Does it take two to tango? Combined effects of relational job crafting and job design on energy and performance
Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/34384Dato
2024-07-30Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Sammendrag
Despite an extensive body of research on job crafting, our understanding of how
bottom-up job crafting behaviors interact with top-down job design in influencing
employee effectiveness remains limited. Drawing on conservation of resources theory,
we developed and tested a theoretical framework to examine the implications of daily
promotion- versus prevention-oriented relational job crafting on employees' energy
and subsequent task performance, in the context of relational job design (i.e., task
interdependence). To test our theorizing, we conducted two experience-sampling studies over 10 workdays with full-time employees across various organizations (Study 1:
Nday-level = 845, Nperson-level = 126; Study 2: Nday-level = 793, Nperson-level = 108). Multilevel path modeling indicated promotion-oriented relational job crafting was positively
associated with subsequent task performance by increasing energy levels (Study 2),
particularly when task interdependence was low (Study 1). In contrast, preventionoriented relational job crafting was energy depleting in low-task-interdependent contexts (Study 2) but increased employees' energy in high-task-interdependent contexts
(Study 1). Our findings suggest different forms of day-to-day relational job crafting
behaviors are relevant for employees' energy and performance, but their effectiveness
may depend on the relational job-design context.
Forlag
WileySitering
Doden, Bindl, Unger. Does it take two to tango? Combined effects of relational job crafting and job design on energy and performance. Journal of Organizational Behavior. 2024Metadata
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Copyright 2024 The Author(s)