Knowledge Capital Accumulations and Employee Involvement Work Systems—Does Workplace Culture Have a Role?

Kent V. Rondeau, Terry H. Wagar

Abstract


Knowledge capital accumulations are impacted by a variety of workplace factors, including the human resource management work system and the workgroup culture in which it is embedded. Organizations adopting high-involvement work systems stressing employee participation, empowerment, commitment, and accountability have the potential to produce, and to be a beneficiary of, greater stores of employee intellectual capital. The role of workplace culture in this relationship is potentially salient but its operational characteristics require further elucidation. Using a competing values framework to characterize workplace culture, four culture archetypes can be specified: hierarchical, market, entrepreneurial, and clan. Results from step-wise regression analysis show that the four workplace culture archetypes contribute differentially to intellectual capital stores, yet only the clan and entrepreneurial culture archetypes partially mediates this relationship.

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DOI: https://doi.org/10.22158/jbtp.v8n3p1

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Copyright (c) 2020 Kent V. Rondeau, Terry H. Wagar

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