Dual Career Couple
Purbudi Wahyuni, Pribadi Widyatmojo
Universitas Pembangunan Nasional Veteran Yogyakarta
Keywords: Career, Employee, Family Life
Abstract: This study examined the relationship between a couple of career and family life. The double role of female
worker gots complex problems, that produces organization and the female worker challenges, because of the
role function of the woman (Parasuraman dan Greenhaus, 1992). The balance of workplace support and
family support composes job satisfaction, family satisfaction, and declining job stress. That spouses realize
that supporting each other is capable of success achieved in the workplace. This phenomenon enhances this
research, especially about why employees have a readiness to support their peers in the workplace, and the
influences on well-being on the dual-career couple. Population research is all dual career-couples or a
married couple of employees in Private Hospital because these dual career-couples need to build their
characteristics of Hospital employees. The number of this research respondent is 186 employees. This is a
lifestyle for many women, as the larger female worker opportunity dan, the larger female education
opportunity. The analysis result shows that intergroup knowledge does not influence well-being in the
workplace, and intergroup knowledge influence positive and significant toward peer support. The influence
of intergroup knowledge toward well-being is negative and not significant.
1 INTRODUCTION
Many couples act as dual-career-couple, which
means determine both husband and wife are working
outside. This dual-career-couple grows up since the
number of female workers growing up. This is a
lifestyle for many women, as the larger female
worker opportunity dan, the larger female education
opportunity.
Female workers were asked to be professional
workers and asked to be committed as couples of
life, so that, the female workers are capable of
actualizing themselves, which was indicated by their
achievement in the workplace and family well-
being.
The double role of female worker gots complex
problems, that produces organization and the female
worker challenges, because of the role function of
the woman (Parasuraman dan Greenhaus, 1992).
The influences of interaction and accumulated
problems in the family and workplace, have to be
resolved to prevent from serious job stress and
career. Casio (2003) stated that one of many ways of
reducing job stress is that the female workers have to
manage their time as flexible as possible without
sacrificing their commitment to the workplace and
family. Sekaran (1985) stated that the success of the
double role management depends on social support.
Greenhaus dan Parasuraman (1992) identified that
social support reduced stressor on the strategic
human resources, in different domains of work and
family. Family support, especially husband support
or wife support, called spouse support, meanwhile
workplace support called the organization to
support.
The balance of workplace support and family
support composes job satisfaction, family
satisfaction, and declining job stress. This research is
done by Wahyuni (2010) to find out that spouses
realize of supporting each other is capable of success
achieved in the workplace. Organization support is
workplace support that comes from the
superintendent or supervisor directly, peer support,
and co-worker support. Superintendent support has a
significant influence on well-being, which means
the fitness of job satisfaction and family satisfaction.
Higgin and Duxbury (1992) stated that well-being
consists of job satisfaction and, family satisfaction
which are components of which is a component of
work-life quality measurement.
412
Wahyuni, P. and Widyatmojo, P.
Dual Career Couple.
DOI: 10.5220/0009959104120423
In Proceedings of the International Conference of Business, Economy, Entrepreneurship and Management (ICBEEM 2019), pages 412-423
ISBN: 978-989-758-471-8
Copyright
c
2020 by SCITEPRESS Science and Technology Publications, Lda. All rights reserved
The result of Holzbach (1978), Cobb's (1976,
1980) research, and Wahyuni (2009) research, stated
that organizational support is simply peered support,
which is the friend's capability of making
coordination to switch with each other in case of
unplanned special family urgent. This support is
capable of improving work motivation, what more
helping to solve the work problems. That support
produces job satisfaction. The next Wahyuni (2010)
research found that spouse support did not determine
job satisfaction in the workplace, but it determined
the family decisions. Meanwhile, the organizational
support (that comes from the superintendent,
coworker, and subordinate) gives positive signs of
job satisfaction. But does not influence on family
satisfaction. Accordance with the goodness of fit
that social support, especially spouse support and
organizational support variables, have a significant
influence on well-being that comes from family
satisfaction and job satisfaction. But, the social
support variable is indicating a moderating variable
of the influence of the stressor and well-being
variable, but as an independent variable, it has a
direct impact on the well-being variable.
