Climate for personal initiative and radical and incremental innovation in firms: A validation study
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
Standard
In: Journal of Enterprising Culture, Vol. 22, No. 1, 2014, p. 91-109.
Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
Harvard
APA
Vancouver
Bibtex
}
RIS
TY - JOUR
T1 - Climate for personal initiative and radical and incremental innovation in firms
T2 - A validation study
AU - Fischer, Sebastian
AU - Frese, Michael
AU - Mertins, Jennifer Clarissa
AU - Hardt, Julia Verena
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - We examine whether organizational climate for personal initiative (PI climate) is conducive to firm innovation in small and medium-sized firms. Employees with PI are self-starting, proactive, and persistent, and a PI climate is characterized by common norms of encouraging PI at the workplace. A climate that fosters PI among employees would enhance the innovation output of firms, since it increases not only proactive thinking about future opportunities and problems but self-starting action as well. This PI climate is distinct from the team climate inventory (TCI, Anderson and West, 1996). We contrast the PI climate measure (Baer and Frese, 2003) with the TCI for predicting radical and incremental innovations in firms. Findings reveal (with 25 firms, N = 82 employees) that PI climate was related to radical innovation, but not incremental innovation. On the other hand, the TCI (unrelated to radical innovation) was related to incremental innovation. Our study results imply that different organizational climates account for the different forms of innovation in firms.
AB - We examine whether organizational climate for personal initiative (PI climate) is conducive to firm innovation in small and medium-sized firms. Employees with PI are self-starting, proactive, and persistent, and a PI climate is characterized by common norms of encouraging PI at the workplace. A climate that fosters PI among employees would enhance the innovation output of firms, since it increases not only proactive thinking about future opportunities and problems but self-starting action as well. This PI climate is distinct from the team climate inventory (TCI, Anderson and West, 1996). We contrast the PI climate measure (Baer and Frese, 2003) with the TCI for predicting radical and incremental innovations in firms. Findings reveal (with 25 firms, N = 82 employees) that PI climate was related to radical innovation, but not incremental innovation. On the other hand, the TCI (unrelated to radical innovation) was related to incremental innovation. Our study results imply that different organizational climates account for the different forms of innovation in firms.
KW - Business psychology
KW - Entrepreneurship
U2 - 10.1142/S0218495814500046
DO - 10.1142/S0218495814500046
M3 - Journal articles
VL - 22
SP - 91
EP - 109
JO - Journal of Enterprising Culture
JF - Journal of Enterprising Culture
SN - 0218-4958
IS - 1
ER -