufeli, W 2012, 'De motivatie en prestatie van werkverslaafde, bevlogen en opgebrande werknemers', Gedrag en Organisatie, vol. 25, no. 4, pp. 325-346. https://doi.org/10.5117/2012.025.004.325