Grounding on the interactionist perspective proposed by Woodman, Sawyer, and Griffin (1993), this paper conceives organizational creativity as a complex concept whose investigation requires the understanding of the process, the product, the person, and the situation. Accordingly, this work attempts to enrich the understanding of how organizational creativity can be fostered by offering a framework which combines (inter-)individual-level learning (collecting knowledge from others), information sharing (through ICT infrastructures), and contextual factors (perceived top management support). The empirical analysis draws on a sample of 362 employees from five Multinational Corporations’ subsidiaries and shows that individuals’ orientation toward learning from others, the extent to which they use ICT for fostering information sharing within the firm, and a strong top management support significantly enhance organizational creativity. However, a heavy ICT use may weaken the relationship between learning from others and organizational creativity.
Organizational creativity in multinational companies: Knowledge collecting, ICT use and top management support / Lombardi, Sara; Giustiniano, Luca; Cavaliere, Vincenzo. - ELETTRONICO. - (2015), pp. 0-0. (Intervento presentato al convegno DRUID 2015 Conference "The Relevance of Innovation" tenutosi a Roma nel 15-17 Giugno 2015).
Organizational creativity in multinational companies: Knowledge collecting, ICT use and top management support
Lombardi, Sara
Membro del Collaboration Group
;Cavaliere, VincenzoMembro del Collaboration Group
2015
Abstract
Grounding on the interactionist perspective proposed by Woodman, Sawyer, and Griffin (1993), this paper conceives organizational creativity as a complex concept whose investigation requires the understanding of the process, the product, the person, and the situation. Accordingly, this work attempts to enrich the understanding of how organizational creativity can be fostered by offering a framework which combines (inter-)individual-level learning (collecting knowledge from others), information sharing (through ICT infrastructures), and contextual factors (perceived top management support). The empirical analysis draws on a sample of 362 employees from five Multinational Corporations’ subsidiaries and shows that individuals’ orientation toward learning from others, the extent to which they use ICT for fostering information sharing within the firm, and a strong top management support significantly enhance organizational creativity. However, a heavy ICT use may weaken the relationship between learning from others and organizational creativity.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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