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Showing papers on "Transformational leadership published in 2022"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors developed and tested a model on how digital transformational leadership and organizational agility influence digital transformation with digital strategy as a moderator, and found that digital transformation and organizational agile positively influence digital transformations.
Abstract: Drawing upon new institutional theory, we developed and tested a model on how digital transformational leadership and organizational agility influence digital transformation with digital strategy as a moderator. We found that digital transformational leadership and organizational agility positively influence digital transformation, and digital transformational leadership influences organizational agility. The finding of our study also indicates organizational agility to mediate the relationship between digital transformational leadership and digital transformation. Our findings offer an advanced understanding of the impact of transformational leadership and organizational agility on digital transformation and the role of digital strategy. Our study's findings address critical questions about how leadership style and promoting organizational agility in the public sector can enhance digital transformation.

60 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper , the role of green transformational leadership (GTL) in fostering pro-environmental behaviors (PEBs) through green human resource management (GHRM) was examined.

52 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
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.

42 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
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.
Abstract: The COVID-19 pandemic has caused organizational crises leading to shutdowns, mergers, downsizing or restructuring to minimize survival costs. In such organizational crises, employees tend to experience a loss or lack of resources, and they are more likely to engage in knowledge hiding to maintain their resources and competitive advantage. Knowledge hiding has often caused significant adverse consequences, and the research on knowledge hiding is limited. Drawing upon the Conservation of Resources and Transformational Leadership theories, a conceptual framework was developed to examine knowledge hiding behavior and its antecedents and consequences. We collected data from 281 Vietnamese employees working during the COVID-19 pandemic. Our results show that role conflict, job insecurity, and cynicism positively impact knowledge hiding behavior. Knowledge hiding behavior negatively affects job performance and mediates the antecedents of knowledge hiding on job performance. Transformational leadership moderated the impact of role conflict on knowledge hiding.

42 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the authors examined the relationship between a hospital's corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives and PEB with the mediating effect of environmental-specific transformational leadership (ESTL).
Abstract: The healthcare sector throughout the world is identified for its outsized carbon footprint. Despite the mounting importance of employees' pro-environmental behavior (PEB) for decarbonization, the role of PEB in a healthcare context was less emphasized previously, especially in a developing country context. To address this knowledge gap, the current work was carried out to examine the relationship between a hospital's corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives and PEB with the mediating effect of environmental-specific transformational leadership (ESTL). At the same time, the conditional indirect effect of altruistic values (AV) was also considered in the above relationship. The data were collected through a questionnaire by employing a paper-pencil method from the hospital employees (n = 293). By considering the structural equation modeling, the hypothesized relationships were validated. The results indicated that CSR directly (β1 = 0.411) and indirectly, via ESTL, (β4 = 0.194) influenced the PEB of employees. It was also realized that A.V produced a conditional indirect effect in this relationship (β5 = 0.268). This work tends to help a hospital to improve its environmental footprint through CSR and ESTL. Moreover, the current work also highlights the role of employees' values (e.g., A.V) to guide the environment-specific behavior of employees.

33 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the potential impact on organizational innovations and corporate performance through the influence of transformational leadership on knowledge management and organizational learning has been found out through a study using Structural Equation Modeling (SEM) under positivism philosophy.
Abstract: Purpose : This study aims at finding the potential impact on organizational innovations and corporate performance through the influence of transformational leadership on knowledge management and organizational learning. Methodology : Stratified random sampling was used to collect 273 usable responses from 500 respondents for using Structural Equation Modeling (SEM). The deductive approach was adopted under positivism philosophy. Findings : The Result shows that transformational leadership, organizational learning, and knowledge management significantly predict corporate innovation and those, in effect, foster organizational performance through organizational innovation. Implication : One of the implications of this study is the role of transformational leadership is worth evident through empirical findings to transform knowledge management and organizational learning into organizational innovation. Limitation : The size of the sample prevents the result to generalize the results in the home and abroad, and on the contrary, random sampling could have improved universal acceptance of the result which was not used in this study.

