• No results found

Why participation works

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2021

Share "Why participation works"

Copied!
12
0
0

Loading.... (view fulltext now)

Full text

(1)

Why participation works

(2)

Full title

Why participation works: the role of employee involvement in the implementation of the customer relationship management type of organizational change.

Key words

Participation, employee participation, organizational change, change management, human resource management, HRM, customer relationship management, CRM, CRM effectiveness, attitudes, relations, pressures, contents, ownership, satisfaction, trust, workload, stress, conflict.

ISBN

978-90-367-3768-5 (book)

978-90-367-3771-5 (electronic version)

Publisher

SOM Research School, University of Groningen, Groningen, The Netherlands

Printer

Print Partners Ipskamp, Enschede, The Netherlands

Previous publications

Previously published books by Jelle T. Bouma: Betrokkenheid als sleutel (ISBN 978-90- 5261-648-3), Internet & Intranet (978-90-5294-156-4), Vraagtekens (978-90-7695-374-0).

Copyrights

© Copyrights Jelle T. Bouma. No part of this publication may be stored, reproduced, nor transmitted in any form nor by any means without prior written permission of the author.

Additional copies can be ordered online via http://www.goedboek.nl.

(3)

RIJKSUNIVERSITEIT GRONINGEN

Why participation works:

the role of employee involvement in the implementation of

the customer relationship management type of organizational change

Proefschrift

ter verkrijging van het doctoraat in de Economie en Bedrijfskunde aan de Rijksuniversiteit Groningen

op gezag van de Rector Magnificus, dr. F. Zwarts, in het openbaar te verdedigen op

maandag 22 juni 2009 om 13.15 uur

door

Jelle Tjitze Bouma geboren op 16 april 1972

te Hoornsterzwaag

(4)

Promotor

Prof. dr. P.C. Verhoef

Copromotor Dr. B.J.M. Emans

Beoordelingscommissie Prof. dr. M. Krafft Prof. dr. J. Paauwe Prof. dr. J.I. Stoker

ISBN

978-90-367-3768-5 (boek)

978-90-367-3771-5 (electronische versie)

(5)

I dedicate this dissertation to my father for his encouragement to always aim slightly higher

(6)
(7)

CONTENTS

1 INTRODUCTION... 1

1.1 Research background... 1

Research foundation: human resource management (HRM)... 1

Research justification: why participation of employees?... 3

Research foundation: customer relationship management (CRM)... 6

Research justification: why CRM organizational change?... 7

1.2 Research design... 9

Research scope: individual employees changing financial organizations towards CRM.... 9

Research objective: understand how employee participation influences CRM change.... 10

Research question: in which way does employee participation influence CRM change?. 11 Research contribution: HRM and CRM academic research... 11

1.3 Research concepts... 11

Conceptual model i: employee participation, mediating entities, CRM effectiveness... 11

1.4 Dissertation outline... 14

Chapter 2: Theory... 14

Chapter 3: Method... 14

Chapter 4: Results... 14

Chapter 5: Discussion... 14

2 THEORY... 15

2.1 Theory on employee participation & CRM effectiveness... 15

Employee participation in the current research... 15

Employee participation is expected to be indirectly related to CRM effectiveness... 20

2.2 Theory on intrapersonal attitudes... 22

Employee participation is related to ownership... 24

Employee participation is related to satisfaction... 25

Ownership and satisfaction are related to CRM effectiveness... 26

Ownership and satisfaction are expected to play mediating roles... 27

Partial model ii: employee participation, ownership/satisfaction, CRM effectiveness... 28

2.3 Theory on interpersonal relations... 30

Employee participation is related to being trusted and trusting others... 32

Being trusted and trusting others are related to CRM effectiveness... 34

Being trusted & trusting others are expected to play mediating roles... 35

Partial model iii: employee participation, trusted/trusting, CRM effectiveness... 36

(8)

PREFACE

In my job as a change consultant for over ten years, first at Accenture and then at Deloitte, I have actively supported dozens of client organizational changes. Often, the outcomes of these organizational changes differed more or less from the initial goals that were set by intelligent and experienced people. That surprised me. Why couldn’t these people steer an organization exactly to the desired outcomes? What caused organizational change outcomes to change themselves?

Those questions made me think. After a while the idea appeared, that unknown influences must alter the outcomes of organizational changes. After expressing my preliminary thoughts, several scholars from the University of Groningen challenged me to precise this subject and to create my personal contribution to science. The foregoing reveals in a nutshell why I started working on my Ph.D. research for one day a week, next to my consultancy job.

Combining two tasks, practical field work as a consultant and theoretical research as a Ph.D. student, was never easy. The practical field work demanded over fifty work hours excluding twenty travel hours on average per week. Several much busier weeks did not leave room for any other activities at all, causing a temporary stand still in my research.

However, during less busy weeks the combination of practical field work and theoretical research revealed some synergy, because several organizations that my colleagues and me supported to change, contributed quantitative data and qualitative insights to my research.

I would like to thank my consultancy colleagues and the managers of those organizations for inspiration.

This final product of my Ph.D. research has been shaped with guidance from several persons. I would like to thank Prof. dr. Peter C. Verhoef for his goal oriented suggestions and Dr. Ben J.M. Emans for his many detailed improvements. Furthermore, I would like to thank Prof. dr. Janny C. Hoekstra for her ability to ignite insights, Matilda Dorotic M.S.c.

for her Lisrel revelations, Dr. Marian J. Oosterhuis and Drs. Frouke M. de Poel for their helpful guidance, Dr. Martin J. Land for his process support and Prof. dr. Arndt M. Sorge for his useful ideas. Furthermore, I would like to thank my promotion committee and all colleagues with whom I shared experiences and office spaces. Last but not least, I would like to thank Esther, Tijmen, my parents and everyone who always believe(d) in me.

