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The impact of discretionary HR practices on knowledge sharing and intention to quit–a three-wave study on the role of career satisfaction, organizational identification, and work engagement

The impact of discretionary HR practices on knowledge sharing and intention to quit–a three-wave study on the role of career satisfaction, organizational identification, and work engagement
The impact of discretionary HR practices on knowledge sharing and intention to quit–a three-wave study on the role of career satisfaction, organizational identification, and work engagement
While it is known that high-quality human resource management (HRM) contributes to organizational performance, the process through which individual outcomes are influenced is understudied. Further, not all HRM practices are similarly influential in making impact on performance. We introduce and empirically test a theoretical model that explores the mechanism through which discretionary HRM practices influence employees’ attitudes and behaviors. Employing a three-wave dataset collected from full-time employees (478 employees in Time 1, 266 employees in Time 2, and 235 employees in Time 3), we identify the mediating role of career satisfaction and organizational identification and the moderating role of work engagement as relevant factors in the relationship between perceived discretionary HRM practices and employees’ knowledge sharing behavior and turnover intentions. The analysis, based on Structural Equation Modeling (SEM), has validated the proposed model. The theoretical contribution we offer expands the understanding of role of HRM in shaping work behaviors and outcomes. The study identifies the unique impact of perceived discretionary HR practices on individual and organizational factors, in particular, the important issue of knowledge sharing. The major added value we bring to the literature is about the relevance and impact of discretionary HR practices and the implications it offers to HRM and line managers. Using the findings, organizations can tailor HRM system to fit their position and characteristics and develop ‘best practice’ to fit their needs.
career satisfaction, Discretionary HR practices, knowledge sharing, organizational identification, turnover intention, work engagement
0958-5192
4205-4231
Kundi, Yasir Mansoor
78b8a96d-40fc-4cd6-9944-e74ad76183e2
Baruch, Yehuda
25b89777-def4-4958-afdc-0ceab43efe8a
Ullah, Rahman
04f47eba-9a70-44b0-85f7-2e3769d5f38b
Kundi, Yasir Mansoor
78b8a96d-40fc-4cd6-9944-e74ad76183e2
Baruch, Yehuda
25b89777-def4-4958-afdc-0ceab43efe8a
Ullah, Rahman
04f47eba-9a70-44b0-85f7-2e3769d5f38b

Kundi, Yasir Mansoor, Baruch, Yehuda and Ullah, Rahman (2023) The impact of discretionary HR practices on knowledge sharing and intention to quit–a three-wave study on the role of career satisfaction, organizational identification, and work engagement. International Journal of Human Resource Management, 34 (22), 4205-4231. (doi:10.1080/09585192.2023.2180652).

Record type: Article

Abstract

While it is known that high-quality human resource management (HRM) contributes to organizational performance, the process through which individual outcomes are influenced is understudied. Further, not all HRM practices are similarly influential in making impact on performance. We introduce and empirically test a theoretical model that explores the mechanism through which discretionary HRM practices influence employees’ attitudes and behaviors. Employing a three-wave dataset collected from full-time employees (478 employees in Time 1, 266 employees in Time 2, and 235 employees in Time 3), we identify the mediating role of career satisfaction and organizational identification and the moderating role of work engagement as relevant factors in the relationship between perceived discretionary HRM practices and employees’ knowledge sharing behavior and turnover intentions. The analysis, based on Structural Equation Modeling (SEM), has validated the proposed model. The theoretical contribution we offer expands the understanding of role of HRM in shaping work behaviors and outcomes. The study identifies the unique impact of perceived discretionary HR practices on individual and organizational factors, in particular, the important issue of knowledge sharing. The major added value we bring to the literature is about the relevance and impact of discretionary HR practices and the implications it offers to HRM and line managers. Using the findings, organizations can tailor HRM system to fit their position and characteristics and develop ‘best practice’ to fit their needs.

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Kundi et al. HR Practices As accepted IJHRM 2023 - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 18 December 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 22 February 2023
Published date: 2023
Keywords: career satisfaction, Discretionary HR practices, knowledge sharing, organizational identification, turnover intention, work engagement

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 483340
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/483340
ISSN: 0958-5192
PURE UUID: 27f8684e-e95d-4369-8fed-e44e0058da43
ORCID for Yehuda Baruch: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0678-6273

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Date deposited: 30 Oct 2023 07:08
Last modified: 22 Aug 2024 04:01

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Contributors

Author: Yasir Mansoor Kundi
Author: Yehuda Baruch ORCID iD
Author: Rahman Ullah

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