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Job crafting, a bottom-up job characteristic of academics with an embeddedness potential

Augustine Ebuka Arachie (Department of Business Administration, Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka, Nigeria)
Emmanuel Kalu Agbaeze (Department of Management, University of Nigeria – Enugu Campus, Enugu, Nigeria)
Hope Ngozi Nzewi (Department of Business Administration, Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka, Nigeria)
Emmanuela Obianuju Agbasi (Department of Cooperative Economics and Management, Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka, Nigeria)

Management Research Review

ISSN: 2040-8269

Article publication date: 8 February 2021

Issue publication date: 16 July 2021

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Abstract

Purpose

The frequent turnover of academic instructors (lecturers) to other organizations and countries despite the autonomies their job offer them necessitated; this study aims to examine the relationship between job crafting (JC) and embeddedness of lecturers to their jobs.

Design/methodology/approach

A survey research design was adopted. This study is carried out in the south-east region of Nigeria. The population of the study consisted of 8,051 academic staff of six randomly selected public universities in the region and a sample size of 367 was determined using Krejcie and Morgan (1970) formula. The primary and secondary source of data were used in data collection and were analysed using regression analysis at a 5% level of significance.

Findings

Result revealed that task crafting has a statistically significant positive relationship with employee job fit (r = 0.949, R2 = 0.900, F = 2699.473, p-value < 0.05), that relational crafting has a statistically significant positive influence on employee links (r = 0.982, R2 = 0.964, F = 8112.281, p-value < 0.05) and that there is a statistically significant positive correlation between cognitive crafting and sacrifice links (r = 0.962, R2 = 0.926, F = 3729.900, p-value < 0.05).

Practical implications

This study’s practical implication is that it will aid in making academics in Nigeria embedded in their jobs by encouraging them to craft their jobs so as to give them more meaning. In the field of research, this study helps to close the literature gap existing in JC and the role it plays in embedding academics in their jobs, hence, opening up a whole new research area with empirical data to back it up. For management, the study will help in knowing how to appropriately harness the potential of JC in making employees more engaged in their jobs.

Originality/value

Many studies have been carried out in the past in areas of JC and employee performance, non to the best knowledge of the researchers has been extended to studying JC as it relates to the embeddedness of academics to their jobs in Nigeria, this study is, therefore, a new addition to academic literature in this area.

Keywords

Citation

Arachie, A.E., Agbaeze, E.K., Nzewi, H.N. and Agbasi, E.O. (2021), "Job crafting, a bottom-up job characteristic of academics with an embeddedness potential", Management Research Review, Vol. 44 No. 7, pp. 949-969. https://doi.org/10.1108/MRR-07-2020-0432

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

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