Lemmer,

Jelle T. Bouma

[email protected]

(9)

2.4 Theory on job pressures... 38

Employee participation is related to workload... 40

Employee participation is related to stress... 41

Employee participation is related to conflict... 43

Workload, stress and conflict are related to CRM effectiveness... 45

Workload, stress and conflict are expected to play mediating roles... 46

Partial model iv: employee participation, workload/stress/conflict, CRM effectiveness.. 47

2.5 Theory on job contents... 49

Employee participation is related to local fit... 50

Local fit is related to CRM effectiveness... 51

Local fit is expected to play a mediating role... 52

Partial model v: employee participation, local fit, CRM effectiveness... 52

2.6 Theoretical concepts... 54

Hypotheses overview... 54

Overview model vi: employee participation, mediators, CRM effectiveness... 57

3 METHOD... 59

3.1 Research population & sample... 59

Population: employees changing financial organizations towards CRM... 59

Sample: employees changing sixteen financial organizations towards CRM... 61

3.2 Research scales & items... 66

Scales construction: context-specific items and constructs... 66

3.3 Research assumptions... 70

Random respondent influences... 70

Random researcher influences... 71

Constant environmental influences... 71

Central roles for mediating influences... 72

3.4 Research data... 72

Data collection: pilot study among employees of one insurance organization... 72

Data collection: main study among employees of sixteen financial organizations... 73

Preliminary qualitative checks: interviews and discussions... 74

Preliminary quantitative checks: distinctiveness, distribution and reliability... 75

Table i: List of items... 79

Table ii: Factor loads of items... 83

Table iii: Test statistics of variables... 86

3.5 Methodological concepts... 87

Overview of research type, field, sample, data... 87

(10)

4 RESULTS... 89

4.1 Results on employee participation & CRM effectiveness... 89

Results on employee participation... 89

Results on CRM effectiveness... 90

Table iv: Descriptive statistics of variables... 94

4.2 Results on intrapersonal attitudes... 95

Results on employee participation, ownership & satisfaction, CRM effectiveness... 95

Table v: Pearson’s correlations of intrapersonal attitudes... 98

Table vi: individual regression of intrapersonal attitudes on CRM effectiveness... 99

Table vii: multilevel regression of intrapersonal attitudes on CRM effectiveness... 100

4.3 Results on interpersonal relations... 101

Results on employee participation, being trusted & trusting others, CRM effectiveness101 Table viii: Pearson’s correlations of interpersonal relations... 106

Table ix: individual regression of interpersonal relations on CRM effectiveness... 107

Table x: multilevel regression of interpersonal relations on CRM effectiveness... 108

4.4 Results on job pressures... 109

Results on employee participation, workload & conflict & stress, CRM effectiveness.. 109

Table xi: Pearson’s correlations of job pressures... 114

Table xii: individual regression of job pressures on CRM effectiveness... 115

Table xiii: multilevel regression of job pressures on CRM effectiveness... 116

4.5 Results on job contents... 117

Results on employee participation, local fit, CRM effectiveness... 117

Table xiv: Pearson’s correlations of job contents... 120

Table xv: individual regression of job contents on CRM effectiveness... 121

Table xvi: multilevel regression of job contents on CRM effectiveness... 122

4.6 Results on combined concepts... 123

Results on employee participation, combined mediators, CRM effectiveness... 123

Table xvii: Pearson’s correlations of all variables... 126

Table xviii: combined individual regression analyses on CRM effectiveness... 127

Table xix: combined multilevel regression analyses on CRM effectiveness... 128

Table xx: confirmed hypotheses overview... 129

5 DISCUSSION... 133

5.1 Discussion on combined results... 133

Confirmed model vii: employee participation, mediators, CRM effectiveness... 133

Discussion on employee participation... 133

Discussion on all mediators... 136

(11)

Discussion on CRM effectiveness... 138

5.2 Research implications... 139

Theoretical implications for scholars... 139

Practical implications for consultants... 140

Practical implications for managers... 141

Practical implications for employees... 142

5.3 Research limitations... 143

Limitations from the individual instead of the organizational aggregation level... 143

Limitations from the subjective instead of more objective measurements... 144

Limitations from the non-repeated measurements... 145

Limitations from the specific scope of the current research... 146

5.4 Future research... 146

Future research on employee participation... 146

Future research on CRM effectiveness... 148

Future longitudinal research... 149

Future research in a larger scope... 150

(12)

References

Related documents

These phases show the distinction between completely trivial phases characterized by the absence of edge modes, robust topological phases having topologically protected edge modes,

The aim of this study was to assess the geometry of non-round distal root canals of mandibular molars after preparation with TRUShape rotary instruments in comparison to

Figure 5a presents predicted probabilities of severe on the val- idation data using 75 of our 84 prognostic gene signature that were common in both experimental and validation

The absence of an abnormal phenotype in organotypic cultures prepared from mutant mice, together with the strong develop- mental dependence of the abnormality in the intact brain,

The findings from both the current study, and that of Martins et al., suggest that the perceived pleasantness of body odor was not related to that odor’s strength, suggesting that

Counterintuitively, we show that the larger the error distance is between the claimed location (the street-level address on a website) and the real landmark location, the more

The possibility of re-infection has not been included in the Flu Pandemic Game because simulating a greatly reduced but non-zero probability of re- infection makes a dice game

Fault MCWDTx_CNT1 (16-bit Counter) Subcounter 1 Count < LOWER_LIMIT Count == 3 Count >= UPPER_LIMIT Count == WARN_LIMIT Count MCWDTx_CNT0 (16-bit Counter) Subcounter 0 Count