A debated issue in the literature regards whether the effect of employee involvement for continuous improvement on organizational outcomes differs in contexts with different degrees of production repetitiveness. Divergent positions can be found both in the OM and HRM field. This paper aims at investigating the direct and indirect effect (through Just In Time (JIT) and Total Quality Management (TQM)) of employee involvement for continuous improvement on organizational outcomes (quality, cost, responsiveness and employee relations), and the moderation of production repetitiveness on both these effects. Survey data analyses support that employee involvement for continuous improvement has a significant indirect effect on organizational outcomes through JIT and TQM which is not moderated by production repetitiveness. Instead, lowering production repetitiveness, the direct impact of employee involvement decreases and could become even non-significant. These results contribute to OM and HRM literatures, by emphasizing the need to distinguish between direct and indirect effect when studying the role of production repetitiveness as a contingency. Overall, this research contributes to a better understanding of the mechanisms through which employee involvement for continuous improvement affect organizational outcomes
Employee involvement for continuous improvement and production repetitiveness: A contingency perspective for achieving organizational outcomes
BERALDIN, ANDREA ROBERTO;DANESE, PAMELA;
2022
Abstract
A debated issue in the literature regards whether the effect of employee involvement for continuous improvement on organizational outcomes differs in contexts with different degrees of production repetitiveness. Divergent positions can be found both in the OM and HRM field. This paper aims at investigating the direct and indirect effect (through Just In Time (JIT) and Total Quality Management (TQM)) of employee involvement for continuous improvement on organizational outcomes (quality, cost, responsiveness and employee relations), and the moderation of production repetitiveness on both these effects. Survey data analyses support that employee involvement for continuous improvement has a significant indirect effect on organizational outcomes through JIT and TQM which is not moderated by production repetitiveness. Instead, lowering production repetitiveness, the direct impact of employee involvement decreases and could become even non-significant. These results contribute to OM and HRM literatures, by emphasizing the need to distinguish between direct and indirect effect when studying the role of production repetitiveness as a contingency. Overall, this research contributes to a better understanding of the mechanisms through which employee involvement for continuous improvement affect organizational outcomesPubblicazioni consigliate
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