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Creativity under task conflict: The role of proactively increasing job resources
Author(s) -
Petrou Paraskevas,
Bakker Arnold B.,
Bezemer Katinka
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
journal of occupational and organizational psychology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.257
H-Index - 114
eISSN - 2044-8325
pISSN - 0963-1798
DOI - 10.1111/joop.12250
Subject(s) - creativity , psychology , task (project management) , social psychology , constructive , job attitude , role conflict , job performance , job analysis , conservation of resources theory , applied psychology , management , job satisfaction , computer science , economics , process (computing) , operating system
The present daily diary study among employees from various occupational sectors used conflict and creativity theories to hypothesize that task conflict has an inverted U‐shaped relationship with employee creativity (i.e., creativity is higher at moderate than low or high levels of conflict). In addition, we argue that this curvilinear effect is likely to occur when employees proactively increase their job resources. A total of 92 employees filled out a diary survey at the end of five consecutive days. Results of multilevel analyses revealed that, as predicted, task conflict had an inverted U‐shaped link with creativity when employees increased their structural job resources. However, when employees increased their social job resources, the link was linear and positive. Our findings also showed that increasing job resources related positively to employee creativity – this effect was found for both increasing structural and social job resources. We discuss the theoretical contributions of these findings and conclude that moderate task conflict has the potential to benefit organizations. Practitioner points Task conflict should not be eliminated because when employees deal with it in a constructive way, it can be a creative force of change. Allow employees to increase their job resources so as to become more creative. Especially encourage increasing job resources when employees encounter task conflict.