Peer support in the workplace is measured by the
perception of the context of social workplace
support. The context refers to the social support
theory as a way of comprehending a friend's support
from each other in the workplace. Albrecht and
Adelman (1987), stated that a friend's support came
from mutually dynamic interactions, enhanced
attitude, beliefs, emotion, and positive behaviors.
The first research about peer support from
workplace friend is conducted by Balk (1969) that
stated that the more complex work, the more needs
of peer support.
House (1981, 1985) stated that peer support is a
facility or a way to ease the job implementation or
task support, and enhance the cooperative readiness,
and willingness to advice and guidance in to solve
the problem. Keup (2004), Graen and Uhl-Bien
(1995), Jacob (1970), Kram dan Isabella (1985),
Glesspen (1997), Mc. Evoy and Buller (1987),
Sherony and Green (2002) stated that the higher the
relationship between workplace friend, the higher
peer support needed psychologically and
physiologically what more in career development.
Wahyuni research (2009) stated that intergroup
knowledge and information sharing are antecedents
of peer support psychologically and not
physiologically are moderated by; work
environment, and interaction tenure resulted from
improvement capability expectation each other.
Meanwhile, Inman (2001) stated that diversity
did not influence job satisfaction if the diversity is
not completed with the close relationship between
workplace friend, and positively influenced toward
job satisfaction, especially concerning job
satisfaction on compensation and promotion.
Randolph dan Blencoe (1983) stated that the higher
the knowledge capability level of a peer, the more
positive peer support toward job satisfaction and
teamwork and personally. Huselid (1995) found that
the high-involvement strategy of autonomy has
influenced work environment change without higher
management initiation. The strategy influenced job
satisfaction, and then it influences positively on a
commitment to work and organization performance.
Meanwhile, Rahab (2010), in the literature review,
revealed that the readiness to share knowledge and
experience with each other between peers in the
workplace influenced the improvement of
organizational capability. This information sharing
between peers in the workplace needed the positive
opportunity of critics, ideas, comment expression by
the teamwork member. It means every member of
the teamwork has the same opportunity to express
all problems, difficulties, ideas to improve the
organization's productivity and job satisfaction.
Many types of researches show that there are
debates about behavior that produces peer support in
the workplace, what more dual-career couple toward
well-being that produces job satisfaction and family
satisfaction. Those research observe employees in
the individualism philosophy country. Schaubroeck
and Lam (2002) stated that there are workplace peer
support in the collectivism philosophy country and
those peer support in the individualism philosophy
country. People from individualism countries before
the individual need fulfillment, so that little bit has
paid attention to their peers in the workplace, then in
the collectivism country. Vice versa, people in the
collectivism country pay more attention to their
peers in the workplace.
This phenomenon enhances this research,
especially about why employees have a readiness to
support their peers in the workplace, and the
influences on well-being on the dual-career couple.
People in the collectivism country, including
Indonesia, married, are an important status of social
life. But this status has consequences of rising
interest conflict; the wife and husband married that
they both work outside. Thereby, the next question
is that if peer support is capable of mediating job
and family satisfaction.
Dual Career Couple
413
2 THEORY
This research is analyzing the peer support variable,
a mediator variable between intergroup knowledge
and information sharing variable toward well-being
that producing job satisfaction in the workplace, and
family satisfaction as a double career couple. Every
married and working outside a couple, are eager to
balance job satisfaction and family satisfaction.
Organization success needs its employees to work
well, and thereby the employees should support the
organization's success optimal. The two interests
(job satisfaction and family satisfaction) are
mutually exclusive to each other sometimes, and the
question is if the two interest is mediated by peer
support, intergroup knowledge, and information
sharing. What more, employees who work in the
organization facing the community directly, such as
employees working in a hospital.
