Abstract

PurposeThe purpose of this study is to investigate the perceived effects between soft management practices, employee behaviours and the implementation of digital technologies in manufacturing plants, as well as how these relate to the emergence of digital waste.Design/methodology/approachThis paper uses case-based research. Data was collected in two large manufacturing companies based in Norway and Sweden through semi-structured interviews with two management representatives and four shop-floor employees. The data was used to evaluate 29 variables describing lean- and total quality management (TQM)-associated employee behaviours and soft management practices, in light of digital transformation.FindingsThe results suggest that several variables were positively influenced by the digital transformation process. These were top management leadership, middle management involvement, employee education, corporate social responsibility focus, innovation, knowledge sharing, work-family balance, psychological capital, job satisfaction and career commitment. Training employees, creativity, discretionary effort, turnover intention and proactivity appear to be negatively influenced by digital transformation The findings also indicate that several soft management practices and employee behaviours were not only influenced by manufacturing digitalization but also themselves influenced the process. The potential for digital waste creation was also detected in several variables, including reward and recognition and training employees.Practical implicationsManagers, practitioners and academics may learn about the importance of certain managerial practices and employees’ behavioural needs during the digital transformation process. The findings may help in prioritizing TQM and soft lean management practices and certain employee behaviours during the digital transformation and in creating awareness of digital waste.Originality/valueThis study builds on several existing studies discussing the impact of digital transformation on soft management practices and employee behaviours. It provides insights from a lean and TQM angle and offers a means of prioritizing certain practices and behaviours during a digital transformation. This study also highlights the significance of digital waste.

Highlights

  • The role of employees in manufacturing plants in times of digital transformation and intensive technology adoption poses new challenges to management in establishing valueoriented processes in the most efficient yet digital way (Parschau and Hauge, 2020; Popkova and Sergi, 2020)

  • Towards a conceptual model we propose a conceptual model to guide the investigation, which is based on extant literature of digitalization of manufacturing, soft management practices and employee behaviours

  • Interview questions were aimed to reveal what soft factors and employee behaviours are influenced by the digital transformation in lean manufacturing (LM) plants and which ones relate to digital waste

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The role of employees in manufacturing plants in times of digital transformation and intensive technology adoption poses new challenges to management in establishing valueoriented processes in the most efficient yet digital way (Parschau and Hauge, 2020; Popkova and Sergi, 2020). A number of studies discuss the risk of employees’ replacement by advanced technologies (Adam et al, 2019; Parschau and Hauge, 2020; Popkova and Sergi, 2020; Soukupova et al, 2020). Popkova and Sergi (2020) forecast that by the year 2030, social entrepreneurship will use the opportunities of Industry 4.0 for optimization of its activities but will reject full automatization, using human intellect and artificial intelligence simultaneously. Digital waste can be an outcome of inefficient usage of technologies by manufacturing employees

Objectives
Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call