In the context of the complexity of today's organizations, help seeking behavior is considered as an important step to problem solving and learning in organizations. Yet, help seeking has received less attention in organizational literature. To increase the potential impact of help seeking on learning, it is essential to understand which mechanisms affect help seeking. The present study questioned whether the characteristics of the relationships that employees have in the workplace are related to help seeking behavior. This study draws on a social network perspective to investigate the employees' relationships within their professional network. In particular, the role of accessibility, awareness of expertise, trust, and hierarchy in help se...
Helping processes are critical for organizations. Yet, research suggests that there are strong disin...
Having a large network of colleagues means having several opportunities to help those colleagues, as...
Proactively seeking help from others involves “social costs ” because the help seeker appears incomp...
In the context of the complexity of today's organizations, help seeking behavior is considered as an...
In the context of the complexity of today's organizations, help seeking behavior is considered as an...
In the context of the complexity of today's organizations, help seeking behavior is considered as an...
In the context of the complexity of today's organizations, help seeking behavior is considered as an...
The focus of this dissertation is social networks as factors which facilitate or hinder seeking help...
In the modern workplace, it is virtually impossible to succeed without seeking any help from others....
Social support, or the availability of helping relationships, has been found to reduce work stress. ...
Through a review of previous organizational and social psychological research on helping behavior as...
A fundamental assumption underlying social exchanges in organizations is that help given is likely t...
Although scholars often assume that individuals seek out experts when they need help, recent researc...
The present research established three objectives in examining helping behavior in organizations. Fi...
We suggest that employees' perceptions of organizational support (POS) are not solely a product of i...
Helping processes are critical for organizations. Yet, research suggests that there are strong disin...
Having a large network of colleagues means having several opportunities to help those colleagues, as...
Proactively seeking help from others involves “social costs ” because the help seeker appears incomp...
In the context of the complexity of today's organizations, help seeking behavior is considered as an...
In the context of the complexity of today's organizations, help seeking behavior is considered as an...
In the context of the complexity of today's organizations, help seeking behavior is considered as an...
In the context of the complexity of today's organizations, help seeking behavior is considered as an...
The focus of this dissertation is social networks as factors which facilitate or hinder seeking help...
In the modern workplace, it is virtually impossible to succeed without seeking any help from others....
Social support, or the availability of helping relationships, has been found to reduce work stress. ...
Through a review of previous organizational and social psychological research on helping behavior as...
A fundamental assumption underlying social exchanges in organizations is that help given is likely t...
Although scholars often assume that individuals seek out experts when they need help, recent researc...
The present research established three objectives in examining helping behavior in organizations. Fi...
We suggest that employees' perceptions of organizational support (POS) are not solely a product of i...
Helping processes are critical for organizations. Yet, research suggests that there are strong disin...
Having a large network of colleagues means having several opportunities to help those colleagues, as...
Proactively seeking help from others involves “social costs ” because the help seeker appears incomp...