3 September 2025

Research pick: Organisational climate change - "Is there a relationship between organisational climate and job satisfaction? A view from a systematic review and metaanalysis"

A review of the research literature has confirmed a consistent and measurable link between organisational climate and job satisfaction across multiple professional sectors, including education, healthcare, and other service-orientated industries. The findings, published in the World Review of Entrepreneurship, Management and Sustainable Development, point to the broader importance of workplace culture not only for employee morale but for organisational performance and staff retention.

Organisational climate is a term coined to describe the shared perceptions employees hold about their work environment. It encompasses factors such as leadership behaviour, communication norms, ethical and economic values, and the interpersonal dynamics of the workplace. A more familiar phrase, job satisfaction, reflects how positively employees feel about their roles and whether their needs and expectations at work are being met.

Using a systematic approach governed by the PRISMA guidelines, an internationally recognised protocol for conducting systematic literature reviews, the researchers screened studies from two major academic databases. Of all the studies, 30 met rigorous inclusion criteria, focusing on quantitative analyses that explored the direct relationship between organisational climate and job satisfaction.

They then carried out a statistical meta-analysis and found a consistently positive correlation: when employees perceive their organisational environment as fair, inclusive, and well-managed, they are more likely to report being satisfied in their roles. This pattern held true across diverse contexts, from classrooms to hospital wards to office-based professions.

The strength of the WREMSD study lies in its cross-sectorial breadth. This allowed for comparisons to be made that would highlight both shared patterns and contextual differences. In education, for example, the emotional tone of the school environment was closely linked to the psychological well-being of teachers and their professional commitment. When it comes to healthcare, frontline staff such as doctors and nurses reported greater job satisfaction in environments where leadership was strong, recognition was visible, and emotional support was present. For other sectors, transparent communication, equitable treatment, and a sense of shared purpose played similarly important roles.

The results showed that these relationships do not arise automatically. In settings where leadership was absent or inconsistent, or where organisational values were unclear or contested, the positive link between organisational climate and job satisfaction was considerably weakened. This, the researchers suggest, means that management practices, and the extent to which they cultivate a coherent and supportive organisational culture, are critical factors to be considered.

Geraldo-Campos, L.A. and Haro-Zea, K.L. (2025) ‘Is there a relationship between organisational climate and job satisfaction? A view from a systematic review and metaanalysis’, World Review of Entrepreneurship, Management and Sustainable Development, Vol. 21, No. 2, pp.23–53.

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