Productivity in an Organizational Setting: A Systematic View of the Causalities at Work
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Method
2.1. Planning
2.1.1. Scope
2.1.2. Assumptions
2.1.3. Literature Search
- The article should describe causal relationships leading to productivity either in its theoretical background chapter or results;
- The article should focus on general organizational settings and employees as opposed to specific groups such as parents or shift workers;
2.2. Execution
2.2.1. System Analysis
2.2.2. Causal Loop Diagrams
2.2.3. Synthesis
3. Results of Literature Analysis
4. Synthesis of Items
4.1. First Synthesis—Grouping
4.2. Second Synthesis—Simplification
5. Discussion
6. Conclusions
6.1. Theoretical and Managerial Implications
6.2. Research Limitations
6.3. Future Research
- Analyze the characteristics of relationships, e.g., intensity and importance.
- Group relationships.
- Analyze the effect of metrics (how productivity is defined) on the causality.
- Add missing factors, e.g., leadership, management, and economic factors to the relationship diagram.
- Evaluate the biggest factors that contribute to productivity.
- Construct the theory of work productivity.
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Author(s) (year) | Author(s) (year) |
---|---|
De Meulenaere et al. (2016) | Larson and Callahan (1990) |
Kim and Ployhart (2014) | Graen et al. (1986) |
Delmas and Pekovic (2013) | Schmidt et al. (1986) |
Birdi et al. (2008) | Guzzo et al. (1985) |
Grant (2008) | Latham and Saari (1982) |
Probst et al. (2007) | Schmidt et al. (1979) |
Patterson et al. (2004) | Kazanas (1978) |
Dollard et al. (2000) | Schein et al. (1977) |
Podsakoff et al. (1997) | Kim and Hamner (1976) |
Aiello and Kolb (1995) | Umstot et al. (1976) |
Wright et al. (1993) | Latham and Locke (1975) |
Goodman and Leyden (1991) | Weinstein and Holzbach (1973) |
Rodgers and Hunter (1991) | Rothe (1970) |
Shalley (1991) |
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Item | Item | Item |
---|---|---|
Absenteeism | Entrepreneurial activities | Non-goal performance |
Autonomy | Extra-role behavior | Perceived relative importance of task |
Creativity | Performance monitoring | Perceived likelihood of reward |
Goal difficulty | Financial incentives | Effort used on non-goal tasks |
Goal setting | Strategy development | Effort used to reach goals |
Goal specificity | Company productivity | Information about employee performance |
Employee abilities | Employee productivity | The effect of performance monitoring |
Feedback | Creativity goal setting | Contingency of performance consequences |
Leadership | Total commitment | Effort used on creativity |
Persistence | Job satisfaction | Intrinsic motivation |
Item | Item | Item |
---|---|---|
Skill variety | Perceived quality | Perceived supervisory support |
Feedback | Perceived effort | Perceived performance feedback |
Responsibility | Intrinsic motivation | Perceived innovation and flexibility |
Autonomy | Job enrichment | Perceived meaningfulness of work |
Teamwork | Commitment | Growth need strength |
Social support | Employee abilities | Focus on specific tasks (routine or rewarded) |
Stress | Work demands | Perceived skill development |
Costs | Employee productivity | Perceived concern for employee welfare |
Absenteeism | Extra-role behavior | Actual or threats of downsizing |
Quality | knowledge transfer | Subcultural predisposition |
Attitudes | Company productivity | Performance monitoring |
Cohesion | Employee productivity | Perceived focus on quality |
Cooperation | Task identity | Fallings of social isolation |
Communication | Task significance | Counter-productive behavior |
Job insecurity | Company climate | Quality of decision making |
Creativity | Creative environment | Long term economic growth |
Job satisfaction | Employee turnover | Entrepreneurial activities |
Item | Item | Item |
---|---|---|
Absenteeism | Employee turnover | Need for supervision |
Replacements | Company performance | Knowledge sharing |
Work experience | Company productivity | Entrepreneurial activities |
Teamwork | Employee turnover | Perceived corporate social responsibility |
Autonomy | Intrinsic motivation | Selection ratio |
Job satisfaction | Employee initiative use | Selective staffing |
Costs | Employee proactivity | Absenteeism |
Revenues | Employee productivity | Generic human capital resources |
Employees | Extra-role behavior | Knowledge sharing |
Commitment | Applicant pool size | Firm specific knowledge |
Training | Growth opportunities | Growth need strength |
Joined Item Name | Previous Item Names |
---|---|
Job insecurity | Actual or threats of downsizing |
Employee proactivity | Employee initiative use |
Effort used on non-goal tasks | Effort used on creativity and non-goal task performance |
Teamwork | Cohesion, communication, cooperation, feelings of social isolation, and social support |
Performance consequences | Contingency of performance consequences, financial incentive and perceived likelihood of performance reward |
Employee productivity | Counterproductive behavior, absenteeism, attitudes Persistence, quality, and strategy development |
Company climate | Creative environment, perceived concern for employee welfare, perceived corporate social responsibility, perceived effort, perceived innovation and flexibility, perceived performance feedback, perceived quality, perceived skill development, perceived supervisory support, and subcultural predisposition |
Firm-specific knowledge | Work experience |
Effort used to reach goal | Focus on specific tasks (routine or rewarded) |
Training | Growth opportunities |
Company performance | Long-term economic growth |
Autonomy | Need for supervision and responsibility |
Perceived meaningfulness of work | Skill variety, task identity, and task significance |
The effect of performance monitoring | Work demands |
Item | Item | Item |
---|---|---|
Autonomy | Extra-role behavior | Company performance |
Company climate | Creativity goal setting | Company productivity |
Goal setting | Firm-specific knowledge | Perceived focus on quality |
Feedback | Selective staffing | Perceived meaningfulness of work |
Costs | Goal commitment | Performance consequences |
Creativity | Knowledge sharing | Performance monitoring |
Revenues | Goal specificity | Quality of decision making |
Stress | Intrinsic motivation | Generic human capital resources |
Teamwork | Job enrichment | Effort used to reach goal |
Training | Job insecurity | Employee productivity |
Leadership | Job satisfaction | Entrepreneurial activities |
Goal difficulty | Employee proactivity | Effort used on non-goal tasks |
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Guðbrandsdóttir, I.Ý.; Oddsson, G.V. Productivity in an Organizational Setting: A Systematic View of the Causalities at Work. Adm. Sci. 2022, 12, 90. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci12030090
Guðbrandsdóttir IÝ, Oddsson GV. Productivity in an Organizational Setting: A Systematic View of the Causalities at Work. Administrative Sciences. 2022; 12(3):90. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci12030090
Chicago/Turabian StyleGuðbrandsdóttir, Ingunn Ýr, and Guðmundur Valur Oddsson. 2022. "Productivity in an Organizational Setting: A Systematic View of the Causalities at Work" Administrative Sciences 12, no. 3: 90. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci12030090
APA StyleGuðbrandsdóttir, I. Ý., & Oddsson, G. V. (2022). Productivity in an Organizational Setting: A Systematic View of the Causalities at Work. Administrative Sciences, 12(3), 90. https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci12030090