2.1 Intergroup Knowledge and
Information Sharing Influence and
Peer Support
Bacharach et al. (2005) Schaubroeck & Lam (2002),
Ibarra (1997), Thomas (1993), Fried & Tiegs
(1993), Baum, (1991), Kirmeyer (1987), Love
(1981), Cob (1980), O'Reilly III (1977), Blau
(1977), Thomas, Balk (1969) found that Supportive
Relationships such as Intergroup knowledge and
information sharing influence positive and
significant toward peer support, though in the
heterogeneous teamwork. Goldberg (1981) and
Borkenau dan Ostendorf (1988) stated that
intergroup knowledge and various information
strongly determined peer support. There is no
different support between American and
Afroamerican peer support in the workplace.
Someone or some people get high peer support as
long as they are well known as high capability and
education though they are heterogenous teamwork.
Kloeppel (2006) mood and motivation a positive
correlation on peer support, let alone there is
positive information between peer in the workplace
from confidence speaker or peer in the workplace. In
contrast, negative information adds workload.
Wahyuni (2009), in her qualitative research, found
that intergroup knowledge and information sharing
as an antecedent of peer support psychologically and
in psychologists moderated by the work
environment and tenure of interaction with each
other with an expectation of capability and
knowledge improvement. Make (1994), Crary
(1987), DeNisi et al. (1983), Blau (1977) interaction
tenure and collaboration intensity influenced
positively and significant toward peer support.
DeNisi, Randolph, dan Blencoe (1983) stated that
the higher knowledge, the higher peer support, and
influence positively toward job satisfaction
individually or teamwork. Rahab (2010) concluded
that the willingness to share experience and
knowledge between peers in the workplace
influenced the improvement of organizational
capability. He stated that information sharing
between peers by the opportunity of sharing
information, idea, critics, and comments. Thereby,
hypotheses 1a and 1b are formulated as follows.
Hypothesis 1a: intergroup knowledge influence
positively toward peer support.
Hypothesis 1b: information sharing influenced
positively toward peer support.
2.2 Intergroup Knowlegde,
Information Sharing, and
Well-being
Bruning & Seers (2004), Miller (2005), Lepine &
Dyne (2001), Huselid (1995) stated that cognitive
ability /knowledge influenced positively and
significant toward peer support, to help the
peer./altruism, and empathy. Peer support mediates
the influence of Cognitive ability/knowledge and
work experience toward job satisfaction. Holzbach
1978), Cobb (1976, 1980), Wahyuni (2009) stated
that high support relations between the smart peer
and willingness to share information in
heterogeneous ethnic influenced job satisfaction and
commitment. Organizational support, especially
peers support, influenced directly on well-being
without any moderation.
Lilius (2006), Kim (2003), Mc.Cormick (2001),
Bacharach et al. (2000) Ibarra, (1997), Thomas
(1993), Fried & Tiegs (1993). Podsakoff et al.
(2000). Jackson & William (1985), Harkins &
Jackson (1985), DeNisi et al. (1983), Latane (1981)
stated that peer cohesiveness produces peer
significance. Peer support mediates both career
support, peer significance, and increasing self-
confidence and professionalism and increasing peer
health. Therefore, hypothesis 2a and 2b are
formulated as follows:
Hypothesis 2a: intergroup knowledge influence
positively toward well-being.
Hypothesis 2b: information sharing influence
positively toward well-being
Hypothesis 3: Peer Support mediates the Influence
of Intergroup knowledge and Information sharing
on Well-Being
ICBEEM 2019 - International Conference on Business, Economy, Entrepreneurship and Management
414
Social Support is assisting the employee stress
because of the dual-career couple ( Parasuraman et
al., 1992). The research found that there is a
negative relationship between social and well-being,
in which the couple support reduce stress in the
workplace and family stress. Social support is a
moderating variable on the relationship between
stressors and well-being (Suchet dan Barling; 1986).
