Purpose- Operational performance is critical to competitive advantage, market share and financial performance of organisations. These benefits of operational performance translate to the socioeconomic growth and development of nations. Despite the relevance of this construct, there is paucity of validated scales on it in the airlines’ sector. This study, therefore, conceptualized, dimensionalized and validated the operational performance construct in the civil aviation sector.
Methodology- I exhumed 49 items from the vast literature on operational performance in several sectors, including the airline industry. I contacted managers in the aviation sector and experts in the field to confirm face and content validity. I then engaged an initial sample of 213 workers in the 18 Nigerian domestic airlines and subjected the proposed items to Exploratory Factor Analysis (using IBM SPSS version 27). Furthermore, I enlisted another sample of 201 respondents and used the second set of data to conduct a Confirmatory Factor Analysis (using IBM SPSS Amos version 26).
Findings – The initial 49 items passed the test of face and content validity. Exploratory Factor Analysis resulted in the extraction of 29 items from the initial 49 items, representing five principal components (quality, cost, responsiveness, innovation and safety). Upon Confirmatory Factor Analysis, the final 29-item instrument passed the tests of validity and reliability. The proposed overall measurement model had a good fit with the sample data.
Conclusion- Based on the findings, the study emphasized the need for managers in the airline sector to be aware that the twenty nine observable indicators validated in this study can be deployed to improve their organisations’ operational performance via quality, cost, responsiveness, innovation and safety. The paper reveals some methodological limitations and suggested that structural models on the nexus between operational performance and other variables, such as organizational culture and environmental turbulence, be developed and tested in diverse settings.
Aviation industry confirmatory factor analysis exploratory factor analysis operational performance
Primary Language | English |
---|---|
Subjects | Business Administration |
Journal Section | Articles |
Authors | |
Publication Date | December 31, 2020 |
Published in Issue | Year 2020 Volume: 7 Issue: 4 |
Research Journal of Business and Management (RJBM) is a scientific, academic, double blind peer-reviewed, quarterly and open-access online journal. The journal publishes four issues a year. The issuing months are March, June, September and December. The publication languages of the Journal are English and Turkish. RJBM aims to provide a research source for all practitioners, policy makers, professionals and researchers working in all related areas of business, management and organizations. The editor in chief of RJBM invites all manuscripts that cover theoretical and/or applied researches on topics related to the interest areas of the Journal. RJBM publishes academic research studies only. RJBM charges no submission or publication fee.
Ethics Policy - RJBM applies the standards of Committee on Publication Ethics (COPE). RJBM is committed to the academic community ensuring ethics and quality of manuscripts in publications. Plagiarism is strictly forbidden and the manuscripts found to be plagiarized will not be accepted or if published will be removed from the publication. Authors must certify that their manuscripts are their original work. Plagiarism, duplicate, data fabrication and redundant publications are forbidden. The manuscripts are subject to plagiarism check by iThenticate or similar. All manuscript submissions must provide a similarity report (up to 15% excluding quotes, bibliography, abstract, method).
Open Access - All research articles published in PressAcademia Journals are fully open access; immediately freely available to read, download and share. Articles are published under the terms of a Creative Commons license which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. Open access is a property of individual works, not necessarily journals or publishers. Community standards, rather than copyright law, will continue to provide the mechanism for enforcement of proper attribution and responsible use of the published work, as they do now.