Building on theories of social exchange, enactment and trust, we provide a theorization of innovative work behaviour at the individual (IB) and team (IBT) levels and explain how desirable performance returns occur for individuals and teams. We further propose that horizontal (between team members) and vertical (between teams and their supervisor) team trust moderate the relationship between IBT and team performance. The results, based on surveys conducted at two points in time in a large insurance company in the Netherlands, show that employees’ IB is positively associated with perceived workplace performance at the individual and team levels and that the effects vary based on the forms of trust at play. Our findings offer important new kno...
The critical role of trust is to strengthen working relationships to ensure that organizations achie...
The central aim of this research was to examine the impact of state and trait trust on employees’ l...
Purpose: To date, most research has assumed an additive relationship between work-related predictors...
Building on theories of social exchange, enactment, and trust, we provide a theorization of innovati...
Using European Company Survey data, this paper explores the relationship between trust and establish...
While entrepreneurial orientation (EO) has traditionally been defined and operationalized as a firm-...
With an ever changing and complex business environment within which organisations must compete, inno...
YesThis article presents an integrative review of the rapidly growing body of research on trust in w...
This paper addresses the puzzle of why the same workplace employment relations regimes can lead to d...
The entrepreneurial behaviour of employees provides a competitive advantage for organisations. Howev...
PurposeThis article investigates (in)direct relationships between team-level entrepreneurial orienta...
This study tests organizational trust as the psychosocial mechanism that explains how healthy organi...
Trust between actors in firms per se as well as in the employment relationship, i.e. between the rep...
Previous organizational research on trust has focused more on subordinates’ trust in their leaders t...
Innovation is a major concern of most organisations in today’s fast changing and highly competitive ...
The critical role of trust is to strengthen working relationships to ensure that organizations achie...
The central aim of this research was to examine the impact of state and trait trust on employees’ l...
Purpose: To date, most research has assumed an additive relationship between work-related predictors...
Building on theories of social exchange, enactment, and trust, we provide a theorization of innovati...
Using European Company Survey data, this paper explores the relationship between trust and establish...
While entrepreneurial orientation (EO) has traditionally been defined and operationalized as a firm-...
With an ever changing and complex business environment within which organisations must compete, inno...
YesThis article presents an integrative review of the rapidly growing body of research on trust in w...
This paper addresses the puzzle of why the same workplace employment relations regimes can lead to d...
The entrepreneurial behaviour of employees provides a competitive advantage for organisations. Howev...
PurposeThis article investigates (in)direct relationships between team-level entrepreneurial orienta...
This study tests organizational trust as the psychosocial mechanism that explains how healthy organi...
Trust between actors in firms per se as well as in the employment relationship, i.e. between the rep...
Previous organizational research on trust has focused more on subordinates’ trust in their leaders t...
Innovation is a major concern of most organisations in today’s fast changing and highly competitive ...
The critical role of trust is to strengthen working relationships to ensure that organizations achie...
The central aim of this research was to examine the impact of state and trait trust on employees’ l...
Purpose: To date, most research has assumed an additive relationship between work-related predictors...