26 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the authors investigated the relationship between the corporate social responsibility (CSR) activities of a hotel enterprise and employees' pro-environmental behavior (PEB) by using structural equation modeling (SEM).
Abstract: Tourism and hospitality have been recognized as leading economic sectors globally. Before the outbreak of COVID-19, it was estimated that the tourism and hospitality sector was growing by around 4% each year. Although the economic-efficiency-led hypothesis of the tourism and hospitality sector is strong, there is another perspective related to tourism and hospitality. That is, tourism and hospitality are not as “green” as they were supposed to be. Indeed, this sector is known for its outsized carbon footprint. It is estimated that, if not managed efficiently, the GHG contribution of the tourism sector will grow in the future. Specifically, the hotel business accounts for 1% of total global greenhouse gas emissions (GHG), which is huge. Responding to these significant issues, this study investigates the relationship between the corporate social responsibility (CSR) activities of a hotel enterprise and employees’ pro-environmental behavior (PEB). The mediating role of environmental-specific transformational leadership (ESTFL) and the moderating role of green perceived organizational support (GPOS) were also tested in the above relationship. The data were collected by the employees through a self-administered questionnaire. The hypothesized relations were statistically investigated by using structural equation modeling (SEM). The findings revealed that CSR activities of a hotel not only influence employees’ PEB directly, but the mediating role of ESTFL was also significant. At the same time, the conditional indirect role of GPOS was also confirmed. This study offers different theoretical and practical insights, which have been discussed in detail.

26 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors explored one of the biggest causes of the lack of organizational knowledge creation: knowledge hiding (KH), which can be provoked by the deviant and detached behaviours of leaders and/or the motivations of employees.
Abstract: The present study explores one of the biggest causes of the lack of organizational knowledge creation: knowledge hiding (KH). KH can be provoked by the deviant and detached behaviours of leaders and/or the motivations of employees. In this context, leaders assume a key role in reducing the effect of KH. Through the lens of transformational leadership (TL), a sample of 758 European SMEs with a total number of 2,232 employees operating in a knowledge-intensive sector is investigated. The scope is to evaluate the correlation between the three main characteristics of transformational leadership (i.e., trust, a collaborative environment, and the involvement of employees) and the phenomenon of KH through a logistic regression analysis. It emerges that TL can influence the organizational context and redefine the behaviours related to KH. In addition, empathic leadership can provide added value for companies since a collaborative environment and common objectives reduce the level of KH.

26 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A comprehensive, structured, objective bibliometric review of the main leadership styles investigated in the hospitality industry from 1977 to 2021 (September) is presented in this paper , which depicts this field's conceptual structure.
Abstract: Purpose This paper aims to provide a comprehensive, structured, objective bibliometric review of the main leadership styles investigated in the hospitality industry from 1977 to 2021 (September) and depicts this field’s conceptual structure. Design/methodology/approach Bibliometric analysis techniques such as bibliographic coupling were used using several software applications (VOSviewer, BibExcel and Pajek, among others) to identify trends and research gaps in this literature. The paper provides an overview of the evolution of research activity on different leadership styles that yields important insights into research trends, most-researched themes, main authors and key journals. Findings A total of 287 publications on leadership from the Web of Science and Scopus databases were summarized. The number of studies on leadership has been growing since 2013, evincing persistent interest in the topic. Eleven main streams of leadership research in the hospitality literature were detected and characterized, with transformational and servant leadership emerging as the most common approaches. Possible evolution of the topics and future research lines were also identified. Research limitations/implications The findings can guide practitioners and scholars to further explore and implement emerging leadership styles in the hospitality sector. The paper also presents future research avenues to advance the field of leadership. Originality/value The current review provides a valuable framework for examining key leadership styles, understanding the most-researched styles and illustrating leadership's critical role in organizational and individual outcomes in hospitality businesses.

25 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors used the full-range leadership model to argue that on days when leaders engage in transformational leadership behaviors, they identify follower strengths and stimulate followers to show personal initiative.

