01899nam a2200193 4500999001900000008004100019100002400060245011500084260000900199300001300208520122600221650003001447650002501477700002401502773004401526906001701570942001201587952010601599 c509857d509857190621b ||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d aMunjal, Sonia96560 aAssociative impact of personality orientation and levels of stress on procrastination in middle-level managers c2019 ap.53-70. aTo procrastinate is to ‘voluntarily delay an intended course of action despite expecting to be worse off for the delay’ (Steel, 2007, Psychological Bulletin 133(1), 65). This behaviour, despite its cost, is common in workplaces and other life domains. By understanding why it occurs and how to prevent it, managers can help optimise the performance and productivity of employees. Hence, this research article is an effort to add a little to the sparse knowledge base in this field. It is also an effort to throw light on the relationship of Levenson’s multidimensions of the locus of control (LOC) and stress on the procrastination of employees, which have not been explored earlier. Two categories of variable are tested as the predictors of procrastination: various dimensions of LOC and occupational stress. Research results confirm that occupational stress along with LOC dimension affects the procrastinating behaviour of the employees. One of the major findings to emerge from the current research is that managers with powerful others as their LOC dimensions were least procrastinating. This contradicts the previous research results that external factors procrastinate more than internal ones. - Reproduced. aOccupational stress96462 aMiddle manager96561 aMishra, Richa96463 aIndian Journal of Public Administration aOrganisation 2ddccAR 00102ddc40709383800aIIPAbIIPAd2019-06-21h65(1), Jan, 2019: p.53-70.pAR119970r2019-06-21yAR