Abstract
This study investigates how three organizational antecedents – environment, work culture, and job design – jointly shape employees’ thriving at work. We propose that these factors create a supportive ecosystem that fosters both vitality and learning. Using a survey of 316 employees in the ICT industry in North Macedonia, we conducted multiple linear regression analyses to assess the predictive power of environment, work culture, and job design on thriving at work. Results reveal that the environmental factors emerged as the strongest predictor, followed by job design and work culture. Altogether, these factors accounted for a substantial portion of the variability in thriving at work, underscoring their collective importance for employee well-being and development. From a practical standpoint, these findings suggest that enhancing physical, social, and structural job dimensions can substantially boost employees’ vitality and learning. For managers and human resource professionals, the insights encourage a holistic approach by integrating ergonomic practices, cultivating a positive organizational culture, and thoughtfully designing job roles to promote thriving in contemporary, often remote, work settings.
Original language | English |
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Journal | DIEM: Dubrovnik International Economic Meeting |
Volume | 11 |
Issue number | 1 |
Publication status | Accepted/In press - 23 May 2025 |
Event | 7th Dubrovnik International Economic Meeting DIEM 2025 : Resilience in times of global economic uncertainty - challenges and opportunities - Dubrovnik University, Dubrovnik, Croatia Duration: 28 May 2025 → 30 May 2025 |
Keywords
- Thriving at work
- Work culture
- job design