In the context of social support, people individually
receive good brotherhood in their professionalism
and family life, manifestation in peer support, and
organizational support formally. Informal support
receives from spouse, family, friend, and society.
There are many concepts of social support, such as
by Kahn and Antonucci (1980) defined social
support as an interpersonal transaction that involved
affection, affirmation, and assistance support.
House (1981) proposed that social support as
interpersonal transactions involved in four kinds of
support, such as; emotional, instrumental
informational and judgmental, or evaluative.
DeNisi, Randolph, and Blencoe (1983) stated
that the higher knowledge peer has more positive
peer support, enhance job satisfaction individually
and teamwork. Huselid (1995) found that the high-
involvement strategy resulted in autonomy and
freedom of decision making to respond to
environmental change, without higher management
permission. This strategy has an influence on job
satisfaction, in turn, produced positive commitment
and organizational performance.
Cohen dan Will (1985) proposed four kinds of
organizational support. First, appreciation support.
This support is proposed by giving people that they
are significance individually toward the organization
and their family. This support produces a positive
contribution to their own toward. Second,
informational support. This informational support
helps people define, realize, and problem-solving
capability. Thus information support is indicated by
the information available about the steps of stressor
minimizing. Third, brotherhood support. This
brotherhood support minimizes stress by affiliates
people in social relationship contracts, or by
minimizes the frailness. The third support,
manifested by social activity, pleasure, or recreation.
The fourth is instrumental support that produced in
the availability of the organization facility to reduce
the stress.
Organizational support is supported form the
workplace, comes from a supervisor, peer support,
and co-worker support. A coworker is a close friend
in the workplace, that eager to help each other and
motivate each other (Wahyuni, 2009).
Peer support variable is measured by their
perception of social support each other in the
workplace social, by social support theory and
social exchange theory. Albrecht dan Adelman
(1987) stated that social support theory functions as
a way of comprehending support between friends in
the workplace in the organization. The support
obtained if there are mutually dynamic interactions
among people or employees in the workplace as a
result of positive attitude
, beliefs, emotion, and
behavior. On the other hand, Klein et al. (2004)
stated that social exchange theory explaining the
people's or employee's way of need fulfillment
through profit maximization and cost minimization
in the social relationship.
Balk (1969) stated that people or employe get
more complex of peer support. Latane et al. (1979)
founded a negative conclusion that team
performance decreased by increasing teamwork
members. The conclusion denied by their following
research (Latane, 1981; Wills 1981), with their
statement that teamwork cooperation as a result of
social impact theory. This theory explains that peer
support enhances social conditions absolutely ( e.g.,
people join in a social group to get special status).
House (1981, 1985) expressed that peer support
is a way to production facilities of work or task
support, and functions as the willingness to join
together, to advice, a guide to solve the problem.
Keup (2004), Graen and Uhl-Bien (1995), Jacob
(1970), Kram and Isabella (1985), Glesspen (1997),
Mc. Evoy and Buller (1987), Sherony and Green
(2002) stated that the higher the relationship among
peers, the higher peer support psychologically and in
psychologically enhanced career development.
Wahyuni (2009) stated that intergroup knowledge
and information sharing are peer support
antecedents psychologically and psychologically,
which is moderated by the work environment and
their interaction tenure. Their interaction tenure
especially accompanied by their capability and
knowledge teamwork improvement expectation.
The last interaction produces job satisfaction and
family satisfaction.
Inman (2001) stated that teamwork diversity did
not influence job satisfaction, but influenced the
team cohesiveness, which in turn produced the job
satisfaction, especially job satisfaction on
compensation and promotion. Wahyuni (2009)
founded that team diversity did not moderate peer
support. Bruning and Seers (2004) stated that team
diversity in the organization influenced job
satisfaction negatively, so do Miller (2005).
