Putting a band-aid on a wooden leg: A sociotechnical view on the success of decentralisation attempts to increase job autonomy
Abstract
Purpose
Decentralisation attempts that aim to increase job autonomy do not always succeed. This paper aims to study to what extent the tendency to maintain existing operational task divisions is an important explanation for this lack of success.
Design/methodology/approach
In total, 456 employees in 25 organisations participated in a cross-sectional intervention study. Each employee filled out a questionnaire on job autonomy both before and after the decentralisation process, in which all organisations shifted regulatory, preparatory and supportive tasks to the lowest organisational level.
Findings
This study found small, but significant, effects of decentralisation attempts on job autonomy. The size of the effects, however, depended on the way the way in which the operational tasks were divided. Simultaneously, larger effects were found for organisations which decentralised tasks and changed the way operational tasks were divided. Both findings reached the conclusion that although decentralisation attempts seemed important for increasing job autonomy, the way in which the operational tasks were divided and even changed, was at least as important for a successful decentralisation process.
Originality/value
After decades of research on modern sociotechnical theory, this study is the first to show that decentralisation attempts do not merely increase job autonomy. The effect of such attempts depends on the way in which operational tasks are divided in organisations.
Keywords
Citation
Vermeerbergen, L., Van Hootegem, G. and Benders, J. (2016), "Putting a band-aid on a wooden leg: A sociotechnical view on the success of decentralisation attempts to increase job autonomy", Team Performance Management, Vol. 22 No. 7/8, pp. 383-398. https://doi.org/10.1108/TPM-03-2015-0013
Publisher
:Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Copyright © 2016, Emerald Group Publishing Limited