24 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the authors examined how the combined effects of work environmental factors and leadership behaviours lead to the presence or absence of industrial employees job performance by applying fuzzy-set qualitative comparative analysis (fsQCA).
Abstract: This study examines how the combined effects of work environmental factors and leadership behaviours lead to the presence (or absence) of industrial employees job performance by applying fuzzy-set qualitative comparative analysis (fsQCA). A sample composed of supervisor-subordinate dyads was used to test the propositions of this study. The results show that the most important variables are transformational leadership and social support. Employee empowerment and task significance seem to play a secondary role in leading to employee job performance. These findings support the need for managers to use positive leadership to manage human resources. This paper contributes to the advancement of the knowledge of employee job performance through the identification of the combinations of conditions that can lead to the presence or absence of this important organizational outcome. Directions for future studies are commented on at the end of the paper.


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the authors investigated the impact of environmental transformational leadership on pro-environmental behavior (PEB) of employees in Kazakhstan and examined the potential mediating effect of environmental awareness and green human resource management (GHRM) as a moderating effect, using the theory of planned behavior.
Abstract: We investigated the impact of environmental transformational leadership (ETL) on pro-environmental behavior (PEB) of employees in Kazakhstan. The study also examined the potential mediating effect of environmental awareness and green human resource management (GHRM) as a moderating effect, using the theory of planned behavior. An online cross-sectional survey was conducted with 268 Kazakh employees from private and public organizations. Structural equation modeling was used to test the theory-driven model. The results show that environmental leadership predicted employees’ PEB, environmental awareness mediated the relationship, and GHRM partially moderated the relationship. The results of bootstrapping tests reveal that environmental awareness played successive mediating roles in the link between ETL and PEBs, but the simple slope test did not support the moderating effect of GHRM. Environmental awareness and GHRM were identified as fundamental mechanisms that accounted for the connection between ETL and PEBs.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the authors explore the dynamics of business model transformations in established companies by studying a real-life business case at a global-tech company that transforms a traditional business model to a cloud-based digital IoT platform as a multi-sided, industrywide platform business.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the mediating role of individual green values (IGV) between green transformational leadership (GFTL) and environmental performance (EP) was examined and government regulations were used as a moderator concerning the relationship between GTFL and EP.
Abstract: Like many different and relevant sectors, the leather industry is currently facing a major environmental issue that may affect the competitiveness of all the stakeholders across the value chain. Drawing the conceptual model on the natural resource-based view (NRBV), this study seeks to examine the mediating role of individual green values (IGV) between green transformational leadership (GFTL) and environmental performance (EP). Furthermore, government regulations are used as a moderator concerning the relationship between GTFL and EP. An online survey was randomly distributed to Pakistan's leather industry employees to test the hypothesis by collecting data from 205 respondents. Partial Least Square Structural Equation Modeling (PLS-SEM) has been used to analyze data. The results demonstrate that green transformational leadership (GTFL) positively affects EP. Moreover, this study also reveals that GTFL significantly contributes to developing the IGV that consequently affects EP. Thus, the current study provides a significant sequential GTFL, IGV and EP path. However, surprisingly, the results show that government regulations do not moderate the relationship between GTFL and IGV. This study significantly contributes to the theory and stakeholders and leaders in a vast variety of manufacturing industries. It suggests that all organizations should adopt GTFL principles that encourage employees to engage in environmentally friendly activities by developing green values at the individual level to enhance EP. With this regard, GTLF, IGV, and government regulations may thus play a vital role for organizations and industry for better EP and competitiveness.


