英文摘要 |
The financial industry is the core of the country's overall economy, and the health of its management could have an impact on a country’s economic development. Because financial professionals handle highly sensitive asset, the industry places a particularly strong emphasis on the characters of its employees. Therefore personality tests are essential and necessary tools when selecting suitable candidates for employment. The Taiwan Academy of Banking and Finance Testing Center, where the researcher is employed, cooperated with PCPET to develop a personality test. This test is based on domestic financial personnel norms and designed to evaluate the accuracy and appropriateness of recruiting procedures used by financial institutions for selecting employees.In order to provide strong and valid evidence for the aforementioned 'Financial Professionals Personality Test,' the researcher collaborated with the P BANK which provided its counter staff and account managers as samples for this research. The research tools included the 'Financial Professionals Personality Test,' 'Minnesota Job Satisfaction Questionnaire,' ' Retention Willingness Questionnaire,' and three years of actual employee performance evaluation scores at P Bank. The research used the Pearson correlation test to analyze the correlation between personality traits, job performance, job satisfaction, and retention willingness, and it used the SEM method to analyze the correlation model among the variables based on The Theory of Work Adjustment. A total of 208 questionnaires were issued to participants (including 99 counter staff and 109 account managers) and received from 187 participants (including 89 counter staff and 98 account managers) with a recovery rate of 90%. The findings are as follows: The correlation between personality traits, job satisfaction, job performance and retention willingness is significantly relevant. Furthermore, personality traits could be a significant basis for predicting job satisfaction and have significant predictive power on retention willingness as well as for indirectly predicting job satisfaction. In addition, through the SEM analysis, the research found that the P Bank counter staff’s adaptive traits were Agreeableness, Service Orientation and Conscientiousness; whereas the account managers’ adaptive traits were Openness, Agreeableness and Service Orientation. In conclusion, the 'Financial Professionals Personality Test' could be an efficient reference for P Bank when selecting suitable people for counter staff and accounts manager. Its results could also indicate potential employees’ future job satisfaction, job performance, and Retention Willingness. |