Unlocking the Link Between Accountants' Perception of Innovation Job Requirements and Expected Positive Performance Outcomes: The Role of Job Crafting and Technophilia
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The paper aims to examine the impact of innovation job requirements on expected positive performance outcomes through job crafting behaviours. It also examines how the level of technophilia moderates this relationship. The study uses survey data from 424 professional accountants in Canada. Data analysis was performed using structural equation analysis on AMOS v. 24. The results show that job crafting plays a mediating role between perceived innovation job requirements and expected positive performance outcomes. The study also finds that the level of technophilia moderates this relationship. This study contributes to the existing literature by highlighting the importance of job crafting to fulfill the accountants' innovation job requirements with enhanced expected positive performance outcomes.
本文旨在研究创新工作要求通过工作制作行为对预期积极绩效结果的影响。它还研究了技术爱好者的水平如何调节这种关系。该研究使用了对加拿大424名专业会计师的调查数据。数据分析采用AMOS v. 24的结构方程分析。结果表明,工作制作在感知创新工作要求与期望积极绩效结果之间起中介作用。研究还发现,技术狂热程度缓和了这种关系。本研究对现有文献的贡献在于强调了工作制作对于满足会计师创新工作要求和提高预期积极绩效结果的重要性。
期刊介绍:
The Canadian Journal of Administrative Sciences (CJAS) is a multidisciplinary, peer-reviewed, international quarterly that publishes manuscripts with a strong theoretical foundation. The journal welcomes literature reviews, quantitative and qualitative studies as well as conceptual pieces. CJAS is an ISI-listed journal that publishes papers in all key disciplines of business. CJAS is a particularly suitable home for manuscripts of a crossdisciplinary nature. All papers must state in an explicit and compelling way their unique contribution to advancing theory and/or practice in the administrative sciences.