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Article type: Research Article
Authors: Karani, Anushreea; * | Jayswal, Miteshb
Affiliations: [a] ICSSR, affiliated to ‘Department of Business Management’, Sardar Patel University, Vallabh-Vidyanagar, Gujarat, India | [b] ‘Department of Business Management’, Sardar Patel University, Vallabh-Vidyanagar, Gujarat, India
Correspondence: [*] Address for correspondence: Anushree Karani, Post-Doctoral Research Fellow, ICSSR-MHRD, Affiliating Institution: G.H. Patel Postgraduate Institute of Business Management, Sardar Patel University, Vallabh-Vidyanagar, Gujarat, India. E-mail: [email protected].
Abstract: BACKGROUND:The Information Technology and Information Technology Enabled Services (IT and ITES) industry has been the backbone of the Indian economy. The sector is characterized by long working hours, strict deadlines, night shift, constant usage of computers, etc. Hence, the industry and nature of the job are influencing the psychological risk factors of the employees. PURPOSE:The purpose of this paper is to explore the psychological risk factors (job stressors) of technocrat millennials and critically analyze them from the socio-demographic perspective. METHODS:A single cross-sectional study with snowball sampling was collected from 300 technocrat millennials in Ahmedabad city (India). Job stressors are examined as psychological risk factors. MANOVA and independent-sample t-test has been put to use for establishing the relationship between psychological risk factors and socio-demographic variables. RESULTS:The study highlighted that the experience, current position, size of family, number of children, gender, and family type had an impact on psychological risk factors of technocrat millennials. CONCLUSIONS:The study contributes to the literature on the psychological risk factors and its association with demographic variables, and specifically in Ahmedabad city (India). Income did not have an impact on psychological risk factor; whereas education was the only demographic variable affecting the responsibility for persons. The experience influenced the role overload, role ambiguity, poor peer relations, and intrinsic impoverishment. The study explained each socio-demographic variable’s impact on 12 psychological risk factors separately. The result of the paper will give insight to HR managers in the recruitment and selection of employees.
Keywords: Information technology & information technology enabled services industry, stressors, Indian context, descriptive research
DOI: 10.3233/WOR-213531
Journal: Work, vol. 69, no. 3, pp. 1007-1017, 2021
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