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Employer’s investments in job crafting to promote knowledge worker’s sustainable employability: a moderated mediation model

Syed Muhammad Irfan (Department of Statistics, COMSATS University Islamabad -Lahore Campus, Lahore, Pakistan)
Faisal Qadeer (Hailey College of Commerce, University of the Punjab, Lahore, Pakistan)
Muhammad Ibrahim Abdullah (Department of Management Sciences, COMSATS University Islamabad - Lahore Campus, Lahore, Pakistan)
Muddassar Sarfraz (School of Management, Zhejiang Shuren University, Hangzhou, PR China)

Personnel Review

ISSN: 0048-3486

Article publication date: 19 July 2022

Issue publication date: 1 November 2023

1499

Abstract

Purpose

The primary study purpose is to examine whether managerial support triggers job crafting and sustainable employability, and to what extent work uncertainty moderates the managerial support and sustainable employability relationships mediated by job crafting using a moderated mediation approach. Thus, this study aims to uncover new antecedent and outcomes of job crafting using job demands and resources (JD–R) theory as no such research has yet examined these relationships.

Design/methodology/approach

The structural equation modeling (SEM) technique was employed to test the proposed relationships based on survey data that include a final 483 knowledge workers of the services sector. The authors tested the structural model using self-developed estimates for AMOS 24.0 to examine the moderated mediation process models (process models 7, 14 and 58) rather than using a conventional process macro through SPSS.

Findings

Consistent with the formulated hypothesis, the results of this study indicate that managerial support directly stimulates job crafting and sustainable employability. Further, job crafting mediates the relationships between managerial support and sustainable employability. This validates the JD–R theory assumption that managerial support as job resources initiates a motivational process through job crafting, leading to sustainable employability as the outcome of the motivational process. Additionally, the moderated mediation results show that in the presence of high work uncertainty, employees are more engaged in job crafting to boost their sustainable employability.

Practical implications

Organizations may incorporate these findings while developing human resources (HR) management policies and practices to align top-down and bottom-up job re(design) approaches. For example, by designing line managers’ role in implementation of supportive HR practices, their supportive leadership behavior towards employees will successfully trigger job crafting and nurture their sustainable employability.

Originality/value

This research adds to the work design and employability literature. No such study has yet examined whether managerial support triggers job crafting and sustainable employability. Prior studies examine personality traits, some individual difference variable, job characteristics, or leadership influence as antecedents of job crafting. Utilizing the JD–R theory, we empirically validate that job crafting plays a vital role in the motivational process initiated by the job resources (managerial support), leading to sustainable employability as an outcome of the motivational process. The authors further show that in the presence of high job demands (work uncertainty), employees are more engaged in job crafting and more conscious to boost their sustainable employability.

Keywords

Citation

Irfan, S.M., Qadeer, F., Abdullah, M.I. and Sarfraz, M. (2023), "Employer’s investments in job crafting to promote knowledge worker’s sustainable employability: a moderated mediation model", Personnel Review, Vol. 52 No. 8, pp. 2025-2047. https://doi.org/10.1108/PR-10-2021-0704

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022, Emerald Publishing Limited

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