Fostering work engagement through dedication : case Ramboll
Kuntsi, Valtteri (2014)
Kuntsi, Valtteri
2014
Yrityksen johtaminen - Management and Organization
Johtamiskorkeakoulu - School of Management
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Hyväksymispäivämäärä
2014-06-25
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:uta-201407011947
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:uta-201407011947
Tiivistelmä
The present case study had two main objectives: the first objective was to determine what the prerequisites of work engagement are among the case company's consultants and the second objective was to determine how the supervisors of these consultants foster work engagement through their actions. The case company was Ramboll Finland Ltd. which is a part of an international corporation called Ramboll Group. The company offers engineering, design, and consultancy services relating to buildings, transport, environment, energy, oil, gas, and management consulting.
Work engagement can be defined as a positive and fulfilling work-related state of mind that is characterized by vigor, dedication and absorption. In this study, dedication was presumed to be the prerequisite of vigor and absorption and thus the main component of work engagement. A dedicated employee is strongly involved in his or her work and experiences a sense of significance, enthusiasm, inspiration, pride, and challenge. The research data were collected through semi-structured interviews with five consultants and five supervisors working in the case company's office in Tampere. The case company's job satisfaction inquiry from the year 2012 was also utilized as an additional source of information. The research data were analyzed via content analysis and approached from a fact point of view.
The findings of the study indicate that the case company's consultants are dedicated and thus engaged in their work. The dedication enhancing themes among the consultants are appreciation, supervisor's work support, social relationships and cooperation, supervisor's genuine interest and caring, innovative activities and thoughts, success, trust, content and quantity of tasks, consultant's personal characteristics, supervisor's own example, significance of tasks, challenging work, and employer. Altogether the findings are in line with previous work engagement studies and hence supported by them.
In order to utilize the findings of this study, the case company should next disseminate them to all of its supervisors in Finland so that they are able to incorporate them into their actions. Although challenges and resources seem to be in good balance at the company, it is important that the supervisors try to identify those challenges that are disabling rather than enabling and buffer their subordinates from these job demands. Additionally, the supervisors should take care that no one ends up being "over-engaged" or "over-dedicated" because it may lead to an imbalance between professional and private life and thus cause detrimental consequences to the individual and company. Taking the different needs and personalities of the consultants into account along with the limited resources supervisors have at their command, this study finds that fostering work engagement through dedication is an ongoing process which requires constant balancing from the case company's supervisors.
Work engagement can be defined as a positive and fulfilling work-related state of mind that is characterized by vigor, dedication and absorption. In this study, dedication was presumed to be the prerequisite of vigor and absorption and thus the main component of work engagement. A dedicated employee is strongly involved in his or her work and experiences a sense of significance, enthusiasm, inspiration, pride, and challenge. The research data were collected through semi-structured interviews with five consultants and five supervisors working in the case company's office in Tampere. The case company's job satisfaction inquiry from the year 2012 was also utilized as an additional source of information. The research data were analyzed via content analysis and approached from a fact point of view.
The findings of the study indicate that the case company's consultants are dedicated and thus engaged in their work. The dedication enhancing themes among the consultants are appreciation, supervisor's work support, social relationships and cooperation, supervisor's genuine interest and caring, innovative activities and thoughts, success, trust, content and quantity of tasks, consultant's personal characteristics, supervisor's own example, significance of tasks, challenging work, and employer. Altogether the findings are in line with previous work engagement studies and hence supported by them.
In order to utilize the findings of this study, the case company should next disseminate them to all of its supervisors in Finland so that they are able to incorporate them into their actions. Although challenges and resources seem to be in good balance at the company, it is important that the supervisors try to identify those challenges that are disabling rather than enabling and buffer their subordinates from these job demands. Additionally, the supervisors should take care that no one ends up being "over-engaged" or "over-dedicated" because it may lead to an imbalance between professional and private life and thus cause detrimental consequences to the individual and company. Taking the different needs and personalities of the consultants into account along with the limited resources supervisors have at their command, this study finds that fostering work engagement through dedication is an ongoing process which requires constant balancing from the case company's supervisors.