Summary information

Study title

Sources of Stress in Sales Management Personnel, 1973-1974

Creator

Thorpe, R. M., University of Bradford, Management Centre

Study number / PID

964 (UKDA)

10.5255/UKDA-SN-964-1 (DOI)

Data access

Restricted

Series

Not available

Abstract

Abstract copyright UK Data Service and data collection copyright owner.The purpose of this study was to determine which factors explain, most fully, the psychological stress reported by middle-level sales executives.Main Topics:Attitudinal/Behavioural Questions Role structure: whether job has written job description/manual of procedures/written instructions/official organisation chart/regular assessment by superior. To what extent job is routine and predictable, whether content has changed in past year, whether change expected, frequency of major problems, frequency of needing fresh knowledge or skills, whether problems are easily solved, whether responsibilities and opportunities for decision-making are clearly laid down, amount of variation in job. Role conflict: whether feels policies and guidelines of job are incompatible, amount of conflict experienced in carrying out job, whether finds difficulty in reconciling needs of customer with needs of organisation, whether job has clear planned goals and objectives. Role ambiguity: knowledge of own responsibilities, whether has to work under vague directives and orders. Job satisfaction: expectations of promotion, amount of security in job, opportunity to demonstrate initiative and make progress, satisfaction with status/authority/accomplishment, expectation of finding a better organisation to work for. Inter-departmental conflict: relationship with other departments. Formalisation: whether decisions can be taken alone, whether staff are checked for rule violations, whether procedures exist to cover all situations, whether job performance is recorded. Centralisation: whether all decisions have to be referred to someone higher up. Routinisation: amount of variety/routinisation in job. Environmental uncertainity: degree of uncertainty concerning firm's market share position/sales volume/ composition of product mix/customers' tastes/competitors' activity/government regulatory activity/customer credit worthiness....
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Methodology

Data collection period

01/05/1973 - 01/06/1974

Country

England

Time dimension

Cross-sectional (one-time) study

Analysis unit

Individuals
Groups
Institutions/organisations
Subnational
Businessmen
Employees

Universe

Sales executives in medium and large firms in Yorkshire and the North Midlands

Sampling procedure

Simple random sample

Kind of data

Not available

Data collection mode

Face-to-face interview
Self-completion

Access

Publisher

UK Data Service

Publication year

1980

Terms of data access

The Data Collection is available to UK Data Service registered users subject to the End User Licence Agreement.

Commercial use of the data requires approval from the data owner or their nominee. The UK Data Service will contact you.

Related publications

Not available