Ramanadhula, Joel (2025) Investigating the Impact of Transformational Leadership Style on Employee Job Satisfaction in Fintech Companies in Wales. Doctoral thesis, University of Wales Trinity Saint David.
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Abstract
This study examines the idiosyncrasies of transformational leadership that focus on usability in fintech platforms, its cascading effects on employee satisfaction, followed by customer satisfaction. Guided by transformational leadership and affordance theories, the study develops a conceptual framework that reveals the relationship between leadership-driven organisational dynamics, usability empowerment, and satisfaction outcomes. The qualitative methodology utilized in this study draws on data received from 10 employees and 16 customers, thereby providing an overarching understanding of both internal workforce empowerment and external customer experiences. The researchers identify usability characteristics, such as navigation, rapid feedback, customizable tools, and error minimization, which were positively influenced by key leadership behaviours like inspiring purpose, articulating vision, catalysing innovation, and persisting through change. These usability factors directly correspond with critical operational and customer-oriented objectives that promote reduction of cognitive load for employees, while simultaneously creating reliable, intuitive and inclusive platforms. Employee satisfaction, following from usability improvements, flows through to delivery — to customer experience — as a service that is sustainable, personalized, efficient, and trustworthy. The research proposes new theoretical constructs like employee-customer bridge and satisfaction chain, extending dystopian theories by framing employees as proactive agents in customer-oriented transformation. On the one hand, the theoretical contribution discusses an emergent phenomenon among fintech organisations that shift to usability excellence through design thinking and human-centered design; on the other hand, practical strategies are offered for fintech organisations to navigate these changes, in particular making adaptive leadership, inclusivity, and iterative feedback key to their usability attempt’s. The study acknowledges limitations regarding a small sample and qualitative scope and suggests future research that uses longitudinal and mixed methods approaches. The study ultimately contributes a foundational basis for utilising transformational leadership principles to construct a user-oriented fintech ecosystem, with implications for both theory and practice in a rapidly changing market landscape.
Item Type: | Thesis (Doctoral) |
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Subjects: | T Technology > T Technology (General) |
Divisions: | Theses and Dissertations > Doctoral Theses |
Identification Number: | https://doi.org/10.82227/repository.uwtsd.ac.uk.00003950 |
Depositing User: | Joel Ramanadhula |
Date Deposited: | 07 Oct 2025 14:34 |
Last Modified: | 08 Oct 2025 15:40 |
URI: | https://repository.uwtsd.ac.uk/id/eprint/3950 |
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