DocumentCode
3294656
Title
Encouraging Knowledge Contribution to Electronic Repositories: The Roles of Rewards and Job Design
Author
Pee, L.G.
Author_Institution
Tokyo Inst. of Technol., Tokyo, Japan
fYear
2012
fDate
4-7 Jan. 2012
Firstpage
3729
Lastpage
3738
Abstract
The effectiveness of electronic knowledge repositories relies on employees´ willingness to contribute their knowledge and rewards have often been used to promote knowledge contribution. To better understand the effectiveness of rewards, this study examines the relative effect of extrinsic and intrinsic rewards. Further, noting that extrinsic rewards have been observed to have inconsistent effects, this study investigates whether the effect of extrinsic rewards is contingent upon job design. Results of a survey of 163 employees show that extrinsic rewards have a weaker effect than intrinsic rewards but its effect can be enhanced by increasing job autonomy, skill variety, and task identity. This study contributes to research by identifying the circumstances in which extrinsic rewards have stronger effect and offers practical suggestions for providing rewards and designing jobs to promote knowledge contribution by employees in organizations.
Keywords
information resources; knowledge management; organisational aspects; personnel; electronic knowledge repositories; employee willingness; extrinsic rewards; intrinsic rewards; job autonomy; job design; knowledge contribution; skill variety; task identity; Economics; Job design; Knowledge engineering; Organizations; Scheduling; Security; Standards organizations;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
System Science (HICSS), 2012 45th Hawaii International Conference on
Conference_Location
Maui, HI
ISSN
1530-1605
Print_ISBN
978-1-4577-1925-7
Electronic_ISBN
1530-1605
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/HICSS.2012.242
Filename
6149348
Link To Document