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the authors present the findings on new skills assessment for Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR) and present a roadmap for the next research trends and topics in the area of 4IR and new skills requirements.
Abstract: Purpose The adoption of knowledge management (KM) to steer new skills and capabilities among people provides evidence that KM not only offers competitive advantages but also provides a means for organisational survival, by improvising core capabilities or generate new ones that can drive people in the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR) era. This paperaim to identify critical new skills and capabilities among people within an organisation to stay competitive, innovative and relevant. Design/methodology/approach The paper presents the findings on new skills assessment for Fourth Industrial Revolution. The study was carried out through an interview with a focus group discussion technique to gather data on the role of KM in creating new set of skills or capabilities in Fourth Industrial Revolution’s landscape. The study also reports a bibliographic study of critical skills based on more than a decade of related academic and industry publications to portray research trends and future directions. Findings There is a demand in “must-have” skills related to Industry 4.0 such as capability for complex decision-making, complex problem-solving, collaborative innovation, project management, creativity and critical thinking, social skill and social responsibility. While these skills are critical enablers to aiding individuals in the scenarios of plausible 4IR futures, several important new research trends that emerge have also not been adequately explored including KM and Industry 4.0 skill gap, skill evolution, machine knowledge, intuitive decision-making, rational decision-making, technostress, digital fluency, collaborative innovation, industrial policies, human–machine interaction and societal systems. Research limitations/implications This research provides a roadmap for the next research trends and topics in the area of Fourth Industrial Revolution and new skills requirements. The study discusses some of the essential issues and challenges with upskilling required for Industry 4.0. It also focuses on how upskilling learning initiatives influence new knowledge creation. This primarily contributes to the educational field in deciding how and when to adopt appropriate strategies and identify which initiatives to best meet the needs of its community. Practical implications KM enables individuals to utilise their existing core capabilities or generate new ones for immediate investment in upskilling to meet current and future skills needs required by an organisation. Simply put, KM will improve the organisation’s talent-driven learning strategy and increase individuals’ ability to learn faster and attain sustainable competitive advantage in a fast-paced ever changing environment. Originality/value This paper is useful to academics, practitioners and policymakers in the fields of KM. The research provides initial insight into new skills mapping in the context of Fourth Industrial Revolution and the needs for researchers to understand the recent research trends in KM.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors quantitatively analyzes eight local government deep decarbonization plans of cities that range in size from eight thousand to nine million people, while also considering the impacts of the population size and the national context.
Abstract: As the urgency for climate action heightens, local governments and stakeholders are developing pathways towards deep decarbonization at the local level and committing to community-wide greenhouse gas reductions of 80–100% by 2050 or earlier. Urban areas are the largest place-based source of greenhouse gas emissions, accounting for 71%–76% of global emissions. Local governments have direct and indirect control of over a significant proportion of emissions that occur within their municipalities. However, there remains a gap in knowledge about the local technical and policy pathways that are being developed in order to achieve deep decarbonization and how these pathways vary for different size cities. This study qualitatively analyzes eight local government deep decarbonization plans of cities that range in size from eight thousand to nine million people. We analyze emerging patterns among the cities, while also considering the impacts of the population size and the national context. Each city has unique circumstances and priorities when it comes to decarbonization, and not all cities prioritize their highest emitting sectors for decarbonization. We find that emerging technical pathways to deep decarbonization focus on five priority sectors (electricity, buildings, transportation, waste, and carbon sinks and storage), but also that several local governments are developing innovative strategies beyond what is described in the literature for decarbonizing the priority sectors within their jurisdiction and are expanding the scope of their plans to include emerging areas in GHG mitigation such as scope 3 and embodied greenhouse gas emissions.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the authors quantitatively analyzes eight local government deep decarbonization plans of cities that range in size from eight thousand to nine million people, while also considering the impacts of the population size and the national context.
