ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Work-family conflict and career development on performance of married women employeesCase of Bank Employees, Indonesia

Ria Mardiana Yusuf    
Hasnidar Hasnidar    

Resumen

This research aims to analyze the direct and indirect effect of work-family conflict on performance and career development of married women bank employees. Work-family conflict is measured by using the indicator of work affect to family and family affect to work while performance is measured using indicators assessments: quality of work,  punctuality, attitude, and effectiveness. Career development is measured by indicators of education, training, reward and punishment, family support, and rotation. All assessment is based on self-evaluations.   Purposive sampling is used of 38 married women employees working in the state-owned bank, and using path analysis of PLS (partial least square) as a statistical analysis measurement combining with qualitative analysis to describe the results of statistical analysis for each independent variable and its effects on the dependent variable. The result of this study showed that work-family conflict has a negative effect on performance and career development. But performance has an insignificant effect on career development.   

 Artículos similares

       
 
I. Raisal, Mohamed Hussain Ali    

 
Yogawati Yuli Widyarini, Muafi Muafi     Pág. 177 - 188

 
Arelia Eydis Gudmundsdottir, Inga Minelgaite, Svala Gudmundsdottir, Christopher R Leupold, Thelma Kristín Snorradóttir     Pág. 73 - 87
Research Question: This study examines the attitudes of 106 of Iceland?s highest-level public officials towards their current work conditions and the constraints around them. Motivation: Rapidly changing internal and external environments create pre... ver más
Revista: Management

 
Muhammad Iqbal Khan,Syed Haider Ali Shah,Aftab Haider,Shahab Aziz,Munaza Kazmi     Pág. 42 - 50
Organizations compete in today?s world through its intangible assets which literature describe as human capital. Technology can be replaced but human capital cannot be replaced completely ever. Employee retention is center of attention for all the organi... ver más

 
Katarina Katja Mihelic, Metka Tekavcic    
This paper discusses the work-family conflict that forms the central construct of the work-family literature, and is defined as the experience of mutually incompatible pressures that stem from work and family domains. Juggling myriad responsibilities wit... ver más