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Authors
Advisor(s)
Abstract(s)
The purpose of this paper is to explore the differences between employees working in
family and non-family firms regarding their emotion regulation and job satisfaction levels. Moreover,
focusing on family firms, we assess the relationship between the employees’ emotion regulation and
job satisfaction levels. The empirical evidence is provided by a sample of 178 Portuguese employees,
80 employees of family firms, and 98 non-family firms’ employees, who responded to a questionnaire
that included emotion regulation and job satisfaction measures. All respondents work in smalland
medium-sized private companies. Although the results do not confirm the first hypothesis,
suggesting that employees working on family firms show higher levels of emotion regulation than
those of non-family companies, the idea that employees of family companies show higher levels of job
satisfaction than employees of non-family companies is confirmed (i.e., Hypothesis 2). Moreover, the
results also support the third hypothesis, confirming that emotion regulation levels have a significant
and positive relationship with the job satisfaction levels of employees working in family firms. This
paper makes several contributions to the research literature by addressing two organizational aspects
still under-addressed in the comparison between family and non-family firms, while pursuing to offer
insights on the relationship between the emotion regulation and job satisfaction levels of employees
working in family firms.
Description
Keywords
Family business Emotion regulation Job satisfaction
Citation
Pimentel, D., & Pereira, A. (2022). Emotion regulation and job satisfaction levels of employees working in family and non-family firms. Administrative Sciences (2076-3387), 12(3), 114. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci12030114
Publisher
MDPI