Ambidexterity and unit performance: intellectual capital antecedents and cross‐level moderating effects of human resource practices
Ambidexterity and unit performance: intellectual capital antecedents and cross‐level moderating effects of human resource practices
This study develops a cross-level model examining the effects of intellectual capital facets (i.e., human, social, and organizational capital) on unit ambidexterity. Further, it proposes that organizational-level high-performance human resource (HPHR) practices significantly shape these effects as well as the unit ambidexterity–unit performance relationship. Hierarchical linear modeling on multisource and lagged data from a sample of 148 business units from 58 US Fortune 500 firms shows that unit human and social capital positively contributes to unit ambidexterity, unit organizational capital has a negative relationship with unit ambidexterity, and organizational HPHR practices amplify the former and mitigate the latter of these unit-level effects. The findings also reveal that the relationship between ambidexterity and unit performance becomes stronger in organizational contexts of heightened HPHR practices. This multilevel approach increases understanding of how units achieve ambidexterity and attain related performance gains. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Kostopoulos, Konstantinos c.
2ed61e33-e1b9-49c5-bbce-40fe4f8002a8
Bozionelos, Nikos
acacdeea-14be-47dd-a32b-0f95b5f5742d
Syrigos, Evangelos
b1c15e33-35b2-4c6a-ba96-02938a9b5174
30 December 2015
Kostopoulos, Konstantinos c.
2ed61e33-e1b9-49c5-bbce-40fe4f8002a8
Bozionelos, Nikos
acacdeea-14be-47dd-a32b-0f95b5f5742d
Syrigos, Evangelos
b1c15e33-35b2-4c6a-ba96-02938a9b5174
Kostopoulos, Konstantinos c., Bozionelos, Nikos and Syrigos, Evangelos
(2015)
Ambidexterity and unit performance: intellectual capital antecedents and cross‐level moderating effects of human resource practices.
Human Resource Management, 54 (S1).
(doi:10.1002/hrm.21705).
Abstract
This study develops a cross-level model examining the effects of intellectual capital facets (i.e., human, social, and organizational capital) on unit ambidexterity. Further, it proposes that organizational-level high-performance human resource (HPHR) practices significantly shape these effects as well as the unit ambidexterity–unit performance relationship. Hierarchical linear modeling on multisource and lagged data from a sample of 148 business units from 58 US Fortune 500 firms shows that unit human and social capital positively contributes to unit ambidexterity, unit organizational capital has a negative relationship with unit ambidexterity, and organizational HPHR practices amplify the former and mitigate the latter of these unit-level effects. The findings also reveal that the relationship between ambidexterity and unit performance becomes stronger in organizational contexts of heightened HPHR practices. This multilevel approach increases understanding of how units achieve ambidexterity and attain related performance gains. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
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Accepted/In Press date: 6 March 2015
Published date: 30 December 2015
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Local EPrints ID: 495656
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/495656
ISSN: 0090-4848
PURE UUID: f7fd7fbf-30b5-42b7-8111-ae8b846f85ef
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Date deposited: 20 Nov 2024 17:39
Last modified: 20 Nov 2024 17:39
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Author:
Konstantinos c. Kostopoulos
Author:
Nikos Bozionelos
Author:
Evangelos Syrigos
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