Published on: April 2026
IMPACT OF EMPLOYEE ENGAGEMENT ON ORGANIZATIONAL COMMITMENT AND JOB PERFORMANCE
Ritik Kumar Raushan
Dr. Indira Priyadarsani Pradhan
Noida International University
School of Business Management
Article Status
Available Documents
Abstract
The study adopts an exploratory and descriptive research design and focuses on employees working in the service sector. A sample of 500 respondents was selected using a structured questionnaire to collect primary data. The questionnaire was designed to capture various dimensions of employee engagement, including vigor, dedication, and absorption, along with measures of organizational commitment and job performance. Secondary data were also reviewed to support the theoretical framework and provide context to the study.
The findings indicate that employee engagement has a strong and positive impact on both organizational commitment and job performance. Employees who are highly engaged tend to develop a deeper sense of belonging and loyalty towards the organization, which strengthens their commitment and encourages them to contribute more effectively to organizational objectives. The results also reveal that engaged employees demonstrate higher levels of efficiency, better task performance, and a greater willingness to go beyond their assigned roles.
How to Cite this Paper
Raushan, R. K. (2026). Impact of Employee Engagement on Organizational Commitment and Job Performance. International Journal of Creative and Open Research in Engineering and Management, <i>02</i>(04). https://doi.org/10.55041/ijcope.v2i4.693
Raushan, Ritik. "Impact of Employee Engagement on Organizational Commitment and Job Performance." International Journal of Creative and Open Research in Engineering and Management, vol. 02, no. 04, 2026, pp. . doi:https://doi.org/10.55041/ijcope.v2i4.693.
Raushan, Ritik. "Impact of Employee Engagement on Organizational Commitment and Job Performance." International Journal of Creative and Open Research in Engineering and Management 02, no. 04 (2026). https://doi.org/https://doi.org/10.55041/ijcope.v2i4.693.
References
Kothari, C.R. (2004). Research Methodology: Methods and Techniques. New Delhi: New Age International Publishers.Robbins, S.P., & Judge, T.A. (2017). Organizational Behavior (17th ed.). Pearson Education.
Dessler, G. (2020). Human Resource Management (16th ed.). Pearson.
Armstrong, M. (2014). Armstrong's Handbook of Human Resource Management Practice. Kogan Page.
Luthans, F. (2011). Organizational Behavior. McGraw Hill.
Noe, R.A., Hollenbeck, J.R., Gerhart, B., & Wright, P.M. (2017). Fundamentals of Human Resource Management. McGraw Hill.
Journal Articles
Saks, A.M. (2006). Antecedents and consequences of employee engagement. Journal of Managerial Psychology, 21(7), 600–619.
Harter, J.K., Schmidt, F.L., & Hayes, T.L. (2002). Business-unit-level relationship between employee satisfaction and performance. Journal of Applied Psychology, 87(2), 268–279.
Meyer, J.P., & Allen, N.J. (1991). A three-component conceptualization of organizational commitment. Human Resource Management Review, 1(1), 61–89.
Schaufeli, W.B., & Bakker, A.B. (2004). Job demands and engagement. Journal of Organizational Behavior, 25(3), 293–315.
Bakker, A.B., & Demerouti, E. (2008). Towards a model of work engagement. Career Development International, 13(3), 209–223.
Judge, T.A., & Bono, J.E. (2001). Job satisfaction–performance relationship. Journal of Applied Psychology, 86(1), 80–92.
Ethical Compliance & Review Process
- •All submissions are screened under plagiarism detection.
- •Review follows editorial policy.
- •Authors retain copyright.
- •Peer Review Type: Double-Blind Peer Review
- •Published on: Apr 27 2026
This article is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License. You are free to share and adapt this work for non-commercial purposes with proper attribution.

