Projects per year
Abstract
Self-managing organizations, characterized by flat hierarchies and decentralized power, are expected to empower and engage employees. In contrast, critics argue that a lack of structure could cause confusion and increased stress and burnout. However, neither assumption has been quantitatively tested. Furthermore, the concept of self-management remains ambiguous, and validated scales have been lacking. Addressing this, we conducted two quantitative studies, one with employees from several organizations (N = 425) and another with a nationally representative sample (N = 2,000). First, we distinguish between organizational and employee self-management and develop validated scales for both. Next, we examine their relations to work engagement and burnout, finding that both types of self-management are positively related to work engagement and negatively to burnout. Both types of self-management were also indirectly related to work engagement and burnout via job challenges and job hindrances. Our study clarifies and quantifies what self-management is and suggests it can benefit employee well-being.
Original language | English |
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Journal | Business Research Quarterly |
DOIs | |
Publication status | E-pub ahead of print - 16 Dec 2024 |
MoE publication type | A1 Journal article-refereed |
Keywords
- self-managing organizations
- post-bureaucracy
- Work engagement
- job burnout
- self-management
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- 1 Finished
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ltseohjautuvuuden tila Suomessa: ltseohjautuvuuden yhteys työn imuun ja työuupumukseen kansallisesti edustavassa aineistossa
Biniari, M. (Principal investigator)
01/11/2019 → 30/04/2021
Project: Domestic funds and foundations