Abstract:
Employee happiness is more important for the organization because happy employees are more
creative and results oriented, they retain with the organization for long time. Employee retention is
one of the challenging issues faced by corporate leaders in any industry as the performance of any
business unit depends on its employees. The ability to retain talented and committed employees
contributes significantly to the success of the business. With that basis the purpose of the research is
to examine the impact of employee happiness on employee retention with special reference to Gem
and Jewellery research and training institute in Sri Lanka.
For the selected sample which is 60 employees of Gem and Jewellery research and training institute,
well-structured questionnaire were distributed and the results gathered from the responses were
analyzed in order to get a meaningful conclusion. The selected method for sampling in this research is
random sample from Gem and Jewellery Research and Training Institute. Data were collected using
both primary and secondary sources. Primary data were collected through questionnaires. The data
was analyzed using SPSS, test applied was correlation.
A conceptual framework was designed and relationships among its constructs (employee happiness
and employee retention) were hypothesized. Employee happiness is considered as independent
variable and employee retention is considered as dependent variable. The hypotheses which are tested
based on the individual happiness, work-life balance, and managerial behavior, working environment,
salary and position stress. According to the findings the entire hypothesis was accepted. All the
variables are having strong relationship.
Findings suggest that employee happiness has strong impact on employee retention 111 Gem and
Jewellery research and training institute. This research can be beneficial for the parties especially for
the Gem and Jewellery research and training institute, people who are more concern on Human
Resource Management, students and future researchers.