Creating resource passageways in cross-cultural virtual work teams: a longitudinal field study
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作者:
Kaur, Prabhjot
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机构:
Management Dev Inst, Org Behav OB & Human Resources HR Area, Gurgaon, IndiaManagement Dev Inst, Org Behav OB & Human Resources HR Area, Gurgaon, India
Kaur, Prabhjot
[1
]
Prashar, Anupama
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Management Dev Inst, Operat Management OM Area, Gurgaon, IndiaManagement Dev Inst, Org Behav OB & Human Resources HR Area, Gurgaon, India
Prashar, Anupama
[2
]
Bhatnagar, Jyotsna
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h-index: 0
机构:
Management Dev Inst, Org Behav OB & Human Resources HR Area, Gurgaon, IndiaManagement Dev Inst, Org Behav OB & Human Resources HR Area, Gurgaon, India
Bhatnagar, Jyotsna
[1
]
机构:
[1] Management Dev Inst, Org Behav OB & Human Resources HR Area, Gurgaon, India
[2] Management Dev Inst, Operat Management OM Area, Gurgaon, India
Virtual work team;
Manager as coach;
Training effectiveness;
Conservation of resources;
Longitudinal field study;
NATIONAL CULTURE;
ENGAGEMENT;
CLIMATE;
EMPLOYEES;
DESIGN;
MODEL;
METAANALYSIS;
PERFORMANCE;
LEADERSHIP;
MANAGERS;
D O I:
10.1108/PR-10-2021-0719
中图分类号:
F24 [劳动经济];
学科分类号:
020106 ;
020207 ;
1202 ;
120202 ;
摘要:
PurposeLens of conservation of resources (COR) theory has been used to study how organizations can create resource passageways for their employees via managers. This has been examined in cross-cultural virtual work teams distributed across time and space within the high-resource loss context of the COVID-19 pandemic.Design/methodology/approachLongitudinal field design was used in a transnational organization involving data collection at three times over eight months. At Time 1, qualitative methodology was used to propose a conceptual model. At Time 2 and Time 3, an online survey was used to collect data for 205 virtual work teams across 10 countries in the Asia-Pacific region pre and post "manager as coach" training respectively.FindingsUsing COR theory, the study highlights that "manager as coach" training is an effective resource for managers in the high resource depletion context of the pandemic. Access to timely support increases saliency for the resource-gain spiral and has a cross-over impact on virtual work team outcomes suggesting transferability of resources from managers to subordinates. Also, managers across all nationalities view coaching training as an equally valuable resource.Practical implicationsThe study provides evidence for investment in timely and relevant support for managers to positively and swiftly impact virtual work teams during high-resource loss contexts.Originality/valueThe study expands COR crossover theory across space and time dimensions using a longitudinal field research design.