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What makes job satisfaction in the information technology industry?

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dc.contributor.author Arambepola, Nimasha
dc.contributor.author Munasinghe, Lankeshwara
dc.date.accessioned 2022-10-31T06:31:25Z
dc.date.available 2022-10-31T06:31:25Z
dc.date.issued 2021
dc.identifier.citation Arambepola Nimasha; Munasinghe Lankeshwara (2021), What makes job satisfaction in the information technology industry?, International Research Conference on Smart Computing and Systems Engineering (SCSE 2021), Department of Industrial Management, Faculty of Science, University of Kelaniya Sri Lanka. 99-105. en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://repository.kln.ac.lk/handle/123456789/25362
dc.description.abstract Having a rich human resource is critical for an organization to move towards success. Especially, for business organizations such as technology companies, the human resource is the driving factor of the company's growth which depends on employees' motivation, skills and quality of work. Employees often change their jobs when they are not satisfied with it. Different factors may cause a change in the level of job satisfaction of an employee. For example, the dynamic nature of the Information Technology (IT) industry is an impactful factor that determines the job satisfaction of IT professionals. Foreseeing the employees' job satisfaction makes it easy for a company to take swift actions to improve the job satisfaction of its employees. In this research, we analyzed the effectiveness of machine learning (ML) methods for predicting job satisfaction using employee job profiles. There are job-specific factors in each job domain, and those factors may influence job satisfaction levels. Therefore, this research focused on the following fundamental questions: 1) How do existing ML models perform when predicting job satisfaction of software developers? 2) Can the job satisfaction prediction models be generalized to the other job roles in the IT industry? This study compared the performance of classification models: Random Forest (RF), Logistic Regression (LR), Support Vector Machine (SVM), and Neural Network (NN) in predicting the level of job satisfaction. Our experiments used two benchmark datasets: Stack Overflow developer survey and IBM HR analytics dataset. The experimental analysis shows that both employee-related factors and company-related factors contribute similarly to predicting job satisfaction. On average, the above ML models predict the job satisfaction of software developers with an accuracy of around 79%. en_US
dc.publisher Department of Industrial Management, Faculty of Science, University of Kelaniya Sri Lanka en_US
dc.subject classification models, data mining, job satisfaction, machine learning en_US
dc.title What makes job satisfaction in the information technology industry? en_US


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