Abstract:
This research is conducted focusing on the employees at “the selected Lubricant
Company in Sri Lanka” to investigate the impact on employee age on employee
performance. Employee Performance is taken as the dependent variable of the study
while Working Memory Capacity, Time-pressure, Task Performance and Self-efficacy
are taken as independent variables.
Where the null hypothesis only described one independent variable, the hypotheses
have shown three independent factors (Working memory capacity, Task performance
and Self-efficacy) have a relationship with the dependent variable, according to the
alternative hypothesis, but there is low positive relationship with the independent
variable (Time-pressure). The study was published in line with the Research Onion
Framework. Research had done for 102 employees in the Lubricant Company. Data is
gathered throughout a questionnaire under primary data collecting method and sample
had selected by using simple random sampling method. Data has analyzed under
quantitative method.
The objective of the study is to explore the impact on Employee age on Employee
Performance, and to analyze the relationship between identified factors and employee
performance while recommending solutions to overcome the employee performance
related issues in the organization. Therefore, three independent variables, working
memory capacity (P = 0752), task performance (P = 0794) and Self-efficacy (P = 0.819)
have a high positive correlation with employee performance which is dependent
variable. That mean, if those variables increase, employee performance will be
automatically increased. As well as, one independent variable time pressure (P = 0.071)
shows negligible correlation with employee performance.
Every hypothesis was examined, and in the end, one null hypothesis was accepted and
three null hypotheses were rejected, while three alternative hypotheses were accepted
and one rejected. As a result, the final result was produced because three of the research
study's independent variables had a high positive correlation with the dependent
variable, while other independent variable has a negligible relationship with the
dependent variable. The employee self-efficacy is the primary component that has the
greatest impact on employee performance, according to the researcher's data (P = 0.01
& R Square = 67.1%).
As a result, the study's findings supported the researcher's hypothesis that there is low
correlation between time-pressure and employee performance among the Lubricant
Company employees. Future directions on this scope, together with recommendations
to improve employee performance by determining the employee age factors.