Digital Technology and Organizational Change

  • Agarwal S
  • Lenka U
  • Lazazzara A
  • et al.
ISSN: 10534822
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Abstract

Electronic Human Resource Management (e-HRM) is often assumed to increase HRM service quality. This paper empirically examines the relationship between e-HRM and HRM service quality and addresses two calls from recent e-HRM studies, namely to highlight (i) the importance of the interplay between technological and organizational aspects and (ii) the finding that improved HRM service quality is a consequence of e-HRM implementation. We argue that the key drivers of HRM service quality are the strengths both of HRM and of e-HRM. The relationship may be mediated by the frequency of e-HRM usage. In addition, building on Adaptive Structuration Theory, the degree to which mediation occurs may differ within regimes of high and low e-HRM appropriation. We use moderated mediation analysis on a sample of 140 employees of an administration unit to shed light on the drivers of HRM service quality. While we identify strong positive direct effects of HRM strength and of e-HRM strength, we fail to uncover either mediation or contingent mediation effects. The study contributes to e-HRM research by identifying the main antecedent of HRM service quality as HRM strength.

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APA

Agarwal, S., Lenka, U., Lazazzara, A., Galanaki, E., Bondarouk, T., Harms, R., … Fisher, S. L. (2018). Digital Technology and Organizational Change. Employee Relations, 23(1), 18–36. Retrieved from http://www.springer.com/series/11237

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