Abstract
PurposeDrawing on the Job Demands-Resource (JD-R) model, this paper examines innovative culture as the antecedent to employee engagement (EE), taking workplace digitalisation as the mediator and group diversity as the moderator on the workplace digitalisation–EE relationship.Design/methodology/approachThe research model is tested using structural equation modelling, based on 256 online survey data representing the management-level executives of Selangor/Kuala Lumpur-based Malaysian companies.FindingsOur findings support that innovative culture directly affects EE and indirectly through workplace digitalisation. Besides, group diversity moderates the workplace digitalisation–EE relationship.Practical implicationsThe findings suggest that organisations can enhance EE in a diversity-oriented digital setting by cultivating an innovative culture to facilitate employees’ perception and acceptance of workplace digitalisation.Originality/valueOur findings enrich the interdisciplinary literature on how innovative culture, employees’ perception and acceptance of workplace digitalisation and group diversity intersect in reshaping EE.
Reference77 articles.
1. Conservative culture, innovative culture, and innovative performance: a multi-group analysis of the moderating role of the job type;International Journal of Innovation Science,2021
2. Exploring the antecedents of employee engagement;International Journal of Organisational Analysis,2022
3. The influence of job, team and organisational level resources on employee well‐being, engagement, commitment and extra‐role performance: test of a model;International Journal of Manpower,2012
4. Employee engagement, human resource management practices and competitive advantage;Journal of Organisational Effectiveness: People and Performance,2015
5. The influence of change-related organisational and job resources on employee change engagement;Frontiers in Psychology,2022