Despite being regarded as a critical psychological process influencing the effectiveness of change initiatives, concerns about change have not received empirical attention in the organizational change literature. The present study addresses this issue by examining the relationships among employees’ concerns about change (conceptualized as including concerns about the contents and benefits of change, and concerns about mastering the change), commitment to change and innovative work behavior. First, in a hospital undergoing a major administrative change (N ¼ 435), concerns about change were generally found to be negatively related to affective and normative commitment to change and positively related to continuance commitment to change. These results were replicated in a chemical and pharmaceutical company undergoing a technological change (N ¼ 113), except that concerns about change were unrelated to normative commitment to change. In addition, employees’ innovative work behavior moderated the relationship of concerns about change to affective commitment to change such that the relationship was negative when innovative behavior was low but nonsignificant when innovative behavior was high. This study provides scholars and practitioners with a theoretically and empirically grounded framework for assessing employees’ concerns about change, and moves research a step forward into identifying the behaviors that organizations should support to counteract this psychological threat.

Employees’ concerns about change and commitment to change among Italian organizations: The moderating role of innovative work behavior / Battistelli A., Montani F., Odoardi C., Vandenberghe C., Picci P.. - In: THE INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT. - ISSN 0958-5192. - STAMPA. - 25 (7):(2014), pp. 951-978. [10.1080/09585192.2013.809012]

Employees’ concerns about change and commitment to change among Italian organizations: The moderating role of innovative work behavior

Odoardi C.;
2014

Abstract

Despite being regarded as a critical psychological process influencing the effectiveness of change initiatives, concerns about change have not received empirical attention in the organizational change literature. The present study addresses this issue by examining the relationships among employees’ concerns about change (conceptualized as including concerns about the contents and benefits of change, and concerns about mastering the change), commitment to change and innovative work behavior. First, in a hospital undergoing a major administrative change (N ¼ 435), concerns about change were generally found to be negatively related to affective and normative commitment to change and positively related to continuance commitment to change. These results were replicated in a chemical and pharmaceutical company undergoing a technological change (N ¼ 113), except that concerns about change were unrelated to normative commitment to change. In addition, employees’ innovative work behavior moderated the relationship of concerns about change to affective commitment to change such that the relationship was negative when innovative behavior was low but nonsignificant when innovative behavior was high. This study provides scholars and practitioners with a theoretically and empirically grounded framework for assessing employees’ concerns about change, and moves research a step forward into identifying the behaviors that organizations should support to counteract this psychological threat.
2014
25 (7)
951
978
Goal 9: Industry, Innovation, and Infrastructure
Battistelli A., Montani F., Odoardi C., Vandenberghe C., Picci P.
File in questo prodotto:
File Dimensione Formato  
9_ODOARDI_The International Journal of Human_Resource_Management.pdf

accesso aperto

Tipologia: Pdf editoriale (Version of record)
Licenza: Open Access
Dimensione 204.28 kB
Formato Adobe PDF
204.28 kB Adobe PDF

I documenti in FLORE sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.

Utilizza questo identificatore per citare o creare un link a questa risorsa: https://hdl.handle.net/2158/778347
Citazioni
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.pmc??? ND
  • Scopus 41
  • ???jsp.display-item.citation.isi??? 34
social impact