The Job Satisfaction Survey 2 (JSS-2) is a commercial version of the popular JSS that improves upon the original scale. Where the JSS can be used free of charge for noncommercial purposes, the JSS-2 can only be used by paying a licensing fee. The original JSS was developed for use in human and social services. The JSS-2 was designed and developed for a broader working population and it has superior psychometric properties, including improved internal consistency reliability (coefficient alpha), and cleaner factor structure. Norms have been developed more systematically on samples that represent a broad cross-section of occupations.
Many companies benchmark how employees feel about their jobs, doing periodic surveys of engagement and job satisfaction. This is because the job satisfaction of employees is linked to many important organizational outcomes including attendance, employee misbehavior, job performance, stress, and turnover. Job satisfaction can affect the bottom line, which is why it can be important to track employee satisfaction to identify problem areas that need management attention. You can find more about job satisfaction in Paul’s book, Job Satisfaction: From Assessment to Intervention.
The JSS-2 assesses 7 facets of work and contains an 8th general satisfaction scale not included in the original JSS. The facets are
The JSS was developed on 10 diverse samples with a combined sample size of more than 2100 employees. Coefficient alphas for the 8 subscales are all above .90. Exploratory factor analysis of the 7 facet scales show little evidence of cross-loadings, and a confirmatory factor analysis for the 8 subscales showed good fit. For details the test manual can be downloaded here.
The JSS-2 license cost depends on the number of copies.
To purchase a license, e-mail Paul Spector at paul@paulspector.com
Job Satisfaction: From Assessment to Intervention is a sequel to the highly cited (more than 12,000 times) Job Satisfaction published in 1997. On sale from the publisher Routledge.
Paul talks with Yadi Caro of Hardcore Soft Skills Podcast.