{"title":"CEO entrepreneurial orientation, human resource management systems, and employee innovative behavior: An attention‐based view","authors":"Yueyue Liu, Meng Xi, William J. Wales","doi":"10.1002/sej.1488","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Chief executive officer (CEO) entrepreneurial orientation (EO) is an emerging topic within entrepreneurship research. This research offers the attention‐based view (ABV), and its principles of attentional focus, situated attention, and structural distribution of attention to explain how CEO EO fosters an innovative organizational workforce. We theorize that CEO EO predicts lower‐level employee innovative behavior when their top managerial attentional focus on entrepreneurship is translated into high‐performance work practices, which structurally distribute their strategic attention throughout the organization and promotes a situated attentional condition for employees emphasizing innovation. Moreover, we consider (a) human‐resource management (HRM) perceived importance and (b) departmental functional foci as boundary conditions. Using a multi‐level and multi‐source sample from 152 Chinese firms, results support our arguments.Employee innovative behavior is critical to firm growth, renewal, and sustainability. By collecting and analyzing data on 2745 employees nested in 586 departments nested in 152 organizations, we examine the critical role that human resource management (HRM) systems and high‐performance work practices may play in translating a CEOs emphasis on entrepreneurial activity into employee innovative behavior. We offer and observe support for an attention‐based perspective that HRM systems serve as “attentional structures” which channel CEO preferences to lower‐organizational levels. Our results further indicate that an embrace of HRM as a strategic priority among top managers, as well as whether employees are in “boundary spanning” input–output areas of the business, to be meaningful factors which strengthen the effect of HRM‐based attentional structures upon employee innovative behavior.","PeriodicalId":51417,"journal":{"name":"Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal","volume":"9 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":5.4000,"publicationDate":"2023-11-20","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal","FirstCategoryId":"91","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1002/sej.1488","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"管理学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"BUSINESS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Chief executive officer (CEO) entrepreneurial orientation (EO) is an emerging topic within entrepreneurship research. This research offers the attention‐based view (ABV), and its principles of attentional focus, situated attention, and structural distribution of attention to explain how CEO EO fosters an innovative organizational workforce. We theorize that CEO EO predicts lower‐level employee innovative behavior when their top managerial attentional focus on entrepreneurship is translated into high‐performance work practices, which structurally distribute their strategic attention throughout the organization and promotes a situated attentional condition for employees emphasizing innovation. Moreover, we consider (a) human‐resource management (HRM) perceived importance and (b) departmental functional foci as boundary conditions. Using a multi‐level and multi‐source sample from 152 Chinese firms, results support our arguments.Employee innovative behavior is critical to firm growth, renewal, and sustainability. By collecting and analyzing data on 2745 employees nested in 586 departments nested in 152 organizations, we examine the critical role that human resource management (HRM) systems and high‐performance work practices may play in translating a CEOs emphasis on entrepreneurial activity into employee innovative behavior. We offer and observe support for an attention‐based perspective that HRM systems serve as “attentional structures” which channel CEO preferences to lower‐organizational levels. Our results further indicate that an embrace of HRM as a strategic priority among top managers, as well as whether employees are in “boundary spanning” input–output areas of the business, to be meaningful factors which strengthen the effect of HRM‐based attentional structures upon employee innovative behavior.
期刊介绍:
The Strategic Entrepreneurship Journal is a research journal that publishes original work recommended by a developmental, double-blind review process conducted by peer scholars. Strategic entrepreneurship involves innovation and subsequent changes which add value to society and which change societal life in ways which have significant, sustainable, and durable consequences. The SEJ is international in scope and acknowledges theory- and evidence-based research conducted and/or applied in all regions of the world. It is devoted to content and quality standards based on scientific method, relevant theory, tested or testable propositions, and appropriate data and evidence, all replicable by others, and all representing original contributions. The SEJ values contributions which lead to improved practice of managing organizations as they deal with the entrepreneurial process involving imagination, insight, invention, and innovation and the inevitable changes and transformations that result and benefit society.