TITLE

The proactive employee: Managing workplace initiative

AUTHOR(S)
Campbell, Donald J.
PUB. DATE
August 2000
SOURCE
Academy of Management Executive;Aug2000, Vol. 14 Issue 3, p52
SOURCE TYPE
Academic Journal
DOC. TYPE
Article
ABSTRACT
Business and behavioral undertakings such as job enrichment, participation, empowerment, and transformational leadership are organizational attempts to expand the employee role. This article examines a number of these undertakings to illustrate how they function as role-expansion mechanisms, and how they implicitly define five role characteristics generally reflective of a proactive employee. While job and task competence, interpersonal effectiveness, and organizational orientation have always been associated with the employee role, the other two role characteristics�enterprising qualities and personal integrity�represent relatively new expectations. These new demands raise some important issues for firms and managers, centered on differences associated with the firm's, the manager's, and the employee's expectations regarding the use of judgment and initiative. The article examines some implications of these differences, discusses person-environment fit considerations, and proposes recommendations for handling the problem. It concludes with a discussion of how the continuing evolution of the employee role blurs the traditional line between manager and employee, and how this affects the traditional managerial role.
ACCESSION #
4468066

Tags: MANAGEMENT -- Employee participation;  ORGANIZATIONAL behavior;  EMPLOYEES -- Attitudes;  JOB enrichment;  ORGANIZATIONAL change;  QUALITY of work life;  EMPLOYEE empowerment;  PERSONNEL management;  MANAGEMENT science;  LEADERSHIP;  WORK environment -- Psychological aspects;  RESPONSIBILITY

 

Related Articles

  • Empowerment: Rejuvenating a potent idea. Forrester, Russ // Academy of Management Executive;Aug2000, Vol. 14 Issue 3, p67 

    Empowerment is a tantalizing notion that seems to offer organizations the promise of more focused, energetic, and creative work from employees. But after years of trying, many organizations have not realized the promise the idea held. This article presents some reasons why: precipitous...

  • Adaptive Experiments: An Approach to Organizational Behavior Research. Lawler III, Edward E. // Academy of Management Review;Oct77, Vol. 2 Issue 4, p576 

    By monitoring changes in organizations, adaptive experiments can be performed, and can contribute to understanding organizational behavior (OB). They require a particular measurement approach which contains longitudinal data, a comparison group or groups, a broad range of measures, an...

  • Research Notes. THE RELATIONSHIP OF SATISFACTION LEVEL AND CONTENT OF JOB SATISFACTION QUESTIONNAIRE ITEMS TO ITEM SENSITIVITY. Giles, William F.; Feild, Hubert S. // Academy of Management Journal;Jun78, Vol. 21 Issue 2, p295 

    In this article the authors discuss research they conducted that examined the relationship between item sensitivity on job satisfaction questionnaires and the respondent's level of job satisfaction. They note that respondents would be more likely to falsely answer questions that they believe...

  • Managerial Behavior in Upwardly Oriented Organizations. Higgins, Richard B. // California Management Review;Spring72, Vol. 14 Issue 3, p49 

    Thirty years after the celebrated "Hawthorne Experiment" at Western Electric, there are still business organizations which remain relatively untouched by the Human Relations Movement, participative management, or Theory Y. Centralized control systems, highly structured tasks, and traditional...

  • HINTS & TIPS. Rogerson, Andy // Training Journal;Sep2008, p72 

    The article provides tips on how to boost employees' job satisfaction. It includes making sure to have an open communication with employees by conducting face-to-face meetings and anonymous employee surveys. Another is providing the right training to match their developmental needs. It also...

  • Types of Workplace Social Support in the Prediction of Job Satisfaction. Harris, J. Irene; Winskowski, Ann Marie; Engdahl, Brian E. // Career Development Quarterly;Dec2007, Vol. 56 Issue 2, p150 

    Research on social support and job satisfaction has yielded mixed results, partly be- cause studies have rarely examined different types of workplace social support, such as collegial support, task support, coaching, and career mentoring. This study identified the relative contributions of...

  • WHAT IS A PROMOTION? Pergamit, Michael R.; Veum, Jonathan R. // Industrial & Labor Relations Review;Jul99, Vol. 52 Issue 4, p581 

    Using National Longitudinal Survey of Youth data, the authors analyze the determinants and consequences of a promotion among young workers. Most events that workers called 'promotions' involved no change in position or duties, but were simply an upgrade of the current position. Typically, only...

  • Ideology And The Decline Of Management Theory. Nehrbass, Richard G. // Academy of Management Review;Jul1979, Vol. 4 Issue 3, p427 

    The article explores the role of ideology in the formation, development and dissemination of management theory. Organizational theorizing is often ideological and based on assumptions they may not be true. This biasing is responsible for the continuation of inappropriate managerial practices....

  • No Easy Roads to Employee Involvement. Peck, Sharon R. // Academy of Management Executive;Aug98, Vol. 12 Issue 3, p83 

    The article presents an examination of a study conducted by Sharon Parker, Toby Wall, and Paul Jackson on how employees develop into strategic actors. The researchers investigated whether simply training employees in new manufacturing techniques such as total quality management (TQM) or...

Share

Read the Article

Courtesy of VIRGINIA BEACH PUBLIC LIBRARY AND SYSTEM

Sign out of this library

Other Topics