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Journal ArticleDOI

Don’t play the odds, play the man: Estimating the driving potency of factors engendering knowledge hiding behaviour in stakeholders

Abraham Cyril Issac, +2 more
- 20 Feb 2020 - 
- Vol. 32, Iss: 3, pp 531-551
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TLDR
In this paper, the authors identify the most critical strategic factors that cause knowledge hiding in different contexts and model the same with the aid of total interpretive structural modeling, which determines the unique driving factors and their powers, which vary based on industry sectors and years of work experience.
Abstract
The nature of knowledge and the way it is assimilated do play a vital role in influencing knowledge sharing tendencies. These specific factors coupled with the ineffectiveness of the intrinsic knowledge management system point towards an inherent knowledge hiding tendency that exists within every organization. Knowledge hiding is established as an intentional attempt to hide knowledge when it is requested. In the recent past, scholars have investigated the factors causing hiding of the task-related knowledge. However, there is still no clear understanding of the strategic factors that lead to knowledge hiding in organizations and which of these factors are the most critical ones. The purpose of this paper is to identify the most critical strategic factors that cause knowledge hiding in different contexts.,This research study tries to identify these factors from the literature, corroborate it with industry experts and model the same with the aid of total interpretive structural modelling. This is followed by Matrice d'Impacts Croises Multiplication Appliquee a un Classement and sensitivity analysis, which determines the unique driving factors and their powers, which vary based on industry sectors and years of work experience.,This study found out that knowledge hiding behaviour is more pronounced in the initial years of an individual within the organization and similarly in the final years of an individual within the organization. In a period in between both these, there are no critical driving factors that infuse knowledge hiding.,This is one of the first comprehensive research studies that unravel the dynamic nature of the strategic factors engendering knowledge hiding across two different dimensions, namely, industry sectors and work-experience of individuals. This study categorically aims to aid the management in bringing out necessary interventions to curb the menace of knowledge hiding.

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Citations
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Knowledge hiding in organizational crisis: The moderating role of leadership

TL;DR: In this article, a conceptual framework was developed to examine knowledge hiding behavior and its antecedents and consequences in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic in Vietnamese workers.
Journal ArticleDOI

Knowledge hiding in organizational crisis: The moderating role of leadership

TL;DR: In this paper , a conceptual framework was developed to examine knowledge hiding behavior and its antecedents and consequences in the context of the COVID-19 pandemic in Vietnamese workers.
Journal ArticleDOI

How and when abusive supervision influences knowledge hiding behavior: evidence from India

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the differential roles of self-esteem and co-rumination in the mediated relationship between abusive supervision and knowledge hiding via psychological safety and find that psychological safety mediated the impact abusive supervision had on knowledge hiding.
Journal ArticleDOI

Understanding knowledge hiding in business organizations: A bibliometric analysis of research trends, 1988–2020

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated how knowledge hiding contributes to individuals, groups, and business processes of organizations, with regards to improving employee performance, strategic performance, and the organization's overall knowledge management system, as well as the consequences and costs of knowledge hiding in organizations.
Journal ArticleDOI

Towards Explaining Knowledge Hiding through Relationship Conflict, Frustration, and Irritability: The Case of Public Sector Teaching Hospitals

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors attempted to explain the hiding of explicit knowledge in the presence of relational conflicts, frustration, and irritability, and found that relationship conflicts positively affect knowledge hiding, and frustration partially mediates the relationship between relationship conflicts and knowledge hiding.
References
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TL;DR: In this article, a review of the research on different types of public-good dilemmas provides some indications of the specific interventions that may help organizations encourage the kind of social dynamics that will increase overall knowledge sharing.
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