Abstract

Job crafting describes proactive employee behaviors to improve the design of their work and working conditions, and to adapt their job to better suit their abilities and needs. During organizational changes, employees may use job crafting to adjust to the changes in their work and protect their well-being and motivation, i.e., work engagement. However, research shows that although the effects of job crafting strategies that expand the design of work (approach job crafting) have been positive on work engagement, the effects of job crafting strategies that diminish the scope of work (avoidance job crafting) have often been negative. This study investigated the effects of the interactions between different job crafting strategies on work engagement, an aspect that has not thus far been studied. Specifically, we hypothesized that avoidance job crafting is not harmful for work engagement when it is conducted in combination with approach job crafting, particularly during times of organizational change. A two-wave, 18-month follow-up study was conducted among public sector workers who either experienced (n = 479) or did not experience (n = 412) changes in their work. Latent moderated structural equation modeling revealed that avoidance job crafting did not reduce work engagement when combined with approach job crafting behaviors. Moreover, job crafting best benefited work engagement when it was combined with these opposing strategies. However, job crafting was beneficial for work engagement only among employees who were affected by organizational changes, that is, among employees whose job design had changed. Practically, organizations implementing changes could encourage proactive job redesign approaches among their employees—particularly both approach and avoidance types of job crafting strategies.

Highlights

  • Organizational changes may decrease work engagement [1,2]—an important indicator of occupational well-being [3]

  • Our findings suggest that the potentially negative impact of avoidance job crafting on work engagement may be buffered by simultaneous approach job crafting

  • This study showed that the effect of avoidance job crafting on work engagement depended on the simultaneous utilization of some types of approach job crafting strategies: the harmful effects of avoidance job crafting on work engagement could be counteracted by simultaneous approach job crafting behavior

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Summary

Introduction

Organizational changes may decrease work engagement [1,2]—an important indicator of occupational well-being [3] This is because when employees are affected by organizational changes, they tend to perceive negative changes in their working conditions and work environment, that is, decreases in their jobs’ resourceful and motivating aspects and increases in their jobs’ demanding and hindering aspects [4,5]. Both of these have consistently shown to be detrimental to work engagement [6]. Public Health 2020, 17, 9084; doi:10.3390/ijerph17239084 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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