Abstract: As the urgency for climate action heightens, local governments and stakeholders are developing pathways towards deep decarbonization at the local level and committing to community-wide greenhouse gas reductions of 80–100% by 2050 or earlier. Urban areas are the largest place-based source of greenhouse gas emissions, accounting for 71%–76% of global emissions. Local governments have direct and indirect control of over a significant proportion of emissions that occur within their municipalities. However, there remains a gap in knowledge about the local technical and policy pathways that are being developed in order to achieve deep decarbonization and how these pathways vary for different size cities. This study qualitatively analyzes eight local government deep decarbonization plans of cities that range in size from eight thousand to nine million people. We analyze emerging patterns among the cities, while also considering the impacts of the population size and the national context. Each city has unique circumstances and priorities when it comes to decarbonization, and not all cities prioritize their highest emitting sectors for decarbonization. We find that emerging technical pathways to deep decarbonization focus on five priority sectors (electricity, buildings, transportation, waste, and carbon sinks and storage), but also that several local governments are developing innovative strategies beyond what is described in the literature for decarbonizing the priority sectors within their jurisdiction and are expanding the scope of their plans to include emerging areas in GHG mitigation such as scope 3 and embodied greenhouse gas emissions.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the mediator effect of corporate social responsibility (CSR) on the relationship between green transformational leadership (GTL) and green performance (GP) in restaurant management in North Cyprus was examined.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results provide meaningful insights to the hospital administrators to combat burnout, a critical reason for medical errors in hospitals, by investigating the role of TL in reducing the risk of burnout among hospital employees.
Abstract: Medical errors have been identified as one of the greatest evils in the field of healthcare, causing millions of patient deaths around the globe each year, especially in developing and poor countries. Globally, the social, economic, and personal impact of medical errors leads to a multi-trillion USD loss. Undoubtedly, medical errors are serious public health concerns in modern times, which could be mitigated by taking corrective measures. Different factors contribute to an increase in medical errors, including employees’ risk of burnout. Indeed, it was observed that hospital employees are more exposed to burnout situations compared to other fields. In this respect, managing hospital employees through transformational leadership (TL) may reduce the risk of burnout. However, surprisingly, studies on the relationship between TL and burnout are scarce in a healthcare system, indicating the existence of a critical knowledge gap. This study aims to fill this knowledge gap by investigating the role of TL in reducing the risk of burnout among hospital employees. At the same time, this study also tests the mediating effects of resilience and role clarity with the conditional indirect effect of intrinsic motivation in the above-proposed relationship. To test different hypotheses, a hypothetical model was developed for which we collected the data from different hospital employees (n = 398). Structural equation modeling (SEM) was considered for statistical validation of hypotheses confirming that TL significantly reduces burnout. The results further indicated that resilience and role clarity mediate this relationship significantly. Lastly, the conditional indirect effect of intrinsic motivation was also confirmed. Our results provide meaningful insights to the hospital administrators to combat burnout, a critical reason for medical errors in hospitals. Further, by incorporating the TL framework, a hospital may reduce the risk of burnout (and, hence, medical errors); on the one hand, such a leadership style also provides cost benefits (reduced medical errors improve cost efficiency). Other different theoretical and practical contributions are discussed in detail.