Dual Career Couple
415
Schaubroeck and Lam (2002) stated that
collectivism communities' behavior tended to work
cooperative voluntarily. In contrast, the
individualism community prefers to work
individually. Thereby, this qualitative and
quantitative research contributes to the
comprehension of peer support and social
enforcement process to manage them.
Task characteristic enhances peer support,
especially the willingness to help each other, such as
social power theory complemented with expectancy
theory. The theory explained that teamwork
members consistently supported each other in
achieving the organization's goals, that producing
job satisfaction in the workplace.
Social support is the information of value and
willingness to cooperate in the workplace. Social
support and cohesiveness are foundations of
interpersonal relationship that produces trust,
openness, and organizational outcome such as job
satisfaction and organizational performance
(Goldhaber et al. ,1978); Hellriegel dan Slocum
(1974); Schnake (1983). Trust and openness
function as control of right and wrong (O’Reilly and
Roberts, 1974).
Egdof's (1996) research treats the antecedent
variable is the personal capability to communicate,
and interpersonal communication that moderated by
temporary income and half benefit influences peer
support. The conclusion expresses that the higher
interpersonal communication and the higher
temporary income influences peer support
significantly.
In the case of organizational downsizing, peer
support relieves the people or employee's tension by
information sharing to get the new job. This
phenomenon is founded by Egdof (1996) and
Randell (1998). Egdof (1996) and Randell (1998)
explained that peer support base on interpersonal
communication and cohesiveness because of the
emotion similarity toward peer existence in the
workplace.
Peer attribution (locus of causality,
controllability, and stability) based on attribution
theory, explained that peer support willingness based
on three factors, including; (1) behavioral
characteristic, which means the willingness to
cooperate in the teamwork that producing peer
support, and outcome, (2) organization condition
enforcing every people or employee cooperate each
other (Smith et al., 1983), (3) responsible behavior
to help each other called altruism (Weiner, 1980a;
1986b; 1986, 1995).
Blau (1977) expressed that peers, information,
and task sharing increased cohesiveness and trust
that increased a sense of helping each other. Crary
(1987), and. Make (1994) founded that interaction
tenure an intensity influenced peer to peer
cohesiveness and performance (Baum, 1991).
Bacharach et al. (2000) stated that peer
cohesiveness enforces people's significance in the
teamwork, and produces dual-career couple
improvement (Ibarra, 1997). Thomas (1993) stated
that brotherhood and peer support improves self-
confidence and professionalism. Pendaat Fried &
Tiegs (1993) stated that peer cohesiveness reduced
stress and improved employee's health take
carelessly. Podsakoff et al
. (2000) expressed that
peer support improved individual and organizational
performance.
Walz and Niehoff (1996) stated that peer support
39% enforced job satisfaction on customer service
efficiency, operation efficiency, with high quality.
The social relationship is trust, taking care of
each other through information and knowledge
sharing (Uzzi, 1996).
Schaubroeck and Lam (2002) compared
Hongkong Bank in the collectivist society with USA
Teller in the individualism society found that
similarity of personality and peer communication
influenced peer support. Burnett's research (2005)
found that personality influenced on peer support,
and found that peer support increased outcome.
Therefore, Bacharach et al. (2005); Baum
(1991); Thomas, (1993); Fried and Tiegs (1993);
Walz and Niehoff (1996); Uzzi (1996); Blau (1977);
Ibarra (1997); Schaubroeck and Lam (2002); and
Burnett (2005) stated that peer support increased
peer cohesiveness, and peer support did not come
from demography similarity, instead of peer
interpersonal relationship and high information
sharing, trust. People or member interaction
improved decision making, promotion.
Well-being is reflected in job satisfaction,
indicated by individual stress. Parasuraman et al.
