Corporate Psychological Responsibility: CPR Is Needed

Authors

  • Johanna Sweet Roanoke College
  • Sydney Wagner Roanoke College

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.33423/jop.v23i3.6484

Keywords:

organizational psychology, Corporate Psychological Responsibility (CPR), psychologically healthy workplaces, motivation, psychological capital, motivation theory

Abstract

Corporate Psychological Responsibility (CPR) is the responsibility of an organization to focus on psychological factors that impact employees to create a competitive advantage for all stakeholders (Sweet, 2020). This manuscript seeks to introduce a framework and model for CPR. A literature review of components that impact employees psychologically in motivational theory and in positive organizational behavior was conducted to identify elements that should be managed to become a psychologically responsible organization. Five pillars of CPR are introduced: health and safety, psychological capital, positive relationships, valued rewards, and fair organizational policies/practices. Organizations that take CPR seriously can create a competitive advantage.

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Published

2023-09-28

How to Cite

Sweet, J., & Wagner, S. (2023). Corporate Psychological Responsibility: CPR Is Needed. Journal of Organizational Psychology, 23(3). https://doi.org/10.33423/jop.v23i3.6484

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Section

Articles