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the authors explored the impact of pandemic job stress and transformational leadership on employees' innovative work behavior through knowledge sharing, focusing on the importance of innovations for organizational survival and growth.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article , the authors examined the moderating effect of transformational leadership on the indirect relationships between Gen Z employees' tech-savviness and social skills on industry turnover intention via service robot risk awareness (SRRA).
Abstract: Purpose There has been a dramatic increase in the adoption of service robots in hotels, potentially replacing the human workforce. Drawing on Social Amplification of Risk Framework, this study aims to examine the moderating effect of transformational leadership on the indirect relationships between Gen Z employees’ tech-savviness and social skills on industry turnover intention via service robot risk awareness (SRRA). Design/methodology/approach This study collected two-wave time-lagged multilevel data of 281 frontline Gen Z hotel employees from 54 departments in China. Participants were asked to rate their tech-savviness, social skills and SRRA in the first survey. They rated their supervisor’s transformational leadership and industry turnover intention one week later. Findings Multilevel path analysis results showed SRRA mediates the negative indirect relationship of Gen Z employee’s tech-savviness and social skills on industry turnover intention. Transformational leadership weakened the positive effect of SRRA on industry turnover intention. Originality/value This study contributes to the growing literature on service robots by investigating the antecedents and outcomes of employees’ SRRA. To the best of the authors’ knowledge, it is one of the first empirical studies investigating the role of leadership to mitigate the negative consequences of employee’s SRRA. Managers can use the results of this study to implement training programs and ensure that employees and service robots successfully coexist in the workplace.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Jan 2022
TL;DR: This article explored educational leadership during the COVID-19 pandemic from the perspectives of higher education students and developed a guiding model of educational leadership for the new normal with the novel emerging components.
Abstract: This research aims to explore educational leadership during the COVID-19 pandemic from the perspectives of higher education students and to develop a guiding model of educational leadership for ‘new normal’ with the novel emerging components. This research is conducted using grounded theory method and social network analysis. The first study group includes 32 participants, second study group includes another 26 participants, and final group includes 12 participants. Participants in all groups are university students studying in a higher education institution in Turkey. Written documents, personal interviews and group discussion are used for data collection. Based on analysis, a guiding model is developed which illustrates the concept of educational leadership for the new normal, which is composed of “networking, enhancing educational practices, calmness & compassion, analytical & strategical thinking, and transparency”. Also, the social network analysis shows that “encouraging online communities, promoting social interaction, creating a safe and inclusive learning environment, providing learning resources, leading under pressure, emphasizing optimism, making data-driven decisions” are cornerstones in terms of educational leadership for the new normal. In addition to those substantially noted key concepts, some higher education students also seem to be in need of some other aspects of educational leadership such as inspiration for learning, open dialogue, risk planning and leveraging capacity of community. The participants also indicate that successful educational leadership is about understanding others’ perspectives, rather than sticking to leader’s perspective. © 2022, Ozgen Korkmaz. All rights reserved.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper , a meta-analysis of the leadership-workplace safety relationship was conducted by examining the associations between a broader range of five leadership categories-change-oriented, relationaloriented, taskoriented, passive, and destructive-and seven workplace safety variables.
Abstract: Given the high human and economic costs of workplace safety, researchers and practitioners have paid increasing attention to how leadership behaviors relate to workplace safety. Previous research has demonstrated that leadership behaviors are important for workplace safety. In this meta-analysis, we extend our understanding of the leadership-workplace safety relationship by (a) examining the associations between a broader range of five leadership categories-change-oriented, relational-oriented, task-oriented, passive, and destructive-and seven workplace safety variables; (b) investigating the relative importance of these leadership categories in explaining variance in these workplace safety variables; and (c) testing contextual and methodological contingencies of the leadership-workplace safety relationship. Using effect sizes from 194 samples (N = 104,364), we find that although leadership behaviors are associated with workplace safety, the leadership categories vary considerably in their relative importance. Task-oriented leadership followed by relational-oriented leadership emerge as the most important contributors to workplace safety. Change-oriented leadership (which includes transformational leadership) does not emerge as the largest contributor for any of the seven tested safety variables, despite it being the most frequently examined leadership model in the workplace safety literature. Effectiveness of leadership behaviors in relation to workplace safety varies by national culture power distance, industry risk, workforce age, as well as by contextualized forms of leadership (i.e., safety-specific vs. generalized). Finally, there is meta-analytic evidence for publication bias and common-method variance. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper , the authors investigate the extent to which transformational leadership behaviours enacted by team members relate to safety behaviours of team members, teams, and team leaders, and suggest that the effectiveness of shared transformational Leadership might vary depending on perceived organizational support.
