{"title":"Is there more to compensation than money? The empirical study of dimensionality of the total rewards model and its implications for entrepreneurship","authors":"Konrad Kulikowski, Piotr Sedlak","doi":"10.15678/eber.2023.110305","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Objective: We aim to verify the dimensionality of the total rewards (TR) model, the idea that employees’ compensations do not consist only of money but encompass all financial and non-financial values that employees received from their work. Research Design & Methods: Drawing inspirations from three influential TR models and using data from a large multi-occupational online survey, we conducted exploratory factor analysis (FA) ( n = 3022) to test TR dimensionality and structural equation modelling (SEM) ( n = 2641) to test TR validity. Findings: The FA results revealed the two-dimensional structure of TR as best fitting to data, showing financial (tangible) and non-financial (intangible) rewards as two distinct aspects of compensation. The SEM analysis showed specific patterns of associations for each TR dimension with employee loyalty, motivation, intention to quit, and organizational performance. Implications & Recommendations: The success of an entrepreneurial firm might depend not only on innovation in products and services but also on innovative compensation that allows for gaining competitive advantages. The TR model might be used to address these challenges and build a competitive workforce by at-tracting talented employees from the labour market even under financial resources scarcity. Contribution & Value Added: By showing the role of intangible rewards in compensations, our findings might inspire further entrepreneurial research and provide entrepreneurial firms with the conceptual device to de-sign compensation systems that accumulate human capital not only by money but also via intangible rewards.","PeriodicalId":11726,"journal":{"name":"Entrepreneurial Business and Economics Review","volume":"112 12 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":2.6000,"publicationDate":"2023-01-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Entrepreneurial Business and Economics Review","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.15678/eber.2023.110305","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"ECONOMICS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective: We aim to verify the dimensionality of the total rewards (TR) model, the idea that employees’ compensations do not consist only of money but encompass all financial and non-financial values that employees received from their work. Research Design & Methods: Drawing inspirations from three influential TR models and using data from a large multi-occupational online survey, we conducted exploratory factor analysis (FA) ( n = 3022) to test TR dimensionality and structural equation modelling (SEM) ( n = 2641) to test TR validity. Findings: The FA results revealed the two-dimensional structure of TR as best fitting to data, showing financial (tangible) and non-financial (intangible) rewards as two distinct aspects of compensation. The SEM analysis showed specific patterns of associations for each TR dimension with employee loyalty, motivation, intention to quit, and organizational performance. Implications & Recommendations: The success of an entrepreneurial firm might depend not only on innovation in products and services but also on innovative compensation that allows for gaining competitive advantages. The TR model might be used to address these challenges and build a competitive workforce by at-tracting talented employees from the labour market even under financial resources scarcity. Contribution & Value Added: By showing the role of intangible rewards in compensations, our findings might inspire further entrepreneurial research and provide entrepreneurial firms with the conceptual device to de-sign compensation systems that accumulate human capital not only by money but also via intangible rewards.
期刊介绍:
Entrepreneurial Business and Economics Review (EBER), as multi-disciplinary and multi-contextual journal, is dedicated to serve as a broad and unified platform for revealing and spreading economics and management research focused on entrepreneurship, individual entrepreneurs as well as particular entrepreneurial aspects of business. It attempts to link theory and practice in different sections of economics and management by publishing various types of articles, including research papers, conceptual papers and literature reviews. Our geographical scope of interests include Central and Eastern Europe and emerging markets, however we also welcome articles beyond this scope. The Journal accept the articles from the following fields: -Entrepreneurship and Business Studies (in particular entrepreneurship and innovation, strategic entrepreneurship, corporate entrepreneurship, entrepreneurship methodology, new trends in HRM and HRD as well as organizational behaviour, entrepreneurial management, entrepreneurial business, management methodology, modern trends in business studies and organization theory, policies promoting entrepreneurship, innovation, R&D and SMEs, education for entrepreneurship), -International Business and Global Entrepreneurship (especially international entrepreneurship, European business, and new trends in international business, IB methodology), -International Economics and Applied Economics (in particular the role of entrepreneurship and the entrepreneur in economics, international economics including the economics of the European Union and emerging markets, as well as Europeanization, new trends in economics, economics methodology).