(1992) stated that work-family domains, job
satisfaction, and family satisfaction were well-being
indicators. Higgins and Duxbury (1992) stated that
job satisfaction is a measurement component of
work-life, and family satisfaction is a measurement
component of family life. Wahyuni (2010) found
that spouse support did not influence job
satisfaction; on the other side, organizational
support influenced job satisfaction positive and
significant. Spouse support influenced family
satisfaction positively, and organizational support
did not influence family satisfaction. Based on the
ICBEEM 2019 - International Conference on Business, Economy, Entrepreneurship and Management
416
goodness of fit conclusion that spouse support and
organizational support influence well-being
significantly. Social support variable does not
moderate the relation between stressor and well-
being; therefore, the hypothesis formulated as
follows:
Hypothesis 4: Peer support mediates the
influence of intergroup knowledge and information
sharing toward job satisfaction and family
satisfaction.
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3 RESEARCHED METHOD
This research uses quantitative design. This research
aim is figuring out the effect of intergroup
knowledge and information sharing toward well-
being (including job satisfaction and family
satisfaction) that is mediated by peer support,
especially for dual-career couples. This research set
is a survey of data collecting techniques, with
married employees individually analysis, to get high
generalization.
Population research is all dual career-couples or
a married couple of employees of Hospital because
these dual career-couples need to build their
characteristics of Hospital employees. The number
of this research respondent is 186 employees.
Collected questionnaire responses are 173 or about
93% response rate 93,01%, and it is good response
rate of survey research in accordance to Hester &
Dickerson (1984) statement that at least five times
items of questionnaire statement, and Sekaran
(2000) statement that at least 10 times research
variables.
3.1 Validity and Reliability
Validity testing is conducted by confirmatory factor
analysis (CFA) with the Nilai loading factor at least
0,50. These loading factors more than 0,5, which
means the instrument of measurement is valid.
Reliability testing conducted by Cronbach’s Alpha.
The research instruments are reliable since the
Cronbach’s Alpha minimum 0,60. The item of
intergroup knowledge and information sharing
loading factor more than 0,5 that mean all item are
valid.
The reliability examination of peer support that
counted from, flexibility, communication, and
cooperative indicators. This examination shows that
these indicators are 0,848. Flexibility indicator
0,848, and communication indicator 0,881.
Cooperative indicator 0,905. Cronbach's alpha more
than 0,6, which means the variables are reliable.
Job satisfaction and family satisfaction CFA analysis
shows that all questionnaire items loading factor
more than 0,5; thereby, all questionnaire items of job
satisfaction and family satisfaction are valid.
Cronbach's alpha reliability of job satisfaction 0,842
and the reliability of family satisfaction 0,822. This
means all questionnaire items of job satisfaction and
family satisfaction are reliable.
3.2 Analysis of Multiple Regression
This multiple regression analysis is conducted by
SPSS version 16.0 for windows.
3.3 Intergroup Knowledge and
Information Sharing Influence
toward Peer Support Analysis
The result of intergroup knowledge and information
sharing toward peer support influence analysis
shown in the 4.5. The result shows that intergroup
knowledge influence positive and significant toward
peer support (β = 0,288; p<0,05). The contribution
of intergroup knowledge determining peer support is
28,80%. The influence of information sharing
toward peer support is significant (β = 0,988;
p<0,05). The contribution of information sharing
determining peer support is 98,80%.
The goodness of fit or contribution of intergroup
knowledge and information sharing determining
peer support is 57,30% ( R
2
= 0,573; p = 0,000) and
simultaneously influences positive and significant
toward peer support. Intergroup knowledge and
information sharing that consists of diligent behavior
have a significant positive influence on peer support
(F = 48.942; p = 0,000). Intergroup knowledge and
information sharing consist of work flexibility that
has a significant positive influence on peer support
as (F = 173.887; p = 0,000). Intergroup knowledge
Dual Career Couple
417
and information sharing consists of communication
has a positive and significant influence on peer
support as (F = 94.329; p = 0,000). Intergroup
knowledge and information sharing consists of
cooperative, has a significant positive influence on
peer support as (F = 25.992; p = 0,000). Thereby,
hypothesis 1 is supported.
