posted on 2010-06-23, 13:51authored byKevin Daniels, Varuni P. Wimalasiri, Alistair Cheyne, Vicky Story
The demands-control-support model (R.A.Karasek & T.Theorell, 1990) indicates that
workers can use job control and social support for problem-solving. We examined whether
personal initiative moderated relationships between, on the one hand, job control used for
problem-solving and social support used for problem-solving and, on the other hand, ideas
generation and ideas implementation. We operationalised job control used for problemsolving
as “changing aspects of work activities to solve problems”. We operationalised social
support used for problem-solving as “discussing problems to solve problems”. Using an
experience sampling methodology, participants provided data for up to four times a day for
up to five working days (n = 89). The extent to which people “changed aspects of their work
activities to solve problems” was associated with higher levels of ideas generation for people
with high personal initiative. The extent to which people “discussed problems to solve
problems” was associated with higher levels of ideas implementation for people with high
personal initiative.
History
School
Business and Economics
Department
Business
Citation
DANIELS, K. ... et al, 2011. Linking the demands-control-support model to innovation: the moderating role of personal initiative on the generation and implementation of ideas. Journal of Occupational and Organizational Psychology (JOOP), 84(3), pp. 581-598.