Identifying enabling management practices for employee engagement

Orientation: A currently emerging viewpoint is that today's management practices no longer add value to organisations. The focus of this article is to conduct a systematic review of the scholarly literature on management practices that could be related to employee engagement. Research purp...

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Main Authors: Marius Joubert, Gert Roodt
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AOSIS 2011-12-01
Series:Acta Commercii
Online Access:https://actacommercii.co.za/index.php/acta/article/view/155
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spelling doaj-691abe1e97ac4d94bb83750ab19848652020-11-25T00:31:07ZengAOSISActa Commercii2413-19031684-19992011-12-011118811010.4102/ac.v11i1.155157Identifying enabling management practices for employee engagementMarius Joubert0Gert Roodt1Department of Industrial Psychology and People Management, Faculty of Management, University of JohannesburgDepartment of Industrial Psychology and People Management, Faculty of Management, University of JohannesburgOrientation: A currently emerging viewpoint is that today's management practices no longer add value to organisations. The focus of this article is to conduct a systematic review of the scholarly literature on management practices that could be related to employee engagement. Research purpose: This study searched for evidence in support of the notion of a management value chain, and enabling management practices within each value chain component that could relate to employee engagement. Motivation for the study: An alternative management value chain model could contribute towards a better understanding of which management practices may potentially impact employee engagement. Research design, approach, and method: This is a non-empirical (theoretical) study, based on a systematic, in-depth literature review to identify the key management components and enabling practices within this proposed management value chain. Scholarly research databases were sourced for relevant peer reviewed research conducted since 1990, not excluding important contributions prior to 1990. The literature was systematically searched, selected, studied, and contextualized within this study. Main findings: Support was found for the notion of a management value chain, for enabling management practices within each proposed management value chain component, and it was also established these management practices indeed have an impact on employee engagement. Practical/managerial/implications: The possibility that management work can be presented as a generic management value chain allows managers to approach engaging management practices more systematically. Contribution/value-add: This study highlights the importance of some management practices that have never been seen as part of management work.https://actacommercii.co.za/index.php/acta/article/view/155
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marius Joubert
Gert Roodt
spellingShingle Marius Joubert
Gert Roodt
Identifying enabling management practices for employee engagement
Acta Commercii
author_facet Marius Joubert
Gert Roodt
author_sort Marius Joubert
title Identifying enabling management practices for employee engagement
title_short Identifying enabling management practices for employee engagement
title_full Identifying enabling management practices for employee engagement
title_fullStr Identifying enabling management practices for employee engagement
title_full_unstemmed Identifying enabling management practices for employee engagement
title_sort identifying enabling management practices for employee engagement
publisher AOSIS
series Acta Commercii
issn 2413-1903
1684-1999
publishDate 2011-12-01
description Orientation: A currently emerging viewpoint is that today's management practices no longer add value to organisations. The focus of this article is to conduct a systematic review of the scholarly literature on management practices that could be related to employee engagement. Research purpose: This study searched for evidence in support of the notion of a management value chain, and enabling management practices within each value chain component that could relate to employee engagement. Motivation for the study: An alternative management value chain model could contribute towards a better understanding of which management practices may potentially impact employee engagement. Research design, approach, and method: This is a non-empirical (theoretical) study, based on a systematic, in-depth literature review to identify the key management components and enabling practices within this proposed management value chain. Scholarly research databases were sourced for relevant peer reviewed research conducted since 1990, not excluding important contributions prior to 1990. The literature was systematically searched, selected, studied, and contextualized within this study. Main findings: Support was found for the notion of a management value chain, for enabling management practices within each proposed management value chain component, and it was also established these management practices indeed have an impact on employee engagement. Practical/managerial/implications: The possibility that management work can be presented as a generic management value chain allows managers to approach engaging management practices more systematically. Contribution/value-add: This study highlights the importance of some management practices that have never been seen as part of management work.
url https://actacommercii.co.za/index.php/acta/article/view/155
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