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Is someone listening to me? The effect of employees’ perception of managers’ virtual listening behaviour on turnover behaviour in the high-tech sector during the Covid-19 pandemic

Limor Kessler Ladelsky (The Master of Business Administration (MBA) Department, The Faculty of Management, The Academic Center of Science and Law, Hod Hasharon, Israel; Ramat Gan Academic College, the Programs of Management and Human Resource Management, Ramat Gan, Israel; Department of Management and Organization (M&O), Michael G. Foster School of Business, The University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA and Department of Management, Bar Ilan University, Ramat Gan, Israel)
Thomas William Lee (Department of Management and Organization (M&O), Michael G. Foster School of Business, The University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA)

International Journal of Organizational Analysis

ISSN: 1934-8835

Article publication date: 8 December 2023

116

Abstract

Purpose

This paper aims to examine whether information technology (IT) managers’ virtual listening, as rated by their high-tech employees, affected turnover behaviour beyond a new constellation of variables, some of which have never been researched as antecedents of turnover behaviour, particularly during a pandemic or crisis. Namely, the main aim, among others, is to answer the research question: does IT employees’ perception of the quality of their supervisors’ virtual listening in the pandemic and crisis era, when employees and managers work remotely, will negatively affect turnover behaviour? If yes, in which constellation of antecedents the virtual listening effecting on turnover behaviour?

Design/methodology/approach

Logistic regression analysis was conducted to test the hypotheses via SPSS 26 and PROCESS (Model 6). The variance inflation factor was calculated to test multicollinearity. Interaction was tested using the Hayes and Preacher PROCESS macro model. The researchers also used the J-N technique test (Johnson–Neyman via process). The supplemental analysis used also PROCESS MACRO (IBM Corp., Armonk, NY, USA, 2023) Model 4 and Bootstrap test.

Findings

The findings show that perceptions of supervisors’ virtual listening quality as rated by their employees moderated the relationship between organisational deviance as a type of organisational misbehaviour (OMB) and turnover behaviour and had the strongest effect on turnover behaviour beyond other key predictors (organisational deviance as a type of misbehaviour, turnover intention, job satisfaction, embeddedness and alternatives in the labour market). Alternatives to current work moderated the association between the perception of managers’ virtual listening behaviour as rated by their employees and turnover behaviour. Specifically, when alternatives in the labour market were high or medium, the perceived quality of managers’ virtual listening reduced turnover behaviour. Finally, the perception of the IT employees supervisors’ virtual listening moderated the relationship between organisational deviance and turnover intention among high-tech employees.

Originality/value

Evaluating supervisor listening in the high-tech firm may have value in terms of its relationship to outcomes such as retaining employees, turnover intention and especially turnover behaviour. The effect on turnover behaviour and of that new constellation of antecedents on turnover behaviour when people work remotely was not researched yet and important for the post COVID-19 era. Additionally, in contrast to most studies of turnover, this study also focus on the positive aspects of turnover and especially turnover behaviour to organisations in general and especially to high-tech firm and not just the negative aspect as was researched until now. Another contribution is the finding that when employees perceived their managers’ virtual listening quality as high, the effect of deviance as a type of OMB on turnover behaviour was positive. Namely, the listening as a moderator and turnover assisted in making the organisation cleaner from inappropriate behaviour. Additionally, when alternatives in the labour market are high or medium, perceived quality of virtual listening of managers as rated by their employees can reduce turnover behaviour. This virtual listening–turnover relationship and the moderator of alternatives to current work had not previously been found in the turnover literature and this is also significant a contribution to the turnover and withdrawal literature.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Conflicts of interest: The first author declares that there is no conflict of interest to disclose.

Citation

Ladelsky, L.K. and Lee, T.W. (2023), "Is someone listening to me? The effect of employees’ perception of managers’ virtual listening behaviour on turnover behaviour in the high-tech sector during the Covid-19 pandemic", International Journal of Organizational Analysis, Vol. ahead-of-print No. ahead-of-print. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJOA-09-2023-3997

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2023, Emerald Publishing Limited

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