The Impact of Perceived Leadership Effectiveness on Job Satisfaction Among Mental Health Practitioners in Nonprofit Organizations

Authors

  • Joey Pham The Chicago School of Professional Psychology
  • Niary Gorjian The Chicago School of Professional Psychology
  • Robert Miller The Chicago School of Professional Psychology
  • Glen Masuda Asian Pacific Family Center

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33423/jop.v24i1.6918

Keywords:

organizational psychology

Abstract

Leadership has been a fascinating research topic for many years and garners substantial interest from many organizations seeking to enhance and maximize human resources. Leadership effectiveness was especially identified as one of the most influential moderator for employee job satisfaction. Three additional components that served as the control variables were: organizational commitment, performance, and occupational burnout. Multiple regression analysis was utilized to explore the impact of their relationship with employee job satisfaction. The results confirmed that an employee’s perception of his or her leader’s effectiveness was paramount to job satisfaction compared to the effects of controlled variables.

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Published

2024-04-26

How to Cite

Pham, J., Gorjian, N., Miller, R., & Masuda, G. (2024). The Impact of Perceived Leadership Effectiveness on Job Satisfaction Among Mental Health Practitioners in Nonprofit Organizations. Journal of Organizational Psychology, 24(1). https://doi.org/10.33423/jop.v24i1.6918

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Section

Articles