TY - JOUR
T1 - Does it take two to tango? Combined effects of relational job crafting and job design on energy and performance
AU - Doden, Wiebke
AU - Bindl, Uta
AU - Unger, Dana
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s). Journal of Organizational Behavior published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.
PY - 2024/6/12
Y1 - 2024/6/12
N2 - Despite an extensive body of research on job crafting, our understanding of how bottom-up job crafting behaviors interact with top-down job design in influencing employee effectiveness remains limited. Drawing on conservation of resources theory, we developed and tested a theoretical framework to examine the implications of daily promotion- versus prevention-oriented relational job crafting on employees' energy and subsequent task performance, in the context of relational job design (i.e., task interdependence). To test our theorizing, we conducted two experience-sampling studies over 10 workdays with full-time employees across various organizations (Study 1: Nday-level = 845, Nperson-level = 126; Study 2: Nday-level = 793, Nperson-level = 108). Multilevel path modeling indicated promotion-oriented relational job crafting was positively associated with subsequent task performance by increasing energy levels (Study 2), particularly when task interdependence was low (Study 1). In contrast, prevention-oriented relational job crafting was energy depleting in low-task-interdependent contexts (Study 2) but increased employees' energy in high-task-interdependent contexts (Study 1). Our findings suggest different forms of day-to-day relational job crafting behaviors are relevant for employees' energy and performance, but their effectiveness may depend on the relational job-design context.
AB - Despite an extensive body of research on job crafting, our understanding of how bottom-up job crafting behaviors interact with top-down job design in influencing employee effectiveness remains limited. Drawing on conservation of resources theory, we developed and tested a theoretical framework to examine the implications of daily promotion- versus prevention-oriented relational job crafting on employees' energy and subsequent task performance, in the context of relational job design (i.e., task interdependence). To test our theorizing, we conducted two experience-sampling studies over 10 workdays with full-time employees across various organizations (Study 1: Nday-level = 845, Nperson-level = 126; Study 2: Nday-level = 793, Nperson-level = 108). Multilevel path modeling indicated promotion-oriented relational job crafting was positively associated with subsequent task performance by increasing energy levels (Study 2), particularly when task interdependence was low (Study 1). In contrast, prevention-oriented relational job crafting was energy depleting in low-task-interdependent contexts (Study 2) but increased employees' energy in high-task-interdependent contexts (Study 1). Our findings suggest different forms of day-to-day relational job crafting behaviors are relevant for employees' energy and performance, but their effectiveness may depend on the relational job-design context.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85200007596&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1002/job.2820
DO - 10.1002/job.2820
M3 - Article
SN - 0894-3796
VL - 45
SP - 1189
EP - 1207
JO - Journal of Organizational Behavior
JF - Journal of Organizational Behavior
IS - 8
ER -