Talent management in the context of mindful organizing and organizational mindfulness
Journal of Positive Management
View Archive InfoField | Value | |
Title |
Talent management in the context of mindful organizing and organizational mindfulness
|
|
Creator |
Gajda, Daniel; University of Economics in Katowice, Faculty of Management, Katowice, Poland
|
|
Subject |
—
talent management; mindful organizing; organizational mindfulness — |
|
Description |
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to show the unexplored relationship between mindful organizing, organizational mindfulness and talent management with regard to its outcomes.Methodology: The paper presents an integrative review of the literature available in relation to talent management and organizational mindfulness and provides the development of a theoretical framework based on integration and synthesis of this literature.Findings: The literature review revealed that organizational mindfulness and mindful organizing belong to the factors which may enhance individual level outcomes of talent management, such us: organizational commitment, motivation to work, extra-role behaviour and this, in turn, results in better organization’s performance.Practical implications: In order to enhance the individual level outcomes of talent management, the mindfulness needs to operate across all organizational levels. It should be create by top administrators and translate across organizations’ levels by middle managers for the front-line employees.Research limitations: This study is based on theoretical analysis and its assumptions should be tested empirically.Originality/value of the paper: Although the authors indicate many factors that may shape talent management process and its outcomes, the potential infl uence of mindful organizing and organizational mindfulness on talent management outcomes has not been analysed so far, meanwhile these phenomena’s have a lot in common with managing talented employees. Therefore, it is expected that mindful organizing (directly) and organizational mindfulness (indirectly) may enhance individual level outcomes of talent management.
|
|
Publisher |
Nicolaus Copernicus University
|
|
Contributor |
—
|
|
Date |
2018-06-05
|
|
Type |
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion — Conceptual paper |
|
Format |
application/pdf
|
|
Identifier |
http://apcz.umk.pl/czasopisma/index.php/JPM/article/view/JPM.2017.124
10.12775/JPM.2017.124 |
|
Source |
Journal of Positive Management; Vol 8, No 3 (2017); 42-57
Journal of Positive Management; Vol 8, No 3 (2017); 42-57 2392-1412 2083-103X |
|
Language |
eng
|
|
Relation |
http://apcz.umk.pl/czasopisma/index.php/JPM/article/view/JPM.2017.124/14893
|
|
Coverage |
—
— — |
|
Rights |
Copyright (c) 2018 Journal of Positive Management
|
|