Abstract
This study used a model to determine the combined effect of psychological resources, self-leadership strategies, and job embeddedness on work engagement for employees in the banking sector. A descriptive quantitative research framework was adopted; data were collected from a sample of 303 banking sector employees. The results indicated that self-leadership strategies influence work engagement through psychological resources and job embeddedness. The three constructs combined explained 70.3% of variance in work engagement. Psychological resources have the strongest direct influence on work engagement, and self-leadership is a strong determinant of the psychological resources and moderate determinant of job embeddedness. The study concluded that implementing self-leadership strategies, encouraging the practice of psychological capital, and ensuring strong links and fit (job embeddedness) would aid in enhancing an engaged workforce. The results indicate that accumulating and expanding internal and job resources from psychological capital, self-leadership, and job embeddedness significantly influence work engagement and buffer the effects of job demands.
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