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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Individual Performance in Turbulent Environments: The Role of Organizational Learning Capability and Employee Flexibility
Joaquín CampsGuillermo Buenaventura-veraJoaquin Aldas-manzanoFederico Torres CarballoVictor Oltrasubject
Organizational Behavior and Human Resource ManagementKnowledge managementComputer scienceEconomicsStrategy and Managementmedia_common.quotation_subjectContext (language use)Strategic human resource planningParticipative decision-makingEmpresasNegocios y managementEconomíaRecursos humanosManagement of Technology and Innovation0502 economics and businessOpenness to experiencePartial least squares path modelingOperations managementBusinessFunction (engineering)Applied PsychologyToma de decisionesmedia_commonFlexibility (engineering)ComputingMilieux_THECOMPUTINGPROFESSIONbusiness.industry05 social sciences050209 industrial relationsGestión estratégicaOrganizational learningbusiness050203 business & managementdescription
Organizational learning capability (OLC) and employee flexibility help firms navigate the challenges faced by organizations operating in turbulent environments. OLC includes dimensions such as experimentation, risk taking, openness, dialogue, and participative decision making. Employee flexibility is considered a crucial tool for strategic human resource management in tackling environmental turbulence. Accordingly, we pose the following research question: how, and to what extent, is individual performance enhanced by OLC and employee flexibility in turbulent environments? The major impact that environmental turbulence has on change and flexibility requirements suggests that employee flexibility plays an important role in the impact OLC has on individual performance. However, we found no prior studies that explicitly analyzed this mediating function of employee flexibility. In this study, we tested three hypotheses that link OLC and individual performance, OLC and employee flexibility, and employee flexibility and individual performance. We applied a structural equation methodology, using partial least squares path modeling, to a sample of 174 academics at a Latin American university (a highly turbulent context). Our results show employee flexibility fully mediates the relation between OLC and individual performance given the presence of environmental turbulence.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2015-06-01 |