Publication | Closed Access
Perceived mastery climate, felt trust, and knowledge sharing
120
Citations
117
References
2017
Year
Organizational CharacteristicEducational PsychologyEducationSocial InfluenceHuman Resource ManagementOrganizational BehaviorPsychologyOrganizational SocializationEmployee AttitudeMastery ClimateManagementOrganizational PsychologyEmployee LearningOrganizational SystemsKnowledge TransferTrustOrganizational ResearchKnowledge ExchangeOrganizational CommunicationKnowledge SharingBusinessSummary Interpersonal TrustKnowledge Management
Summary Interpersonal trust is associated with a range of adaptive outcomes, including knowledge sharing. However, to date, our knowledge of antecedents and consequences of employees feeling trusted by supervisors in organizations remains limited. On the basis of a multisource, multiwave field study among 956 employees from 5 Norwegian organizations, we examined the predictive roles of perceived mastery climate and employee felt trust for employees' knowledge sharing. Drawing on the achievement goal theory, we develop and test a model to demonstrate that when employees perceive a mastery climate, they are more likely to feel trusted by their supervisors at both the individual and group levels. Moreover, the relationship between employees' perceptions of a mastery climate and supervisor‐rated knowledge sharing is mediated by perceptions of being trusted by the supervisor. Theoretical contributions and practical implications of our findings are discussed.
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