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Do autonomous and trusting hospital employees generate, promote and implement more ideas? The role of distributed leadership agency

Thomas Faurholt Jønsson (Department of Psychology and Behavioral Sciences, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark)
Christine Maria Unterrainer (Department of Psychology, University of Innsbruck, Innsbruck, Austria)
Helena Grøn Kähler (Department of Psychology and Behavioral Sciences, Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark)

European Journal of Innovation Management

ISSN: 1460-1060

Article publication date: 27 October 2020

Issue publication date: 3 January 2022

696

Abstract

Purpose

Employees constitute an important source of innovation in organizations. Innovation management strategies often include attempts of stimulating employees' innovative contribution by instilling managerial trust and granting job autonomy. However, the authors suggest and investigate the role of employees' distributed leadership agency (DLA) in hospital employee-driven innovation.

Design/methodology/approach

The authors tested the hypotheses using survey data from 1,536 nonmanagerial employees at a hospital in Denmark. In order to deal with a methodological risk of survey designs, the authors assessed and adjusted the results for common method variance (CMV).

Findings

The authors validated a DLA measurement instrument and found an indirect relationship between job autonomy and trust in management on the one hand, via DLA, and with idea generation, promotion and implementation on the other hand. In addition, the results showed a small direct relationship between job autonomy and the three innovative behaviors. The results showed that CMV did bias relationships and reliabilities but only little.

Practical implications

The study introduces distributed leadership to the field of innovation management and confirms that this concept is highly relevant for employee innovation. In order to strengthen an organization's innovative potential, leaders may not only need to grant autonomy and instill trust in their employees, but also gain from employee innovation by distributing leadership tasks to employees.

Originality/value

This study is one of the first to introduce distributed leadership to the field of employee innovation management. By identifying distributed leadership as a key variable, the findings add to one’s extant understanding of how employee involvement encourages employee innovation.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

The authors would like to acknowledge Professor Hans-Jeppe Jeppesen. The project was funded by The Velux Foundation, project no. 904123.

Citation

Jønsson, T.F., Unterrainer, C.M. and Kähler, H.G. (2022), "Do autonomous and trusting hospital employees generate, promote and implement more ideas? The role of distributed leadership agency", European Journal of Innovation Management, Vol. 25 No. 1, pp. 55-72. https://doi.org/10.1108/EJIM-08-2019-0234

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2020, Emerald Publishing Limited

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