Linking human resource management and knowledge management via commitment: A review and research agenda
Abstract
This paper contributes to the development of the knowledge management and human resource management literatures through developing the linkages between them. Increasingly it is being acknowledged that the success of knowledge management initiatives is fundamentally predicated on having workers who are prepared to share their knowledge. It is suggested that HRM concepts and frameworks could be utilized to improve our understanding of what shapes the willingness (or reluctance) of workers to share their knowledge. Specifically the paper considers how the motivation of workers to share their knowledge may be shaped by their level of organizational commitment. Guest and Conway’s model of the psychological contract is modified to link commitment with knowledge‐sharing attitudes and behaviours. Finally, it is suggested that, if commitment is linked to knowledge‐sharing attitudes, then the apparently low commitment levels reported by a number of surveys may mean this represents a key problem for knowledge management initiatives.
Keywords
Citation
Hislop, D. (2003), "Linking human resource management and knowledge management via commitment: A review and research agenda", Employee Relations, Vol. 25 No. 2, pp. 182-202. https://doi.org/10.1108/01425450310456479
Publisher
:MCB UP Ltd
Copyright © 2003, MCB UP Limited