3.4 Intergroup Knowledge and
Information Sharing Influence
toward Well-being Analysis
The result of intergroup knowledge and information
sharing influence toward well-being shown in table
4.5. The analysis result shows that intergroup
knowledge does not influence well-being in the
workplace with (β = -0,086; p >0,05), thereby
hypothesis 2a is not supported. Information sharing
information does not influence well-being in the
workplace with (β = 0,178; p > 0,05), thereby
hypothesis 2b is not supported.
3.5 Intergroup Knowledge and
Information Sharing Influence
toward Well-being Analysis
Mediated by Peer Support
Table 4.6. Shows details of the influence of
intergroup knowledge toward well-being. The
influence of intergroup knowledge toward well-
being is negative and not significant (β=-0,086; p =
0,103). The influence of information sharing toward
well-being is positive by not significant with
(β=0,178; p= 0,173). Thereby, the influence of peer
support toward well-being is positive but not
significant, with (β=0,034; p = 0,643). The influence
of intergroup knowledge, information sharing, and
peer support toward well-being are positive but not
significant, with (R
2
= 0,021; p = 0,245).
The analysis of intergroup knowledge and
information sharing influence toward well-being that
mediated by peer support, shows in table 4.6, that
although intergroup knowledge and information
sharing variables influence positive toward peer
support, the regression coefficient is not significant.
Thereby, a causal relationship between peer support
and well-being is not significant. It means peer
support does not mediate the influence of intergroup
knowledge and information sharing toward well-
being, or hypothesis 3 is not supported.
Variable
β
t/
F
R
2
Sig
Constanta 8.425 8.423 0,00
0
Intergroup
knowledge
interaction
toward peer
support
0,288 3.654 0,00
0
Sharing
Informasi
Interaction
toward peer
support
0,988 8.717 0,00
0
Intergroup
knowledge
Interaction
and
Information
Sharing
toward peer
support
109.8
18
0,573
0,00
0)
Intergroup
knowledge
interaction
and
information
Sharing
toward
diligent
behavior
(Y1)
48.942 0,00
0
a
Intergroup
knowledge
and
Information
Sharing
toward
Flexibility
(Y2)
173.887 0,00
0
a
Constanta 8.425 8.423 0,00
0
Intergroup
knowledge
interaction
toward peer
support
0,288 3.654 0,00
0
Intergroup
knowledge
interaction
and
information
Sharing
toward
diligent
behavior
(Y1)
48.942 0,00
0
a
Intergroup
knowledge
173.887 0,00
0
a
ICBEEM 2019 - International Conference on Business, Economy, Entrepreneurship and Management
418
and
Information
Sharing
toward
Flexibility
(Y2)
Intergroup
knowledge
interaction
and
information
Sharing
toward
Communica
tion (Y3)
94.329 0,00
0
a
Intergroup
knowledge a
piece of
information
sharing
Interaction
toward
Cooperative
(Y4)
25.992 0,00
0
a
Intergroup
knowledge
interaction
toward
Well-Being
-0,086
-1,110
0,26
9
Information
Sharing
Interaction
toward
Well-Being
0,178
1,367
0,17
3
Peer support
Interaksi
toward
Well-Being
0,034 0,464 0,64
3
Intergroup
knowledge
interaction
and
Information
sharing and
peer support
toward
Well-Being
1.398 0,021 0,24
5
4 DISCUSSION
The descriptive statistics show that response average
of intergroup knowledge variable (X1) is 4,09, and
average response of information sharing variable
(X2) is 4,01, and response average of peer support
variable (Y) is 4,19; that indicates the organization is
compact and has nice communication climate in
order to improve knowledge and increase peer
support in the teamwork. This condition indicates
that organization members comprehend the
importance of cooperative climate in achieving
organizational goals. It means they support each
other in the workplace.