Abstract: We investigate the extent to which transformational leadership behaviours enacted by team members – shared transformational leadership – relate to safety behaviours of team members, teams, and team leaders. We also consider the role of perceived organizational support in moderating the relationships between shared transformational leadership and safety behaviours. We collected data from 2,139 crew members (‘team members’) and 98 chief engineers (‘team leaders’) working on merchant shipping vessels (‘teams’). Team members’ perceptions of shared transformational leadership positively related to team members’ safety compliance and safety participation. Shared transformational leadership became less effective in relation to team members’ safety compliance under conditions of high levels of perceived organizational support. Shared transformational leadership at the team level related to higher levels of safety participation of teams. Teams’ shared transformational leadership was positively related to team leaders’ safety participation, but only under low levels of perceived organizational support. Taken together, our findings demonstrate the important role of shared transformational leadership in relation to safety behaviours and suggest that the effectiveness of shared transformational leadership might vary depending on perceived organizational support. Practitioner points Transformational leadership behaviours exercised by team members – shared transformational leadership – are associated with higher levels of mandated and discretionary safety behaviours of team members. Teams that have higher levels of shared transformational leadership demonstrate higher levels of team-level discretionary safety behaviours. Shared transformational leadership is more strongly associated with employees’ mandated safety behaviours under low levels of perceived organizational support. When leaders perceive low levels of organizational support, their teams’ shared transformational leadership becomes a more important correlate of leaders’ discretionary safety behaviours. In addition to traditional leadership training that involves formal leaders only, organizations should consider implementing activities that foster shared leadership behaviours.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Feb 2022-Heliyon
TL;DR: The authors examined the relationship between internal control systems (ICSs) and organizational performance in Vietnamese public sector organizations (PSOs), with particular emphasis on the mediating role of intensity of innovation.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a decision-making approach with the help of CRITIC and CoCoSo methods on q-ROFSs was introduced to evaluate the CSCs barriers in the era of Industry 4.0 transition.
Abstract: PurposeThe poor leadership style is a key obstacle to the effective implementation of Industry 4.0 technologies. To successfully apply the Industry 4.0 technologies, which can enhance the sustainability of firms, senior management needs to be inspiring and transformational. On the other hand, numerous factors can hinder the Industry 4.0 transition and “Circular Supply Chain (CSC)” transformation. Therefore, the main purpose of this study is to evaluate the related barriers of CSCs in the era of Industry 4.0 transition.Design/methodology/approachThe current study developed an innovative decision-making approach with the help of the “Combined Compromise Solution (CoCoSo)” method and “Criteria Importance Through Intercriteria Correlation (CRITIC)” method on the “q-Rung Orthopair Fuzzy Sets (q-ROFSs).” CRITIC in this combined method was used to predict the importance or weighting degrees of the CSCs barriers in the age of Industry 4.0 transition.FindingsThe results of this study found that the absence of knowledge about the Industry 4.0 technologies and circular approaches was the first barrier followed by the problems associated with data security in relationship management in circular flows, the deficiency of knowledge regarding the data management among stakeholders and the lack of awareness about the potential benefits of autonomous systems in labor-oriented “End-of-Life (EOL)” activities for CSCs in the era of Industry 4.0 transition.Research limitations/implicationsA limitation may be that despite the generalizability of the proposed framework, the results may differ when it is implemented in different sectors. By emphasizing the obstacles to sustainable operations of supply chains (SCs) in the context of circular economy (CE) and Industry 4.0, researchers working in the same domain may be encouraged to find ways to remove such obstacles in different settings. As suggested in this study, the priority of various barriers helps researchers suggest effective strategies for the sustainable development of companies within the current dynamic business atmosphere.Practical implicationsThe findings of this paper can aid industry practitioners in fixing their attention on the digitization or automation of their systems in the context of sustainability or resource circularity. Note that within the current context of CE, one of the crucial issues is how to conserve the existing resources; the answer to this question can save the environment.Originality/valueThe current paper proposed a new multi-criteria decision-making method using q-ROFSs to analyze, rank and evaluate the CSC barriers in the age of Industry 4.0 transition. To this end, a new decision-making approach with the help of CRITIC and CoCoSo methods on q-ROFSs called q-ROF-CRITIC-CoCoSo was introduced to evaluate the CSCs barriers in the era of Industry 4.0 transition.

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Nov 2022-Heliyon
TL;DR: In this article , the effect of organizational citizenship behavior and transformational leadership on small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) performance was investigated using a sample of 405 employees from Pakistani SMEs, in terms of engaging them in voluntary work that ultimately improves performance.