Drawing on human and social capital theory, research on employee mobility has discussed the benefits and drawbacks of hiring employees from rival firms. To explain the performance implications of employee mobility, the literature has focused on what moving individuals can do, but has ignored what they are willing to do. However, to fully understand what individuals will actually do at the new firm, we need to understand both. We argue that what individuals are willing to do depends on their collective and relational identity. When competing against a former employer, individuals experience a conflict in their collective identity as they identify with both organizations but can only increase the welfare of one. To reduce this conflict, indiv...
In this environment of increasingly knowledge intensive economy, individuals with their embedded ski...
This article studies how a firm fosters formal and informal interaction among its employees to creat...
In organisations, groups exist as a product of organisational structure. However, individuals are at...
Drawing on human and social capital theory, research on employee mobility has discussed the benefits...
But they compete less against ex-colleagues. Thorsten Grohsjean discusses what this means for compan...
In global corporations, work is increasingly organized around projects and individuals are constantl...
Human capital is considered as one of the most critical sources of firms’ competitive advantage. How...
Over the past several decades, declining employee tenure and rising external employee mobility have ...
A large body of research shows that the migration of managers from one professional service firm to ...
<p>A growing body of research suggests that intra-organizational mobility represents an important so...
This paper unfolds the directions and paths of knowledge flows through personnel mobility, originall...
We present a new mechanism by which prior employment can influence transitions to other firms. We pr...
Evolutionary economic geography has awoken an interest in the question how regions can attract new h...
This study attempts to reconcile previous findings that show both positive and negative outcomes ass...
Industry-specific, innovation-driven regional clusters have become a central focus for economic deve...
In this environment of increasingly knowledge intensive economy, individuals with their embedded ski...
This article studies how a firm fosters formal and informal interaction among its employees to creat...
In organisations, groups exist as a product of organisational structure. However, individuals are at...
Drawing on human and social capital theory, research on employee mobility has discussed the benefits...
But they compete less against ex-colleagues. Thorsten Grohsjean discusses what this means for compan...
In global corporations, work is increasingly organized around projects and individuals are constantl...
Human capital is considered as one of the most critical sources of firms’ competitive advantage. How...
Over the past several decades, declining employee tenure and rising external employee mobility have ...
A large body of research shows that the migration of managers from one professional service firm to ...
<p>A growing body of research suggests that intra-organizational mobility represents an important so...
This paper unfolds the directions and paths of knowledge flows through personnel mobility, originall...
We present a new mechanism by which prior employment can influence transitions to other firms. We pr...
Evolutionary economic geography has awoken an interest in the question how regions can attract new h...
This study attempts to reconcile previous findings that show both positive and negative outcomes ass...
Industry-specific, innovation-driven regional clusters have become a central focus for economic deve...
In this environment of increasingly knowledge intensive economy, individuals with their embedded ski...
This article studies how a firm fosters formal and informal interaction among its employees to creat...
In organisations, groups exist as a product of organisational structure. However, individuals are at...