The average response of job satisfaction (Z1) is
3,65, which means the employees have moderate job
satisfaction in the workplace. The average response
of the family satisfaction variable (Z2) is 3,77,
which means the employees have a moderate family
satisfaction level. The average response of the well-
being variable (Z) is 3,96, which means the
employees have moderate job satisfaction and
moderate family satisfaction. Most of the employees
are young workers with 25 up to 34-year-old, and
diploma education level, and low work experience
less than a 10-year level. Robbin & Judge (2007)
stated that this kind of young employees tends to
resign to find out the better opportunity of work, that
produces a high turnover. It means that employees
with low work experiences tend to have low job
satisfaction, vice versa employees with high work
experiences because the high tenure tends to have
high job satisfaction.
The result of Multiple regression analysis
indicates the same result with Bacharach et al.
(2005), Schaubroeck & Lam (2002), Ibarra (1997),
Thomas (1993), Fried & Tiegs (1993), Baum,
(1991), Kirmeyer (1987), Love (1981), Cob (1980),
O'Reilly III (1977), Blau (1977), Thomas & Balk
(1969) finding that supportive relationships
including intergroup knowledge and information
sharing influence positive significant toward peer
support, though in heterogenous teamwork,
especially on decision making quality. This research
found that intergroup knowledge and information
sharing influence positive significant toward peer
support.
This research shows different conclusions with
Walz dan Niehoff (1996), Inman's (2001) research,
that stated the closer brotherhood of employees the
lower job satisfaction, especially in career,
promotion, and compensation. Greenhaus and
Parasuraman (1992), Higgin and Duxbury (1992),
Wahyuni (2010) find out that family support
influence career development in the workplace.
Organization support consists of peer support, and
direct supervisor support influences well-being,
which consist of job satisfaction and family
satisfaction. Higgin and Duxbury (1992) stated that
well-being consists of job satisfaction and family
satisfaction functions as a component of family life
quality. Organizational support, especially peers,
support, influences well-being.
Dual Career Couple
419
Lilius (2006), Kim (2003), Mc.Cormick (2001),
Bacharach et al. (2000) Ibarra, (1997), Thomas
(1993), Fried & Tiegs (1993). Podsakoff et al.
(2000). Jackson & William (1985) Harkins &
Jackson (1985), DeNisi et al. (1983), Latane (1981)
stated that the closeness of an employee's
brotherhood relationship increases the brotherhood
significance in the workplace. This employee
closeness increases their career success, self-
confidence, and increase trust in the workplace, and
professionalism. This employee closeness reduces
stress in the workplace and supports each other in
the workplace so that they improve individual and
teamwork performance. Weiner (1980a.b, 1986,
1995), Smith et al. (1983). Stated that peer
attribution (locus of causality, controllability, and
stability) based on attribution theory, generally
explains the employee's willingness to support each
other and to cooperate that improve organization
outcome.
This research found that peer support influences
positive significant toward well-being, neither job
satisfaction nor family satisfaction. Although this
research supports the prior research, this research
finding conforms with (Robbin & Judge's, 2007)
explanation that employee work experience tends to
increase turnover. Younger and well-experienced
employees tend to resign to find out a better job that
improves job satisfaction. It means that young
employees tend to have a low level of job
satisfaction, vise Versa the old employees tend to be
steady and get a high level of job satisfaction.
The failure to detect the influence of the
mediating effect of peer support, probably because
of the little amount of sample and because of
situational peer support rising in the workplace. This
research found that young employees tend to resign
to find a better opportunity for a career, producing a
high turnover. This condition is enhanced by the
information in the workplace if the employees
receive positive information from trust peer in the
workplace, the employees tend to be glad, vice versa
the employees get stress, and induce low
performance (Kloeppel, 2006).
It is important to check the mediating effect of
peer support toward well-being variable again, to
cope with the career development of the dual-career
couple.
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