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Explaining Innovation at Work: A Socio-Personal Account

In: Employee-Driven Innovation

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  • Stephen Billett

Abstract

This chapter proposes a socio-personal account that explains innovations at work. These innovations are central to sustaining the viability of enterprises in the face of continual changes in work requirements and client needs. They also comprise the process through which workers come to both learn and actively remake their occupational practices. That is, innovations have important personal and socially derived purposes, and employee-driven innovations are no exception. Moreover, processes securing and sustaining innovations at work draw on interdependently personal and social contributions. For there to be new practices that secure effective responses to emerging or desired workplace goals, there must be situational premises for these innovations, including the means for them to be supported and adopted, and also the personal engagement by workers for these innovations to be enacted. These personal and social dualistic contributions are used here to provide an explanation of what constitutes innovations at work, in particular employeeled innovations, and how they might progress. Central to this explanatory account are concepts associated with workplace affordances (i.e. how individuals are permitted to participate in work) and individual engagements (i.e. how individuals elect to participate in that work), and, importantly, the relations amongst them. Thus, these contributions comprise a duality that is interdependent and relational.

Suggested Citation

  • Stephen Billett, 2012. "Explaining Innovation at Work: A Socio-Personal Account," Palgrave Macmillan Books, in: Steen Høyrup & Maria Bonnafous-Boucher & Cathrine Hasse & Maja Lotz & Kirsten Møller (ed.), Employee-Driven Innovation, chapter 5, pages 92-107, Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Handle: RePEc:pal:palchp:978-1-137-01476-4_5
    DOI: 10.1057/9781137014764_5
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    Cited by:

    1. Petrik Runst & Jörg Thomä, 2022. "Does personality matter? Small business owners and modes of innovation," Small Business Economics, Springer, vol. 58(4), pages 2235-2260, April.
    2. Runst, Petrik & Thomä, Jörg, 2020. "Does Personality Matter? Small Business Owners and Modes of Innovation," ifh Working Papers 24/2020, Volkswirtschaftliches Institut für Mittelstand und Handwerk an der Universität Göttingen (ifh), revised 2020.

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